Regex in R to extract words before a special character - r

I having a dataframe of part of speech tagged strings
Example:
best_JJS phone_NN only_RB issue_NN camera_NN sensor_NN have_VB mind_NN own_JJ
I want to remove the tags after/and the '_' so that I have the output
best phone only issue camera sensor have mind own
I am using R and I couldn't find an appropriate regex for the gsub function.
I tried this.
sentence= c("best_JJS phone_NN only_RB issue_NN camera_NN sensor_NN have_VB mind_NN own_JJ")
o1=gsub("\\_.*","",sentence, perl = T)
But This removes entire string after the first underscore. Thanks in Advance

You may use _[A-Z]+ TRE pattern with gsub:
sentence <- c("best_JJS phone_NN only_RB issue_NN camera_NN sensor_NN have_VB mind_NN own_JJ")
gsub("_[A-Z]+","",sentence)
[1] "best phone only issue camera sensor have mind own"
See the R demo
The _[A-Z]+ pattern matches an underscore (_, note it does not have to be escaped in a regex pattern) and one or more (+) uppercase ASCII letters ([A-Z]).
You may further precise the pattern, say, to only match the _ if it is preceded with a word char and match uppercase letters only when followed with a word boundary:
"\\B_[A-Z]+\\b
In case you want to create a very specific regex for the POS values, you may use alternation:
"\\B_(JJ|NN|CC|[VR]B)\\b"
And continue adding |<code> to the regex pattern.

Related

What is the regex pattern for extracting the substring to the left of four numbers attached to an uppercase word?

I have a string ARC GUNNA SPARKYA 2011QUARTER HORSE.
I'd like to extract only the ARC GUNNA SPARKYA part. I.e., everything to the left of the "2011QUARTER."
I will also have valid strings which I want the pattern NOT to match. Valid strings would be "10RUNS FAST" or "QUICKER 1".
Note that the above means I need a pattern which can explicitly pick up just any four numbers followed by the uppercase word "QUARTER."
I tried ([0-9A-Za-z]+( [0-9A-Za-z]+)+) but that pattern matches the part I want to keep too, so I can't use it to do something like gsub.
Can you please help me understand what regex pattern will accomplish this--particularly in R?
Thank you!
You could use sub with a capture group, and use that group in the replacement.
(.*?)\s+\d{4}QUARTER\b.*
Explanation
(.*?) Capture group 1, match any character, as few as possible
\s+ Match 1+ whitespace characters
\d{4}QUARTER\b Match 4 digits followed by the word QUARTER
.* Match the rest of the line
See a regex101 demo.
text <- "ARC GUNNA SPARKYA 2011QUARTER HORSE"
result = sub("(.*?)\\s+\\d{4}QUARTER\\b.*", "\\1", text)
result
Output
[1] "ARC GUNNA SPARKYA"

How do I add a space between two characters using regex in R?

I want to add a space between two punctuation characters (+ and -).
I have this code:
s <- "-+"
str_replace(s, "([:punct:])([:punct:])", "\\1\\s\\2")
It does not work.
May I have some help?
There are several issues here:
[:punct:] pattern in an ICU regex flavor does not match math symbols (\p{S}), it only matches punctuation proper (\p{P}), if you still want to match all of them, combine the two classes, [\p{P}\p{S}]
"\\1\\s\\2" replacement contains a \s regex escape sequence, and these are not supported in the replacement patterns, you need to use a literal space
str_replace only replaces one, first occurrence, use str_replace_all to handle all matches
Even if you use all the above suggestions, it still won't work for strings like -+?/. You need to make the second part of the regex a zero-width assertion, a positive lookahead, in order not to consume the second punctuation.
So, you can use
library(stringr)
s <- "-+?="
str_replace_all(s, "([\\p{P}\\p{S}])(?=[\\p{P}\\p{S}])", "\\1 ")
str_replace_all(s, "(?<=[\\p{P}\\p{S}])(?=[\\p{P}\\p{S}])", " ")
gsub("(?<=[[:punct:]])(?=[[:punct:]])", " ", s, perl=TRUE)
See the R demo online, all three lines yield [1] "- + ? =" output.
Note that in PCRE regex flavor (used with gsub and per=TRUE) the POSIX character class must be put inside a bracket expression, hence the use of double brackets in [[:punct:]].
Also, (?<=[[:punct:]]) is a positive lookbehind that checks for the presence of its pattern immediately on the left, and since it is non-consuming there is no need of any backreference in the replacement.

REGEX pattern match in R for Course number

I need to identify matching course number that have xx.3xxxxxx.
These are some examples of the course numbers.
26.3730004
27.0210000
26.3730009
26.7114001
23.9610071
26.0A34430
23.3670005
26.0B05430
I tried many patterns one example I used is the pattern below. It did not get any match.
"[^0-9]{2}\Q.\E3[^0-9]+$"
I tried using grep and grepl. I actually need the code to return indexes.
This code shows my attempt to tag the rows that have matches.
Teacher$virtual[
which(
grepl("[^0-9]{2}\\Q.\\E3[^0-9]+$",Teacher$CourseNumber))]
<- "1"
I need to remove any row from my dataframe that have the course number with that pattern. XX.3XXXXXX
But, my code did not find any match. Can you please help me?
You should use
grepl("^[0-9]{2}\\.3", Teacher$CourseNumber)
See the regex graph:
Details:
^ - start of a string
[0-9]{2} - two digits
\\. - a dot (note that a regex escape is a literal backslash, but inside a string literal, "...", a single backslash is used to form string escape sequences, hence the backslash must be double to obtain a literal backslash char necessary for a regex escape)
3 - a 3 char.
NOTE: If you want to use in-pattern quoting with \Q and \E (in between which all chars are treated literally) you need to use PCRE regex, add perl=TRUE and use
grepl("^[0-9]{2}\\Q.\\E3", Teacher$CourseNumber, perl=TRUE)
Now, the dot is treated as a literal dot, not a . metacharacter that matches any char but a line break char (in a PCRE regex, . does not match line break chars by default).
Here, this simple expression would likely cover that:
^[0-9]{2}\.[3].+$
which has a [3] boundary right after the .. It would probably work without start and end anchors:
[0-9]{2}\.[3].+
Demo
We can add or reduce the boundaries, if it'd be necessary.

R - replace last instance of a regex match and everything afterwards

I'm trying to use a regex to replace the last instance of a phrase (and everything after that phrase, which could be any character):
stringi::stri_replace_last_regex("_AB:C-_ABCDEF_ABC:45_ABC:454:", "_ABC.*$", "CBA")
However, I can't seem to get the refex to function properly:
Input: "_AB:C-_ABCDEF_ABC:45_ABC:454:"
Actual output: "_AB:C-CBA"
Desired output: "_AB:C-_ABCDEF_ABC:45_CBA"
I have tried gsub() as well but that hasn't worked.
Any ideas where I'm going wrong?
One solution is:
sub("(.*)_ABC.*", "\\1_CBA", Input)
[1] "_AB:C-_ABCDEF_ABC:45_CBA"
Have a look at what stringi::stri_replace_last_regex does:
Replaces with the given replacement string last substring of the input that matches a regular expression
What does your _ABC.*$ pattern match inside _AB:C-_ABCDEF_ABC:45_ABC:454:? It matches the first _ABC (that is right after C-) and all the text after to the end of the line (.*$ grabs 0+ chars other than line break chars to the end of the line). Hence, you only have 1 match, and it is the last.
Solutions can be many:
1) Capturing all text before the last occurrence of the pattern and insert the captured value with a replacement backreference (this pattern does not have to be anchored at the end of the string with $):
sub("(.*)_ABC.*", "\\1_CBA","_AB:C-_ABCDEF_ABC:45_ABC:454:")
2) Using a tempered greedy token to make sure you only match any char that does not start your pattern up to the end of the string after matching it (this pattern must be anchored at the end of the string with $):
sub("(?s)_ABC(?:(?!_ABC).)*$", "_CBA","_AB:C-_ABCDEF_ABC:45_ABC:454:", perl=TRUE)
Note that this pattern will require perl=TRUE argument to be parsed with a PCRE engine with sub (or you may use stringr::str_replace that is ICU regex library powered and supports lookaheads)
3) A negative lookahead may be used to make sure your pattern does not appear anywhere to the right of your pattern (this pattern does not have to be anchored at the end of the string with $):
sub("(?s)_ABC(?!.*_ABC).*", "_CBA","_AB:C-_ABCDEF_ABC:45_ABC:454:", perl=TRUE)
See the R demo online, all these three lines of code returning _AB:C-_ABCDEF_ABC:45_CBA.
Note that (?s) in the PCRE patterns is necessary in case your strings may contain a newline (and . in a PCRE pattern does not match newline chars by default).
Arguably the safest thing to do is using a negative lookahead to find the last occurrence:
_ABC(?:(?!_ABC).)+$
Demo
gsub("_ABC(?:(?!_ABC).)+$", "_CBA","_AB:C-_ABCDEF_ABC:45_ABC:454:", perl=TRUE)
[1] "_AB:C-_ABCDEF_ABC:45_CBA"
Using gsub and back referencing
gsub("(.*)ABC.*$", "\\1CBA","_AB:C-_ABCDEF_ABC:45_ABC:454:")
[1] "_AB:C-_ABCDEF_ABC:45_CBA"

sub command to extract data and split data frame column [duplicate]

Simple regex question. I have a string on the following format:
this is a [sample] string with [some] special words. [another one]
What is the regular expression to extract the words within the square brackets, ie.
sample
some
another one
Note: In my use case, brackets cannot be nested.
You can use the following regex globally:
\[(.*?)\]
Explanation:
\[ : [ is a meta char and needs to be escaped if you want to match it literally.
(.*?) : match everything in a non-greedy way and capture it.
\] : ] is a meta char and needs to be escaped if you want to match it literally.
(?<=\[).+?(?=\])
Will capture content without brackets
(?<=\[) - positive lookbehind for [
.*? - non greedy match for the content
(?=\]) - positive lookahead for ]
EDIT: for nested brackets the below regex should work:
(\[(?:\[??[^\[]*?\]))
This should work out ok:
\[([^]]+)\]
Can brackets be nested?
If not: \[([^]]+)\] matches one item, including square brackets. Backreference \1 will contain the item to be match. If your regex flavor supports lookaround, use
(?<=\[)[^]]+(?=\])
This will only match the item inside brackets.
To match a substring between the first [ and last ], you may use
\[.*\] # Including open/close brackets
\[(.*)\] # Excluding open/close brackets (using a capturing group)
(?<=\[).*(?=\]) # Excluding open/close brackets (using lookarounds)
See a regex demo and a regex demo #2.
Use the following expressions to match strings between the closest square brackets:
Including the brackets:
\[[^][]*] - PCRE, Python re/regex, .NET, Golang, POSIX (grep, sed, bash)
\[[^\][]*] - ECMAScript (JavaScript, C++ std::regex, VBA RegExp)
\[[^\]\[]*] - Java, ICU regex
\[[^\]\[]*\] - Onigmo (Ruby, requires escaping of brackets everywhere)
Excluding the brackets:
(?<=\[)[^][]*(?=]) - PCRE, Python re/regex, .NET (C#, etc.), JGSoft Software
\[([^][]*)] - Bash, Golang - capture the contents between the square brackets with a pair of unescaped parentheses, also see below
\[([^\][]*)] - JavaScript, C++ std::regex, VBA RegExp
(?<=\[)[^\]\[]*(?=]) - Java regex, ICU (R stringr)
(?<=\[)[^\]\[]*(?=\]) - Onigmo (Ruby, requires escaping of brackets everywhere)
NOTE: * matches 0 or more characters, use + to match 1 or more to avoid empty string matches in the resulting list/array.
Whenever both lookaround support is available, the above solutions rely on them to exclude the leading/trailing open/close bracket. Otherwise, rely on capturing groups (links to most common solutions in some languages have been provided).
If you need to match nested parentheses, you may see the solutions in the Regular expression to match balanced parentheses thread and replace the round brackets with the square ones to get the necessary functionality. You should use capturing groups to access the contents with open/close bracket excluded:
\[((?:[^][]++|(?R))*)] - PHP PCRE
\[((?>[^][]+|(?<o>)\[|(?<-o>]))*)] - .NET demo
\[(?:[^\]\[]++|(\g<0>))*\] - Onigmo (Ruby) demo
If you do not want to include the brackets in the match, here's the regex: (?<=\[).*?(?=\])
Let's break it down
The . matches any character except for line terminators. The ?= is a positive lookahead. A positive lookahead finds a string when a certain string comes after it. The ?<= is a positive lookbehind. A positive lookbehind finds a string when a certain string precedes it. To quote this,
Look ahead positive (?=)
Find expression A where expression B follows:
A(?=B)
Look behind positive (?<=)
Find expression A where expression B
precedes:
(?<=B)A
The Alternative
If your regex engine does not support lookaheads and lookbehinds, then you can use the regex \[(.*?)\] to capture the innards of the brackets in a group and then you can manipulate the group as necessary.
How does this regex work?
The parentheses capture the characters in a group. The .*? gets all of the characters between the brackets (except for line terminators, unless you have the s flag enabled) in a way that is not greedy.
Just in case, you might have had unbalanced brackets, you can likely design some expression with recursion similar to,
\[(([^\]\[]+)|(?R))*+\]
which of course, it would relate to the language or RegEx engine that you might be using.
RegEx Demo 1
Other than that,
\[([^\]\[\r\n]*)\]
RegEx Demo 2
or,
(?<=\[)[^\]\[\r\n]*(?=\])
RegEx Demo 3
are good options to explore.
If you wish to simplify/modify/explore the expression, it's been explained on the top right panel of regex101.com. If you'd like, you can also watch in this link, how it would match against some sample inputs.
RegEx Circuit
jex.im visualizes regular expressions:
Test
const regex = /\[([^\]\[\r\n]*)\]/gm;
const str = `This is a [sample] string with [some] special words. [another one]
This is a [sample string with [some special words. [another one
This is a [sample[sample]] string with [[some][some]] special words. [[another one]]`;
let m;
while ((m = regex.exec(str)) !== null) {
// This is necessary to avoid infinite loops with zero-width matches
if (m.index === regex.lastIndex) {
regex.lastIndex++;
}
// The result can be accessed through the `m`-variable.
m.forEach((match, groupIndex) => {
console.log(`Found match, group ${groupIndex}: ${match}`);
});
}
Source
Regular expression to match balanced parentheses
(?<=\[).*?(?=\]) works good as per explanation given above. Here's a Python example:
import re
str = "Pagination.go('formPagination_bottom',2,'Page',true,'1',null,'2013')"
re.search('(?<=\[).*?(?=\])', str).group()
"'formPagination_bottom',2,'Page',true,'1',null,'2013'"
The #Tim Pietzcker's answer here
(?<=\[)[^]]+(?=\])
is almost the one I've been looking for. But there is one issue that some legacy browsers can fail on positive lookbehind.
So I had to made my day by myself :). I manged to write this:
/([^[]+(?=]))/g
Maybe it will help someone.
console.log("this is a [sample] string with [some] special words. [another one]".match(/([^[]+(?=]))/g));
if you want fillter only small alphabet letter between square bracket a-z
(\[[a-z]*\])
if you want small and caps letter a-zA-Z
(\[[a-zA-Z]*\])
if you want small caps and number letter a-zA-Z0-9
(\[[a-zA-Z0-9]*\])
if you want everything between square bracket
if you want text , number and symbols
(\[.*\])
This code will extract the content between square brackets and parentheses
(?:(?<=\().+?(?=\))|(?<=\[).+?(?=\]))
(?: non capturing group
(?<=\().+?(?=\)) positive lookbehind and lookahead to extract the text between parentheses
| or
(?<=\[).+?(?=\]) positive lookbehind and lookahead to extract the text between square brackets
In R, try:
x <- 'foo[bar]baz'
str_replace(x, ".*?\\[(.*?)\\].*", "\\1")
[1] "bar"
([[][a-z \s]+[]])
Above should work given the following explaination
characters within square brackets[] defines characte class which means pattern should match atleast one charcater mentioned within square brackets
\s specifies a space
 + means atleast one of the character mentioned previously to +.
I needed including newlines and including the brackets
\[[\s\S]+\]
If someone wants to match and select a string containing one or more dots inside square brackets like "[fu.bar]" use the following:
(?<=\[)(\w+\.\w+.*?)(?=\])
Regex Tester

Resources