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10:58
Test your skills: regex.alf.nu (I hope it havent been posted before xD)
8
@mirabilos @Enissay thanks for the input
 
4 hours later…
14:58
@Enissay Got a score of 3309
hello
anyone there??
@ChandraSekar ping
sir i am working on a project in which i need to apply regex pattern for firstname and address
so can u help me???
i need to apply regex for the following sample like
@ChandraSekar What are the requirements ?
I will tell u the formats
Chandru K
chandru k
chandru.k
15:07
Also this might be a good reading
Chandru.K
K.Chandru
K Chandru
i need to apply regex in order to suits all those cases as mentioned above
@ChandraSekar Are there letters like é è or even japanese/chinese ?
no its english
purely english. Its for indian names
Is ChaNdru.K ok ?
yes no probs
15:09
And
C.K ?
but it should satisfies all the cases like allowing one only space for the example Chandru K
it should not allow more than one space
What language are you using ?
Spaces can even replaced by .
android
C.k is also fine
letters doesnt matter
it can even me one or more
actually i am applying regex pattern for OCR result
u there sir???
please help me
So java ...
You might try
/^[a-z]+[ .][a-z]+$/i
See it working on http://regex101.com/r/hF4aS0
thanks let me check and let u know
thanks it works. but its not working for upper case letters
15:16
@ChandraSekar Show me the code you're using
no actually the code which was given by you now
its working for lower case letters
You need to use the "i" modifier to match case insensitive
just now checked with rubular.com
Yeah well add an "i" in the second case
@Enissay Nice. I just got 3456
brb
15:19
oh thanks it works
also for designations and address do u have any ideas
??
Chandru K Android developer, Indian manundroid Company Mob:9800293984 Ph:0442245987 No:50/98 agatstheswar nag, chennai, India, chennai-600074
i will be getting output like this
from that i need to apply regex for each seperate fields and should store in contacts.
i am done with email, website, Mob
now u helped me for Chandru K
thank u so much
if possible please help me for addresses and designation
@ChandraSekar what is "address and designation" ? I'm not from India, so it's not "trivial" :)
i need to apply for countries like US, UK and India
designations will be same right for all the countries..??
@ChandraSekar I don't know, it highly depends on the structure of the data you're getting
Sir also one doubt?? I found many regexes in the web.. its working fine if i try it in rubular but while applying those in my code its not working
is there any specific reason for it??
@ChandraSekar Yeah, because regexes are different depending on the language you're using. That's why I asked you the language you're using in the beginning. For example, in PCRE you could write "\s+" to match whitespaces, but in Java you most likely need to write "\\s+"
15:27
how to be in touch with u sir??? if i have any doubts wil you be supportind me
I am new to android and software.
i have done electrical engineering but working in software :-(
@ChandraSekar I'm almost always in this chatroom, just drop a message with "@HamZa" in it to ping me :)
@ChandraSekar So you're a developer not by choice or what ?
thank u so much.. i am interested in it. But dont how to learn right from the basics. Just now learning java and android side by side
*dont know
Because of my family situation i joined as a developer..:-(
@ChandraSekar Well there are tutorials everywhere, but be aware most of them teach you crap (or they are just outdated)
hmm ya u r right..
Reading books would be great, but you also need to practice and never give up
Also, you need to love programming <3
15:31
hmmm thank u sir.. Have to learn and should achieve something
If you want to learn regex, try http://regex.learncodethehardway.org/book/
It says "the hardway" but it isn't :P
for android and java???
@ChandraSekar euhm, I think PCRE but they are easily portable to java. If you want to start with regex for java, I found this one interesting vogella.com/articles/JavaRegularExpressions/article.html
rubular.com/r/FcTRmKpFHl. sir the regex given by u accepting more than one spaces
it should accept only one space
or special character
@ChandraSekar I forgot ^$ rubular.com/r/4C1QpEM9JC
15:38
oh fine thanks. It it should satisfies Chandru. K and K. Chandru means??
dot and then one space can also be allowed
@ChandraSekar what about space and then dot ?
only dot and space
u r a genious.
thank u so much.
which country u r from??
in PHP, Jul 29 at 10:51, by HamZa
@Mr.Alien @dragon112 I've got arabic blood, dutch and indonesian. I'm the mixed human being :D
16:19
@HamZa you're welcome ☻
(just wondering… any particular reason you pinned the perlre ones, but not the POSIX RE ones? perl/pcre are already linked in the room topic, POSIX aren't…)
16:52
@mirabilos :o separate messages
@HamZa ah ok, np then
i've not yet fully figured out this chat-thingy
/me normally uses IRC
it's quite confusing, e.g. is the time not always shown…
@mirabilos I used IRC just to download stuff via XDCC :P
I can't because DCC is IPv4-only ☻
mh. let me write the links into one message, so it's easier to pin
ok
Shall I presume that you don't have IPv4 or you just don't want to use it ?
mirbsd.org/man7/re_format is for POSIX RE (both BRE (as used by grep, sed and ed) and ERE as used by egrep); mirbsd.org/man1/perlre and mirbsd.org/man1/perlretut is for perl/pcre
I have got IPv4 only through NAT
so I prefer to use IPv6 for IRC, since that's a direct connection then
and the DCC protocol encodes the endpoint addresses as 32-bit decimal (IIRC) number
so that won't work
16:59
The pin/star system is a bit broken
Hmmm I see
I think you can just click another time to un-star the others
@mirabilos I get a message that it's too late
oh ok
meh whatever.
hope these links help someone
I sit in #ed in IRC too, that's why…
you wouldn't believe the people we get… “is this the encyclopedia dramatica room?” :D
hehe, this room is quite lonesome. There are 3 or 4 regulars ...
Euh, which server/channel are you in ?
freenode of course
17:04
lol at the "of course" part :)
hm @Enissay is that meitantei konan?
@HamZa is there any other? :Þ
yes it is =)
I just started the puzzle I posted... I cheated in some questions since the tips said so xD
@mirabilos rizon.net, that's the one I was using
some are really hard xD
it says “Type a regex in the box below.” but not what sort of regex…
I mean, even [joe/jupp](https://www.mirbsd.org/jupp.htm) (text editor) has regex, but the syntax is totally different
e.g. . matches . but \? matches any one char, etc.
eh, the link syntax is also broken here. why does it sometimes work and sometimes not…
17:07
@mirabilos It's javascript, well that's my guess. It doesn't support recursive regexes, lookbehinds
it never does
35
Q: Markdown in chat "room description"

MerlinGreetings guardians of the unicorns, I noticed that markdown links don't render as expected in the room info. It's only a small thing but thought I would bring it to your attention. UPDATE In response to comments: Raw URLs do link; however, the [description](url) syntax doesn't work

@mirabilos If you use "newline" in your message. Markdown (formatting script) won't work
@Jerry SO
@Jerry sometimes it does
@HamZa ah right
that was the first time I tried with newline
@HamZa ECMAscript makes sense, as it does it as-I-type
bold italic link code snippet
huh, so newline breaks it?
17:11
@Jerry If you use a newline markdown won't work. I don't know if this is explicit or just a bug
@Jerry apparently
hmm. I'm wondering what the things in 5. Abba have in common
Syntax: __bold__ *italic* [tag:tag] [meta-tag:metatag]
@mirabilos One of the difficult ones where I got only 129 points
easy to cheat in that tho…
^(foo|bar|baz)
so far, full points for me
which one was that @HamZa?
meh, annoying: ^U doesn't delete the entire input line but lets firecrap pop up the page source.
17:14
@Jerry "abba"
oh, I found that one pretty easy; it's the Power one that got me though ^^; got poor 77 on there
scored um 193 on abba
Well, with ECMAscript flavor there is not much to do I guess ...
I was hoping to use some recursion, or even conditionals, but ah well... made some of my answers get lower points
for the abba, I used negative lookahead and backrefs
"A man, A plan" we could have used recursive regexes to find such matches ...
meh, I see the schema behind Order, but I normally only do POSIX RE and don't know if this can be expressed in ECMAscript RE…
17:23
I kind of cheated on that one by matching and ignoring only what's there
so, if you have something else on that list, my regex might not work properly, even though it does on the provided words
with that 184 points!
@Jerry what's the pattern you used ? I used (.)(.)(.)?.?\3?\2\1$
/me looks them up
@HamZa yeah but anchor it
@mirabilos I only needed $, if I add ^ I'll lose 1 point
for which one is that @HamZa?
abba?
@Jerry no "A man, a plan"
17:27
187 for meh
oh, i've had a lower score on that one xD
I just did ^(.)(.)(.)(.)\4?\3?\2?\1?$
I guess yours better :)
I simply used ^(.)(.).*\2\1$
I got 558 for triples xD
eh! nice!
@Enissay nice
17:30
indeed
546 for me... but I had an aweful regex xD
triples im talking about
@Enissay Look at this "art" ^([0369]+(1[25])?)$|^(1[47](?!6)|3[1269]|[487][0174](?!86|78|41))|^9[05]
I've no idea what I've written lol
don't worry, I have an even worse regex for that one xD
@HamZa niceeee
Im at Glob now... moving slowly, all that thinking makes me hungry >.>
BTW, look at this regex101.com/r/pO3eF4... when you put all the expression between () it captures nothing... wth !!
i'm working on the triples now too…
17:35
@Enissay you need to change the backreference to \2
ow, I certainly have to take a break to eat xD
Glob done => 322... Dinner time xD
@HamZa That one was inspiring! ^([0369]+(1[25])?)$|^(1[47](?!6)|[38][^538]|4[^7]|7[14])|^9[05]
@Jerry nice, I'm working on improving glob
yea me too, just switched to it xD
I'm 334 right now =/
381
17:55
with some spaghetti regex, I got 373
sounds like a yummy regex =P
@Jerry ^(\w+) m.*s \1$|\w+\*(?!t|.*(bl|na)|.*r$)|\*v.*
mine's this one: ^(\*[e-v][^xot]|[b-dlrw][^ai]|[pm][^b])
that's terrible x_x
wuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuut
such regex would yield so many downvotes on SO xD
18:10
woah, got triples solved…
nice :)
489 for it
i'm probably missing some ecmascript re specifics to make it shorter…
oh, naw, probably not, it's more probably a generic multiple of 3 regex, and a shorter one will most likely be tailor made for the specific examples to match or not to match
indeed
the glob one is crazy. the asterisk doesn't even work like globs do, anyway…
that actually reminded me of one question on SO from some time ago... and the answer was really really long
18:22
^([0369]|[147][0369]*([147][0369]*[258][0369]*)*([147][0369]*[147]|[258])|[258][‌​0369]*([258][0369]*[147][0369]*)*([258][0369]*[258]|[147]))+$
like that
Plain strings (207)
Anchors (206)
Ranges (197)
Backrefs (200)
Abba (149)
A man, a plan (156)
Prime (239)
Four (181)
Order (186)
Triples (489)
Glob (373)
meh i lost interest
this is crazy
ok 202 for ranges
pcre…
167 for abba
164 for a man a plan
Plain strings (207)
Anchors (208)
Ranges (202)
Backrefs (201)
Abba (193)
A man, a plan (176)
Prime (267)
Four (199)
Order (184)
Triples (567)
Glob (381)
Balance (282)
Powers (77)
Long count (239)
Long count v2 (216)
3599 total
18:37
prime 248
hmpf.
oic @ anchors
:)
/Lost interest
eh, how do you get that many for a man a plan? i got 165 now, but…
@mirabilos ^(.)(.).*\2\1$
ow that's cheating ;)
18:42
that's @Enissay 's solution :P
Cheating is bad ^_^
.?(.)(.\1){3} gives me 197 for Four…
@mirabilos (.{3}).*\1 200 :P
@mirabilos You can drop the first .?
Plain strings (207)
Anchors (208)
Ranges (202)
Backrefs (201)
Abba (167)
A man, a plan (165)
Prime (248)
Four (199)
Order (186)
Triples (489)
Glob (373)

Powers (48)
oh well.
/me shrugs
enough toyed
i can't even read the last two…
18:57
I copy/pasted in notepad
to match: binary numbers from 0 to 32
to reject everything else
mhm “everything”…
just like the others :D
yea, gets you some points if you can find some shortcuts, but yea
i question why one would want to do some of these things with RE anyway
I guess it's just for the challenge
probably
18:59
there certainly are better ways for many of those
but i never liked things removed from reality
too academic for me
i consider myself a craftsman and even artist, when coding, not an academic
the divisible by three one was interesting though
that's a nice way of thinking about things :)
took me quite a bit to get the “correct” solution
Score 3451, closes the tab
19:36
-5749 points for the last one lol
My first positive score try at that one was to copy/paste the line to match as regex xD
oO
maybe that's the trick? :D
I edited it a bit afterwards to cut on the characters, otherwise, idk =/
Final Score 3370
there's a way I guess to improve some expressions, but im bored to do so xD
please post your last regex :>
mine is awefull
^0* 0*1 0010 0011 0100 0101 0110 01+ 10+ 1001 1010 101
not that much different xD
19:43
this is the last one ?
what about "suffusion of yellow"
I ignored it completely and it didn't bother me in return
wow, true... it made me crazy since it didnt accept my regex :/
Here's mine ^0..0 .0.. ..1. 0..1 .1.. ..0. 0..0 .1.1 ..0. 1..1 .0.. ..1
updated Score 3404
I just replaced some \s with space thanks to Jerry xD
yea, it costs you 1 point with each \s xD
It's amazing to see how others thinks to solve the same problem =)
20:31
what's this New feed items thing?
@mirabilos newest Regex questions on SO
ah ok
 
2 hours later…
22:50
73 is the best I get for powers… bit of cheat at the end, but: ^(xx?|(xxxx)\2?|(x{16})\3?|(x{64})+)$
oh wait 75 with ^(x|(xx){1,4}|(x{16})\3?|(x{64})+)$
more cheat…
this totally goes against what I normally do (find the correct RE not just the one that matches the strings given)
@mirabilos Are you still working on it :O I though you stopped a while ago ...
came back
now I only don't have "balance|
and I have one 'X' in order
but at 186pts that's fair
23:12
lol mirabilos... it will turn you crazy... once I finished, I couldnt even optimise what i did xD
It's just interesting to see how others solved it :)
meh got one X for balance but this is fair
Plain strings (207)
Anchors (208)
Ranges (202)
Backrefs (201)
Abba (167)
A man, a plan (165)
Prime (248)
Four (199)
Order (186)
Triples (489)
Glob (373)
Balance (162)
Powers (75)
Long count (216)
Long count v2 (219)

Score 3317
also got a perfect solution for balance but only 28 points due to length: ^(<(<(<(<(<(<(<>|)*>|<>|)*>|<(<>|)*>|<>|)*>|<(<(<>|)*>|<>|)*>|<(<>|)*>|<>|)*>|<(‌​<(<(<>|)*>|<>|)*>|<(<>|)*>|<>|)*>|<(<(<>|)*>|<>|)*>|<(<>|)*>|<>|)*>|<(<(<(<(<>|)*‌​>|<>|)*>|<(<>|)*>|<>|)*>|<(<(<>|)*>|<>|)*>|<(<>|)*>|<>|)*>|<(<(<(<>|)*>|<>|)*>|<(‌​<>|)*>|<>|)*>|<(<(<>|)*>|<>|)*>|<(<>|)*>|<>|)*>)*$
that one is awefull xD
mh. cobbled this together 'theoretically'.
worst than mine xD
^(?!.*<$)(<<<(?!>>><>|<<>>>>>|>>>><><|<<>>><>>>|<<<)|<<>>(?!>)|(<>)+$|<<><)
the imperfect one has one case less and one X
23:20
lol
ah well. i can't even see all the possible cases, it shortens them
<<<<<>>>><<<><... [30 chars]
so wtf am I supposed to know what to match here?
me neither... I worked only on the visible part and it worked :)
meh 178 now ;)
242 ;)
3397 in total is good enough for me, goodnight
23:42
oh fuu.

Plain strings (207)
Anchors (208)
Ranges (202)
Backrefs (201)
Abba (188)
A man, a plan (173)
Prime (251)
Four (199)
Order (191)
Triples (489)
Glob (373)
Balance (242)
Powers (75)
Long count (217)
Long count v2 (219)

Score 3435
now.
ok 192 for Order…

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