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11:50
194 hours later...
\d+ hours? later...
∞ hours later...
nice :)
in php that's INF
never saw it actually in a real use case
is -∞ + ∞ = 0?
11:57
NO !
mathematically no
in php, no idea
and to be frank, i don't know what should that equal to
algebraically it should right?
no!!!
x = ∞ where -x + x = 0
INF can be say 10e9111 (too large number to represent) but also 10e9222
that's x=inf, y=-inf, y+x=?
12:00
think of INF as a very large unknown number
nono, that's crap
@kaᵠ I know it is, it has freaking musical symbols =oP
lol, didn't read furter :)))
there you go: 3v4l.org/oDSZ9
kinda what was to \be expected
@crypticツ can this be true: X!=X
no, because it would have to be X!=X!
well... that actually can be true without modifying it
is that X factorial?
12:14
yup :D
or X does not equal X
math is factorial, programming not equal, but math now
12:43
@kaᵠ
Hello
@Nina you need some help ?
@HamZaDzCyberDeV Yes in regex
^\+(?:[0-9]??){6,14}[0-9]$ - International Telephone Number ---- [\+]\d{2}[(]\d{2}[)]\d{4}[\-]\d{4} - Mobile Number
Will it work without any issues?
I don't know, but I may suggest some improvements
first of all, characters that are in [] doesn't need to be escaped, one exception may be " - "
That double "??" I dont know what you mean with that
second: in telephone number + is an abreviation or equals double 0, so one may use 00 instead of +, we need to match them both
Third: In the first regex you may use \d instead of [0-9] (it's shorter)
@Nina
12:58
@HamZaDzCyberDeV Thank you for the detailed explanation.. As I am pretty new, I just copied this from net and found it working... kinda... I will try it without escaping []
How could I check for 00??
The first one will be:
^(\+|00)(?:\d??){6,14}\d$
The second one:
(\+|00)\d{2}\(\d{2}\)\d{4}\-\d{4}
If you specify exactly how you expect the numbers to be, I might help you make a regex from scratch
also take a look at some questions on SO
@Nina
again no-idea what '??' means ...
@HamZaDzCyberDeV I have no idea on regex itself...:-/
13:18
hi hamza, nina
@Nina you can learn here: regular-expressions.info
hello
Yeah it isn't that difficult, I didn't know anything about regex and learnt it quite easily, stackoverflow was my training ground :D
user652649
14:04
the new feed items popup is very annoying
@Wes I don't like it because it's too late ...
when you click a link you'll find that the most of the times it's already answered and sometimes even accepted
user652649
that's so Web 1.0
lol
they are checkable at least
most of the times if the question is bad, it already comes up as [closed] :)
@kaᵠ I noticed that JavaScript doesn't support lookbehind assertion
yeah, a shame :(
14:18
well the work around should be
[^a]b
instead of (?<!a)b
14:28
@HamZaDzCyberDeV well yea.. for one character, but it will be captured/matched
@kaᵠ Where should I ask for auto-format tips?
@Nina what do you want to do?
@HamZaDzCyberDeV Thats cool... I would try to learn... But it looks scary..
looks scary for starters, then you get used to it
hieroglyphic :P
@kaᵠ the same.. auto format phone field with proper (,),-
@kaᵠ I wish it becomes easy for me too :)
14:31
@Nina well.. regex would be the way to go
@kaᵠ again :-/
@Nina what language are you using regex in?
I am learning phone gap html+css+js
@Nina first.. strip any nondigit character from the phone number, then format it the way you want it
so Javascript
Yes JS
14:33
or JS :P
:P
Everyone says these are the easiest.. but i find them too hard :-/
I prefere PHP over JS, but they are 2 different worlds :p
@Nina There is a problem though, I think that every country has it's own number format
yeah :)
@HamZaDzCyberDeV No standard format?
Just an example, in algeria mobile phone numbers were 9 digits, and later on it became 10 digits. that's just one example for one country ...
14:38
something like this:regex101.com/r/pN0fS0 which keeps the +
Too bad... how would I validate then?
or basic: regex101.com/r/zV4iW3 that removed that too
Well why do you care about validation ?
Shouldn't I be bothering?
The problem is if you make it too strict you will make some clients unhappy
and if you make it too loose, then you will certainly find some people who don't give numbers
14:40
@Nina and then... use this: regex101.com/r/iT8sY1 works on both types leading + or not, so you can use the simple one for starters
I would think to go in between
1- Check if there is 00 or + (and make it optional), I mean if I visite a french website and I live in france then I wouldn't start my number with the country number
and if someone really wants to input an invalid number he will eventually do that
Fine I will just check for numbers.. Would that help? :-/
Being a started, I can't go beyond my limits :-/
2- check for numbers,
3- check for parenthesis (optional)
4- check for "-", make it optional.
check if "--"arent repeated, or ((( ...
Well the easiest of all, is to get all digits and save it like 0123456789878
And do a little check, I mean you don't expect a length of 6 :p
i'd still go with the replace first, then check the way you want (need), check restrictions also, the output in your preffered format
14:43
morning
Well that's just my opinion
@NikiC hello !
Lol... It looks more than scary now :P I will learn it eventually :)
for example (valid numbers could only start with 2X 3X or 71/72/78)
morning @NikiC
@Nina regex is a powerful tool !
power to the people => regex to the people :P
14:45
@HamZaDzCyberDeV What you think about this english.stackexchange.com/questions/29009/…
@Nina some numbers are 'cool' if written a bit differently: +1 (555) 66.77.88.9
or: +1 (555) 99-12345
@kaᵠ US Formatting?
morning @BenjaminGruenbaum
14:47
I don't even have to read it, I see a lot of "US" words, if your audience is from the USA, then you may follow it ... @Nina
@HamZaDzCyberDeV @kaᵠ I will just accept the numbers then.. I will provide a hint to enter numbers only.. Will that be fine?
Interesting regex related question I answered today
2
A: regex string capturing javascript

Benjamin GruenbaumHere is a working fiddle http://jsfiddle.net/e8tMb/ (If you're interested in an example that supports nested parenthesis I added one on the bottom of this answer) This implementation is not pure RegEx, however, it is very understandable in my opinion. It loops through the string and does exactl...

@Nina i wouldn't restrict customers so much
@BenjaminGruenbaum you're totally against regex it seems :)
14:50
@kaᵠ but it feels good for me :-/
@kaᵠ You say that yet I use regex in my answer :P
lol
@BenjaminGruenbaum sorry, for a split :P
@BenjaminGruenbaum where's the regex part xD
@kaᵠ Tokenize with regex, parse yourself. It's easier
Here var tokens = str.split(/( |\(|\))/g);
easier to read, indeed
14:52
I split by a regex ("(",")"," ")
@Nina whatever you want, just bear in mind that there are clients who don't read, clients who don't think, clients who are hasty etc...
^ that
@HamZaDzCyberDeV what could i do for that...
@kaᵠ regexes are good IMO
same here
and pretty fast !!!
14:56
ok guys I'm off
bye
20 mins ago, by ka ᵠ
or basic: http://www.regex101.com/r/zV4iW3 that removed that too
then check length to be X digits
then check for restrains
save the way you want
output like:
19 mins ago, by ka ᵠ
@Nina and then... use this: http://www.regex101.com/r/iT8sY1 works on both types leading + or not, so you can use the simple one for starters
 
1 hour later…
16:15
"AssignCrt()"
" AssignCrt(aaa) "
" AssignCrt(aaa, aaa000) "
" AssignCrt(aaa , aaa000 , .... ) "
I want to write a regex for this
1 message moved from C#
4 messages moved from C#
hello
what do you need to match/capture @MRS1367 ?
Hi @kaᵠ
I want to write a RegEx for a function (AssignCrt)
@"(\b|^)AssignCrt( )*(( )*((([A-Za-z]+[0-9_]*)*)?()*|([A-Za-z]+[0-9_]*)*()*(,()*[A-Za-z]+[0-9_]*)*)(\b|$)"
16:20
ok
I write this
what's allowed there?
1
many spaces
2
AssignCrt
3 -> like 1
4 (
5 -> like 1
and what can be inside?
6 )
inside is optional
like overload methods
some parameters
with no parameter, 1 or more
rules for parameters
1 start with letters
2 can include numbers and _
for more than one parameter
must exist , before next parameter
16:25
what's a parameter?
and many spaces can exist before and after parameters or , or ) or (
and what's wrong with your expr?
for use function
u can pass some parameters to it
numeric parameters
or
example(s) please
name of a variable
like
" AssignCrt(aaa) "
AssignCrt()
" AssignCrt(aaa, aaa000_) "
" AssignCrt ( , 22333, 555.555, aaa , aaa000 , .... ) "
16:28
ok.. let me try to build that for you
I write this
@"(\b|^)AssignCrt( )*(( )*((([A-Za-z]+[0-9_]*)*)?()*|([A-Za-z]+[0-9_]*)*()*(,()*[A-Za-z]+[0-9_]*)*)(\b|$)"
what's wrong with it?
it's not work correctly
not matchs with my example strings
1 question?
can I use for one or more space character from ''*
?
I use from ( )* for this
16:32
` *`
no need for the parens
spaceCharacter*
yes?
yes
@MRS1367 what do you say about this? regex101.com/r/wC5vS7
amazing!!!
cleaner, simpler
you might want to include more chars in those char classes
or even regex101.com/r/oW9oB6 @MRS1367 and use the i modifier for case insensitive
16:40
you're welcome
this code works for all of 'em!!!
lol, of course
quickly
I love this site
good for learning
I know regex but not like this site (regex101.com)!!!
:-B
:-SS
16:45
@MRS1367 there are a bunch of resources pinned here ----->
and in the room's description /---------->
I see 'em
btw
tnx alot mate
16:47
you're welcome dude
 
1 hour later…
18:15
 
1 hour later…
19:21
@kaᵠ
for match all character
I must use [^]
?
just a dot
simple dot
. with s modifier
don't think he needs newlines too:P
19:22
.\s
yes?
you need to match newlines also?
\r and \n ?
yes
all characters
well.. you could use this class [\s\S] also
means any space character and any non-space character, effectively adding to any character
or use the dot and the s modifier
tnx mate
(?<=\s|^)AssignCrt ( *(((\d*|[A-Za-z]+[A-Za-z0-9_]){0,1})|(\d*|[A-Za-z]+[A-Za-z0-9_]*) (, *(\d*|[A-Za-z]+[A-Za-z0-9_]))*) *)(?=\s|$)
wtf is that?
didn't you get rid of it @MRS1367 ?
19:31
I want this expression not be in (* *)
in what?
what can I do with regex?
manipulate text?
plz see my example
(*
my expression
*)
my expression shouldn't never be between (* and *)
@MRS1367 i'm not following you...
so you're not using the one i wrote earlier ?
19:35
the expression isn't important
u imagine a simple expression for solve it
like
(?<=\s|^)[-+]?\d+(?=\s|$)
this expression shouldn't never be between (* and *)
but there's no * in that
not important
still don't get what you want to explain
19:37
u think that
I want to found expressions that not between (* *)
expression like
"[\s\S]*"
an string
sorry dude, i really don't understand, might help to give some examples, text to match and expected output
write up a question on stackoverflow and paste the link here
sry for my bad english mate
(?<=\s|^)\(\*[-+]?\d+\*\)(?=\s|$)
this means
like (*12*)
ok?
\([^)]+\) ?
19:44
U know the Pascal programming?
we writes comments between (* *) in the Pascal programming
@kaᵠ -> r u there?
hehe
forgot about that
ok i think i get it now
I want to found is an expression between comment signs or not?
but I don't want to add (* and *) signs into my regex expression
I think I must check this with an If condition
lol
why?
use their hex value
19:54
for example
a comment can start from line 2
and end in the line 40
what's hex for 42 ?
and for 40 and 41 ?
do u ask me?
28,29,2a
there you go
btw @MRS1367 what language are you using regex in?
19:57
C#
this is a good regex and simple
great
it's good but with this regex
I can't found my expression is between a comment or not
no idea what you mean
w8
i'm sry
ur regex is correct
i make a mistake
tnx for ur regex code
if this code found something means my code is between comments
and if not found anything means my code isn't a comment
:)
tnx alot again buddy
20:19
k, welcome
what's the meaning of 'k'?
k = ok?
yes :)
so, u typed wrong...
;)
@kaᵠ -> where r u from?
from europe
so ur country is...
20:36
@kaᵠ what does @kaᵠ mean?
Hi @crypticツ
@crypticツ it means life...
@kaᵠ in what lang?
@crypticツ well.. it's actually from egyptian mythology
@crypticツ do you write cryptic code ? :P
20:43
@kaᵠ no, I'm just mysterious O_0
I want to write a regex that
...matches something?
some part of it isn't case-sensitive
like char
I know I can write this
lol @crypticツ
[Cc][Hh][Aa][Rr]
20:46
@MRS1367 (?i)
look it up
but I want to know is there a better way?
yes ^^^
have to run for a bit
tnx again @kaᵠ

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