Section 17.3. Regular Expressions

   

17.3 Regular Expressions

Regular expressions are a powerful language for describing and manipulating text. Underlying regular expressions is a technique called pattern matching , which involves comparing one string to another, or comparing a series of wildcards that represent a type of string to a literal string. A regular expression is applied to a string ” that is, to a set of characters . Often that string is an entire text document.

The result of applying a regular expression to a string is either to return a substring or to return a new string representing a modification of some part of the original string. (Remember that string objects are immutable and so cannot be changed by the regular expression.)

By applying a properly constructed regular expression to the following string:

 One,Two,Three Liberty Associates, Inc. 

you can return any or all of its substrings (e.g., Liberty or One) or modified versions of its substrings (e.g., LIBeRtY or OnE). What the regular expression does is determined by the syntax of the regular expression itself.

A regular expression consists of two types of characters: literals and metacharacters . A literal is a character you want to match in the target string. A metacharacter is a special symbol that acts as a command to the regular expression parser. The parser is the engine responsible for understanding the regular expression. For example, if you create a regular expression:

 ^(FromToSubjectDate): 

this will match any substring with the letters "From", "To", "Subject", or "Date" so long as those letters start a new line ( ^ ) and end with a colon (:).

The caret ( ^ ) indicates to the regular expression parser that the string you're searching for must begin a new line. The letters "From" and "To" are literals, and the metacharacters left and right parentheses ( ( , ) ) and vertical bar ( ) are all used to group sets of literals and indicate that any of the choices should match. Thus you would read the following line as "match any string that begins a new line, followed by any of the four literal strings From, To, Subject, or Date, and followed by a colon":

 ^(FromToSubjectDate): 

A full explanation of regular expressions is beyond the scope of this book, but all the regular expressions used in the examples are explained. For a complete understanding of regular expressions, I highly recommend Mastering Regular Expressions , Second Edition, by Jeffrey E. F. Friedl (O'Reilly).

   


Learning C#
Learning C# 3.0
ISBN: 0596521065
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2005
Pages: 178

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