I am converting Java code to C# and need to replace the use of Java's regex. A typical use is
import java.util.regex.Matcher;
import java开发者_Python百科.util.regex.Pattern;
//...
String myString = "B12";
Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile("[A-Za-z](\\d+)");
Matcher matcher = Pattern.matcher(myString);
String serial = (matcher.matches()) ? matcher.group(1) : null;
which should extract a capture group from a matched target string. I'd be grateful for simple examples.
EDIT: I have now added the C# equivalent of the code as an answer.
EDIT: Here is a tutorial on the use of the actual expressions.
EDIT: Here is a useful comparison of C# and Java (and Perl.)
System.Text.RegularExpressions.Regex
class is the .NET Framework equivalent. The MSDN page I linked to contains a simple example.
I created the C# equivalent of the Java code in the question as:
string myString = "B12";
Regex rx = new Regex(@"[A-Za-z](\\d+)");
MatchCollection matches = rx.Matches(myString);
if (matches.Count > 0)
{
Match match = matches[0]; // only one match in this case
GroupCollection groupCollection = match.Groups;
Console.WriteLine("serial " + groupCollection[1].ToString());
}
EDIT (See @Mehrdad's helpful comments)
The original code was:
// ...
MatchCollection matches = rx.Matches(myString);
foreach (Match match in matches)
{
GroupCollection groupCollection = match.Groups;
Console.WriteLine("serial " + groupCollection[1].ToString());
}
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