Difference between revisions of "Regular Expressions"

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|}
 
|}
  
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==Precedence Rules==
 
When using regular expressions, the rules of arithmetic precedence are as follows:
 
When using regular expressions, the rules of arithmetic precedence are as follows:
*+ and * are done first
 
*Concatenation (ie joining elements together) is done next
 
*| comes last
 
  
 +
+ and * are done first
 +
 +
Concatenation (ie joining elements together) is done next
 +
 +
| comes last
 +
 +
==More Examples==
 
Examples of regular expressions using the alphabet {a, b, c}
 
Examples of regular expressions using the alphabet {a, b, c}
 
*abc defines the language with only the string ‘abc’
 
*abc defines the language with only the string ‘abc’
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*(a | c)+ gives all possible strings of a and c (not including the empty string)
 
*(a | c)+ gives all possible strings of a and c (not including the empty string)
 
   
 
   
Regular expression meta-characters
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==Regular expression meta-characters==
  
 
Symbol Meaning Example
 
Symbol Meaning Example

Revision as of 18:45, 22 May 2017

A regular expression is a notation for defining all the valid strings of a formal language.

Examples of Regular Expression Notation

Regular Expression Meaning
a Matches a string consisting of just the symbol a
b Matches a string consisting of just the symbol b
ab Matches a string consisting of the symbol a followed by the symbol b
a* Matches a string consisting of zero or more a’s
a+ Matches a string consisting of one or more a’s
abb? Matches the string ab or the string abb. The ? symbol indicates zero or one of the preceding element
a|b Matches a string consisting of the symbol a or the symbol b

Precedence Rules

When using regular expressions, the rules of arithmetic precedence are as follows:

+ and * are done first

Concatenation (ie joining elements together) is done next

| comes last

More Examples

Examples of regular expressions using the alphabet {a, b, c}

  • abc defines the language with only the string ‘abc’
  • abc | cba defines the language with two strings’ abc’ and ‘cba’
  • (a | b) c (a | b) gives four strings: ‘aca’, ‘acb’, ‘bca’, ‘bcb’
  • a+ gives an infinite number of strings: ‘a’, ‘aa’, ‘aaa’, etc
  • ab* gives an infinite number of strings: ‘a’, ‘ab’, ‘abb’, ‘abbb’, etc
  • (ab)* gives an infinite number of strings: ‘’, ‘ab’, ‘abab’, ‘ababab’, etc
  • (a | c)+ gives all possible strings of a and c (not including the empty string)

Regular expression meta-characters

Symbol Meaning Example │ Used to separate alternatives a│b Means a or b ? Used to denote zero or one of the preceding element a? 0 or 1 as; matches with ‘’ & ‘a’

  • Used to denote zero or more of the preceding element a*

0 or more as; matches with ‘’, ‘a’, ‘aa’, etc. + Used to denote one or more of the preceding element a+ 1 or more as; matches with ‘a’, ‘aa”’etc. ( ) Used to group characters together, to indicate the scope of another operator (ab)* 0 or more abs; matches with ‘’, ‘ab’, ‘abab’, etc. [ ] Another way of denoting alternatives (instead of vertical bar). Defines a character class [ab] means a or b \ The escape character (this turns the metacharacter into an ordinary character) a\* the a character followed by the * character. Note: \ is needed as a* would mean zero or more as. ^ Used to indicate the negation of a character class

Also used to match the position before the first character in a string a[^bc] a followed by a character that is not a b or c ^abc will match with abc only if it is at the beginning of a string $ Used to match with the position after the last character in a string abc$ will match with abc only if it is at the end of a string . Matches with any single character a.a will match with any string that has an a followed by any character followed by an a e.g. ‘aca’, ‘aba’ - Used to specify a range of values in a character class [A-Z] character in the range of A to Z