RegexMatch (NoSQL query)
APPLIES TO: NoSQL
This function provides regular expression capabilities. Regular expressions are a concise and flexible notation for finding patterns of text.
Syntax
RegexMatch(<string_expr_1>, <string_expr_2>, [, <string_expr_3>])
Arguments
Description | |
---|---|
string_expr_1 |
A string expression to be searched. |
string_expr_2 |
A string expression with a regular expression defined to use when searching string_expr_1 . |
string_expr_3 (Optional) |
An optional string expression with the selected modifiers to use with the regular expression (string_expr_2 ). If not provided, the default is to run the regular expression match with no modifiers. |
Note
Providing an empty string for string_expr_3
is functionally equivalent to omitting the argument.
Return types
Returns a boolean expression.
Examples
The following example illustrates regular expression matches using a few different modifiers.
SELECT VALUE {
noModifiers: RegexMatch("abcd", "ABC"),
caseInsensitive: RegexMatch("abcd", "ABC", "i"),
wildcardCharacter: RegexMatch("abcd", "ab.", ""),
ignoreWhiteSpace: RegexMatch("abcd", "ab c", "x"),
caseInsensitiveAndIgnoreWhiteSpace: RegexMatch("abcd", "aB c", "ix"),
containNumberBetweenZeroAndNine: RegexMatch("03a", "[0-9]"),
containPrefix: RegexMatch("salt3824908", "salt{1}"),
containsFiveLetterWordStartingWithS: RegexMatch("shame", "s....", "i")
}
[
{
"noModifiers": false,
"caseInsensitive": true,
"wildcardCharacter": true,
"ignoreWhiteSpace": true,
"caseInsensitiveAndIgnoreWhiteSpace": true,
"containNumberBetweenZeroAndNine": true,
"containPrefix": true,
"containsFiveLetterWordStartingWithS": true
}
]
The next example assumes that you have a container with items including a name
field.
[
{
"name": "Tecozow coat",
"category": "winter-coats"
},
{
"name": "Bladnick coat",
"category": "winter-coats"
},
{
"name": "Anidin heavy jacket",
"category": "winter-coats"
}
]
This example uses a regular expression match as a filter to return a subset of items.
SELECT VALUE
p.name
FROM
products p
WHERE
p.category = "winter-coats" AND
RegexMatch(p.name, " coat{1}")
[
"Tecozow coat",
"Bladnick coat"
]
Remarks
- This function benefits from a range index only if the regular expression can be broken down into either
StartsWith
,EndsWith
,Contains
, orStringEquals
equivalent system functions. - Returns
undefined
if the string expression to be searched (string_expr_1
), the regular expression (string_expr_2
), or the selected modifiers (string_expr_3
) are invalid. - This function supports the following four modifiers:
| | Format | Description |
| --- | --- | --- |
| Multiple lines |
m
| Treat the string expression to be searched as multiple lines. Without this option, the characters^
and$
match at the beginning or end of the string and not each individual line. | | Match any string |s
| Allow "." to match any character, including a newline character. | | Ignore case |i
| Ignore case when pattern matching. | | Ignore whitespace |x
| Ignore all whitespace characters. | - If you'd like to use a meta-character in a regular expression and don't want it to have special meaning, you should escape the metacharacter using
\
.