Table of Contents for
Regular Expressions Cookbook, 2nd Edition

Version ebook / Retour

Cover image for bash Cookbook, 2nd Edition Regular Expressions Cookbook, 2nd Edition by Steven Levithan Published by O'Reilly Media, Inc., 2012
  1. Cover
  2. Regular Expressions Cookbook
  3. Preface
  4. Caught in the Snarls of Different Versions
  5. Intended Audience
  6. Technology Covered
  7. Organization of This Book
  8. Conventions Used in This Book
  9. Using Code Examples
  10. Safari® Books Online
  11. How to Contact Us
  12. Acknowledgments
  13. 1. Introduction to Regular Expressions
  14. Regular Expressions Defined
  15. Search and Replace with Regular Expressions
  16. Tools for Working with Regular Expressions
  17. 2. Basic Regular Expression Skills
  18. 2.1. Match Literal Text
  19. 2.2. Match Nonprintable Characters
  20. 2.3. Match One of Many Characters
  21. 2.4. Match Any Character
  22. 2.5. Match Something at the Start and/or the End of a Line
  23. 2.6. Match Whole Words
  24. 2.7. Unicode Code Points, Categories, Blocks, and Scripts
  25. 2.8. Match One of Several Alternatives
  26. 2.9. Group and Capture Parts of the Match
  27. 2.10. Match Previously Matched Text Again
  28. 2.11. Capture and Name Parts of the Match
  29. 2.12. Repeat Part of the Regex a Certain Number of Times
  30. 2.13. Choose Minimal or Maximal Repetition
  31. 2.14. Eliminate Needless Backtracking
  32. 2.15. Prevent Runaway Repetition
  33. 2.16. Test for a Match Without Adding It to the Overall Match
  34. 2.17. Match One of Two Alternatives Based on a Condition
  35. 2.18. Add Comments to a Regular Expression
  36. 2.19. Insert Literal Text into the Replacement Text
  37. 2.20. Insert the Regex Match into the Replacement Text
  38. 2.21. Insert Part of the Regex Match into the Replacement Text
  39. 2.22. Insert Match Context into the Replacement Text
  40. 3. Programming with Regular Expressions
  41. Programming Languages and Regex Flavors
  42. 3.1. Literal Regular Expressions in Source Code
  43. 3.2. Import the Regular Expression Library
  44. 3.3. Create Regular Expression Objects
  45. 3.4. Set Regular Expression Options
  46. 3.5. Test If a Match Can Be Found Within a Subject String
  47. 3.6. Test Whether a Regex Matches the Subject String Entirely
  48. 3.7. Retrieve the Matched Text
  49. 3.8. Determine the Position and Length of the Match
  50. 3.9. Retrieve Part of the Matched Text
  51. 3.10. Retrieve a List of All Matches
  52. 3.11. Iterate over All Matches
  53. 3.12. Validate Matches in Procedural Code
  54. 3.13. Find a Match Within Another Match
  55. 3.14. Replace All Matches
  56. 3.15. Replace Matches Reusing Parts of the Match
  57. 3.16. Replace Matches with Replacements Generated in Code
  58. 3.17. Replace All Matches Within the Matches of Another Regex
  59. 3.18. Replace All Matches Between the Matches of Another Regex
  60. 3.19. Split a String
  61. 3.20. Split a String, Keeping the Regex Matches
  62. 3.21. Search Line by Line
  63. Construct a Parser
  64. 4. Validation and Formatting
  65. 4.1. Validate Email Addresses
  66. 4.2. Validate and Format North American Phone Numbers
  67. 4.3. Validate International Phone Numbers
  68. 4.4. Validate Traditional Date Formats
  69. 4.5. Validate Traditional Date Formats, Excluding Invalid Dates
  70. 4.6. Validate Traditional Time Formats
  71. 4.7. Validate ISO 8601 Dates and Times
  72. 4.8. Limit Input to Alphanumeric Characters
  73. 4.9. Limit the Length of Text
  74. 4.10. Limit the Number of Lines in Text
  75. 4.11. Validate Affirmative Responses
  76. 4.12. Validate Social Security Numbers
  77. 4.13. Validate ISBNs
  78. 4.14. Validate ZIP Codes
  79. 4.15. Validate Canadian Postal Codes
  80. 4.16. Validate U.K. Postcodes
  81. 4.17. Find Addresses with Post Office Boxes
  82. 4.18. Reformat Names From “FirstName LastName” to “LastName, FirstName”
  83. 4.19. Validate Password Complexity
  84. 4.20. Validate Credit Card Numbers
  85. 4.21. European VAT Numbers
  86. 5. Words, Lines, and Special Characters
  87. 5.1. Find a Specific Word
  88. 5.2. Find Any of Multiple Words
  89. 5.3. Find Similar Words
  90. 5.4. Find All Except a Specific Word
  91. 5.5. Find Any Word Not Followed by a Specific Word
  92. 5.6. Find Any Word Not Preceded by a Specific Word
  93. 5.7. Find Words Near Each Other
  94. 5.8. Find Repeated Words
  95. 5.9. Remove Duplicate Lines
  96. 5.10. Match Complete Lines That Contain a Word
  97. 5.11. Match Complete Lines That Do Not Contain a Word
  98. 5.12. Trim Leading and Trailing Whitespace
  99. 5.13. Replace Repeated Whitespace with a Single Space
  100. 5.14. Escape Regular Expression Metacharacters
  101. 6. Numbers
  102. 6.1. Integer Numbers
  103. 6.2. Hexadecimal Numbers
  104. 6.3. Binary Numbers
  105. 6.4. Octal Numbers
  106. 6.5. Decimal Numbers
  107. 6.6. Strip Leading Zeros
  108. 6.7. Numbers Within a Certain Range
  109. 6.8. Hexadecimal Numbers Within a Certain Range
  110. 6.9. Integer Numbers with Separators
  111. 6.10. Floating-Point Numbers
  112. 6.11. Numbers with Thousand Separators
  113. 6.12. Add Thousand Separators to Numbers
  114. 6.13. Roman Numerals
  115. 7. Source Code and Log Files
  116. Keywords
  117. Identifiers
  118. Numeric Constants
  119. Operators
  120. Single-Line Comments
  121. Multiline Comments
  122. All Comments
  123. Strings
  124. Strings with Escapes
  125. Regex Literals
  126. Here Documents
  127. Common Log Format
  128. Combined Log Format
  129. Broken Links Reported in Web Logs
  130. 8. URLs, Paths, and Internet Addresses
  131. 8.1. Validating URLs
  132. 8.2. Finding URLs Within Full Text
  133. 8.3. Finding Quoted URLs in Full Text
  134. 8.4. Finding URLs with Parentheses in Full Text
  135. 8.5. Turn URLs into Links
  136. 8.6. Validating URNs
  137. 8.7. Validating Generic URLs
  138. 8.8. Extracting the Scheme from a URL
  139. 8.9. Extracting the User from a URL
  140. 8.10. Extracting the Host from a URL
  141. 8.11. Extracting the Port from a URL
  142. 8.12. Extracting the Path from a URL
  143. 8.13. Extracting the Query from a URL
  144. 8.14. Extracting the Fragment from a URL
  145. 8.15. Validating Domain Names
  146. 8.16. Matching IPv4 Addresses
  147. 8.17. Matching IPv6 Addresses
  148. 8.18. Validate Windows Paths
  149. 8.19. Split Windows Paths into Their Parts
  150. 8.20. Extract the Drive Letter from a Windows Path
  151. 8.21. Extract the Server and Share from a UNC Path
  152. 8.22. Extract the Folder from a Windows Path
  153. 8.23. Extract the Filename from a Windows Path
  154. 8.24. Extract the File Extension from a Windows Path
  155. 8.25. Strip Invalid Characters from Filenames
  156. 9. Markup and Data Formats
  157. Processing Markup and Data Formats with Regular Expressions
  158. 9.1. Find XML-Style Tags
  159. 9.2. Replace Tags with
  160. 9.3. Remove All XML-Style Tags Except and
  161. 9.4. Match XML Names
  162. 9.5. Convert Plain Text to HTML by Adding

    and
    Tags

  163. 9.6. Decode XML Entities
  164. 9.7. Find a Specific Attribute in XML-Style Tags
  165. 9.8. Add a cellspacing Attribute to Tags That Do Not Already Include It
  166. 9.9. Remove XML-Style Comments
  167. 9.10. Find Words Within XML-Style Comments
  168. 9.11. Change the Delimiter Used in CSV Files
  169. 9.12. Extract CSV Fields from a Specific Column
  170. 9.13. Match INI Section Headers
  171. 9.14. Match INI Section Blocks
  172. 9.15. Match INI Name-Value Pairs
  173. Index
  174. Index
  175. Index
  176. Index
  177. Index
  178. Index
  179. Index
  180. Index
  181. Index
  182. Index
  183. Index
  184. Index
  185. Index
  186. Index
  187. Index
  188. Index
  189. Index
  190. Index
  191. Index
  192. Index
  193. Index
  194. Index
  195. Index
  196. Index
  197. Index
  198. Index
  199. About the Authors
  200. Colophon
  201. Copyright
  202. 8.4. Finding URLs with Parentheses in Full Text

    Problem

    You want to find URLs in a larger body of text. URLs may or may not be enclosed in punctuation that is part of the larger body of text rather than part of the URL. You want to correctly match URLs that include pairs of parentheses as part of the URL, without matching parentheses placed around the entire URL.

    Solution

    \b(?:(?:https?|ftp|file)://|www\.|ftp\.)
      (?:\([-A-Z0-9+&@#/%=~_|$?!:,.]*\)|[-A-Z0-9+&@#/%=~_|$?!:,.])*
      (?:\([-A-Z0-9+&@#/%=~_|$?!:,.]*\)|[A-Z0-9+&@#/%=~_|$])
    Regex options: Free-spacing, case insensitive
    Regex flavors: .NET, Java, PCRE, Perl, Python, Ruby
    \b(?:(?:https?|ftp|file)://|www\.|ftp\.)(?:\([-A-Z0-9+&@#/%=~_|$?!:,.]*\)↵
    |[-A-Z0-9+&@#/%=~_|$?!:,.])*(?:\([-A-Z0-9+&@#/%=~_|$?!:,.]*\)|↵
    [A-Z0-9+&@#/%=~_|$])
    Regex options: Case insensitive
    Regex flavors: .NET, Java, JavaScript, PCRE, Perl, Python, Ruby

Discussion

Pretty much any character is valid in URLs, including parentheses. Parentheses are very rare in URLs, however, and that’s why we don’t include them in any of the regular expressions in the previous recipes. But certain important websites have started using them:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PC_Tools_(Central_Point_Software)
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa752574(VS.85).aspx

One solution is to require your users to quote such URLs. The other is to enhance your regex to accept such URLs. The hard part is how to determine whether a closing parenthesis is part of the URL or is used as punctuation around the URL, as in this example:

RegexBuddy's website (at http://www.regexbuddy.com) is really cool.

Since it’s possible for one of the parentheses to be adjacent to the URL while the other one isn’t, we can’t use the technique for quoting regexes from the previous recipe. The most straightforward solution is to allow parentheses in URLs only when they occur in unnested pairs of opening and closing parentheses. The Wikipedia and Microsoft URLs meet that requirement.

The two regular expressions in the solution are the same. The first uses free-spacing mode to make it a bit more readable.

These regular expressions are essentially the same as the last regex in the solution to Recipe 8.2. There are three parts to all these regexes: the list of schemes, followed by the body of the URL that uses the asterisk quantifier to allow URLs of any length, and the end of the URL, which has no quantifier (i.e., it must occur once). In the original regex in Recipe 8.2, both the body of the URL and the end of the URL consisted of just one character class.

The solutions to this recipe replace the two character classes with more elaborate things. The middle character class:

[-A-Z0-9+&@#/%=~_|$?!:,.]

has become:

\([-A-Z0-9+&@#/%=~_|$?!:,.]*\)|[-A-Z0-9+&@#/%=~_|$?!:,.]

The final character class:

[A-Z0-9+&@#/%=~_|$]

has become:

\([-A-Z0-9+&@#/%=~_|$?!:,.]*\)|[A-Z0-9+&@#/%=~_|$]

Both character classes were replaced with something involving alternation (Recipe 2.8). Because alternation has the lowest precedence of all regex operators, we use noncapturing groups (Recipe 2.9) to keep the two alternatives together.

For both character classes, we’ve added the alternative \([-A-Z0-9+&@#/%=~_|$?!:,.]*\) while leaving the original character class as the other alternative. The new alternative matches a pair of parentheses, with any number of any of the characters we allow in the URL in between.

The final character class was given the same alternative, allowing the URL to end with text between parentheses or with a single character that is not likely to be English-language punctuation.

Combined, this results in a regex that matches URLs with any number of parentheses, including URLs without parentheses and even URLs that consist of nothing but parentheses, and as long as those parentheses occur in pairs.

For the body of the URL, we put the asterisk quantifier around the whole noncapturing group. This allows any number of pairs of parentheses to occur in the URL. Because we have the asterisk around the noncapturing group, we no longer need an asterisk directly on the original character class. In fact, we must make sure not to include the asterisk.

The regex in the solution has the form (ab*c|d)* in the middle, where a and c are the literal parentheses, and b and d are character classes. Writing this as (ab*c|d*)* would be a mistake. It might seem logical at first, because we allow any number of the characters from d, but the outer * already repeats d just fine. If we add an inner asterisk directly on d, the complexity of the regular expression becomes exponential. (d*)* can match dddd in many ways. For example, the outer asterisk could repeat four times, repeating the inner asterisk once each time. The outer asterisk could repeat three times, with the inner asterisk doing 2-1-1, 1-2-1, or 1-1-2. The outer asterisk could repeat twice, with the inner asterisk doing 2-2, 1-3, or 3-1. You can imagine that as the length of the string grows, the number of combinations quickly explodes. We call this catastrophic backtracking, a term introduced in Recipe 2.15. This problem will arise when the regular expression cannot find a valid match (e.g., because you’ve appended something to the regex to find URLs that end with or contain something specific to your requirements).

See Also

Techniques used in the regular expressions in this recipe are discussed in Chapter 2. Recipe 2.1 explains which special characters need to be escaped. Recipe 2.3 explains character classes. Recipe 2.6 explains word boundaries. Recipe 2.8 explains alternation. Recipe 2.9 explains grouping. Recipe 2.12 explains repetition.

Recipe 8.5 gives a replacement text that you can use in combination with this regular expression to create a search-and-replace that converts URLs into HTML anchors.