I need regular expression to match braces correct e.g for every open one close one
abc{abc{bc}xyz} I need it get all it from {abc{bc}xyz} not get {abc{bc} I tried this
({.*?})
I need help on regular expression on the condition (4) below:
Begin with a-z
End with a-z0-9
allow 3 special characters like ._-
The characters in (3) must be followed by alphanumeric characters, and it cannot be followed by any characters in (3) themselves.
Not sure how to do this. Any help is appreciated, with the sample and some explanations.
If I try:
Groups = students.Remove(f => f.StudentID.Equals(studentID));
I get an error on this line: f => f.StudentID.Equals(studentID)
I am having difficulty from my previous posts here linq deleted users still associated with groups and here Delete method in WCF
So I thought maybe I could delete the students contained within groups but I get an error Cannot convert lamda expression to type Student because it is not a delegate type.
I know this may be the simplest question ever asked on Stack Overflow, but what is the regular expression for a decimal with a precision of 2?
Valid examples:
123.12
2
56754
92929292929292.12
0.21
3.1
Invalid examples:
12.1232
2.23332
e666.76
Sorry for the lame question, but for the life of me I haven't been able to find anyone that can help!
The decimal place may be option, and that integers may also be included.
How can i rewrite the below SQL query to its equivalent LINQ 2 SQL expression (both in C# and VB.NET)
SELECT t1.itemnmbr, t1.locncode,t1.bin,t2.Total
FROM IV00200 t1 (NOLOCK)
INNER JOIN
IV00112 t2 (NOLOCK)
ON t1.itemnmbr = t2.itemnmbr
AND t1.bin = t2.bin
AND t1.bin = 'MU7I336A80'
What will be proper regular expression for git repositories?
example link:
[email protected]:someone/someproject.git
so it will be like
server can be url or ip
Project can contain some other characters than alphanumeric like '-'
I'm not sure what is the role of '/'
any suggestions?
What will be the regular expression in javascript to match a name field,
which allows only letters, apostrophes and hyphons?
so that jhon's avat-ar or Josh is valid?
Thanks
I am an amateur in JavaScript. I saw this other question, and it made me wonder.
Can you tell me what does the below regular expression exactly mean?
split(/\|(?=\w=>)/)
Does it split the string with "|"?
The string is stored in a parameter.
Say, @FiscalPeriod = "[Date].[Fiscal Dates].[Fiscal Quarter]"
Now,
I need to use the parameter as
SELECT Measures.[Revenue] ON 0,
CLOSINGPERIOD("Parameter Here") ON 1
FROM [Sales]
STRTOMEBER function gives error because it is looking for a member at the leaf left such as
[Date].[Fiscal Dates].[Fiscal Quarter].&[Q1 - 2009]
How can I resolve the string into the mdx expression to use it with closing period??
Here's my code. It compiles in VS2005 but not in gcc. Any ideas
template<class T>
Derived<T>::Derived(const Derived<T>& in)
{
Base<T>::Base<T>(in); //ERROR here
}
"expected primary-expression before token"
I need a regular expression to validate string with one or more of these characters:
a-z
A-Z
'
àòèéùì
simple white space
FOR EXAMPLE these string are valide:
D' argon calabrò
maryòn l' Ancol
these string are NOT valide:
hello38239
my_house
work [tab] with me
I tryed this:
re.match(r"^[a-zA-Z 'òàèéìù]+$", self.cleaned_data['title'].strip())
It seems to work in my python shell but in Django I get this error:
SyntaxError at /home/
("Non-ASCII character '\\xc3' ...
Why ?
Can someone give me the regular expression to match something like /this/is/the/path or /this/is/the/path/ and matches like:
$1=this
$2=is
$3=the
$4=path
([^/]+)/ matches one, but I'm not quite sure how to get it to repeat.
FYI: this is for a mod rewrite RewriteRule match.
Does anyone know of a regular expression for matching on a sequence of four numbers? I need a match on ascending (1234), descending (4321), or the same (1111).
Looking for some help with a Regular Expression to do the following:
Must be Alpha Char
Must be at least 1 Char
Must NOT be a specific value, e.g. != "Default"
Thanks for any help,
Dave
I am trying to build a regular expression in javascript that checks for 3 word characters however 2 of them are are optional. So I have:
/^\w\w\w/i
what I am stumped on is how to make it that the user does not have to enter the last two letters but if they do they have to be letters
I've been struggling to figure out how to best do this regular expression.
Here are my requirements:
Up to 8 characters
Can only be alphanumeric
Can only contain up to three alpha characters [a-z] (zero alpha characters are valid to)
Any ideas would be appreciated.
This is what I've got so far, but it only looks for contiguous letter characters:
^(\d|([A-Za-z])(?!([A-Za-z]{3,}))){0,8}$
I have dictionary like
d = {'user_id':1, 'user':'user1', 'group_id':3, 'group_name':'ordinary users'}
and "mapping" dictionary like:
m = {'user_id':'uid', 'group_id':'gid', 'group_name':'group'}
All i want to "replace" keys in first dictionary with keys from second (e.g. replace 'user_id' with 'uid', etc.)
I know that keys are immutable and i know how to do it with 'if/else' statement.
But maybe there is way to do it in one line expression?
I current have the following regular expression to accept any numeric value that is seven digits
^\d{7}
How do I improve it so it will accept numeric value that is seven or ten digits?
Pass: 0123456, 1234567, 0123456789, 123467890
Fail: 123456, 12345678, 123456789
I'm trying to convert a dictionery into a json object, so that I can work with it in my front end.
sortFields = <%= SchrodersHtmlHelper.ToJson(ViewData["SortInfo"])%>;
However, I keep on getting "Expected expression" for this all the time and I'm clueless why. Could anyone explain to me what I'm doing wrong?
Edit: The conversion works fine, but I still get this issue in the front end, causing the browser to complain about it.
I'm looking for a regular expression that can extract the href from this:
<a href="/tr/blog.php?post=3593&user=930">
There are hundreds of links on the page so I need to extract only those that contain
/tr/blog.php
So in the end I should be left with a list of links that start in /tr/blog
Thanks for any help. It's really puzzling me.
The input: we get some plain text as input string and we have to highlighight all urls there with {url
For some time i've used regex taken from http://flanders.co.nz/2009/11/08/a-good-url-regular-expression-repost/, which i modified several times, but it's built for another issue - to check whether the whole input string is an url or no.
So, what regex do you use in such issues?
Hi,
Does the following cron expression mean "execute every other Sunday?" (I'm trying to use it with the Spring Quartz scheduler)
0 0 3 ? * 2/1 *"
Thanks
Nick