gcue Posted April 3, 2014 Share Posted April 3, 2014 hello world i am trying to strip out all the letters but leave the numbers and periods from this string $string = "Microsoft Office Hotfix 4.5.24 here's what i have now but periods are also stripped $version = StringRegExpReplace($string, "[^0-9]", "$1") thank you in advance! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ZombieKillz Posted April 3, 2014 Share Posted April 3, 2014 Try -> [^0-9.] Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gcue Posted April 3, 2014 Author Share Posted April 3, 2014 ah perfect! thanks... so in this case is the period literal? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jchd Posted April 3, 2014 Share Posted April 3, 2014 Dot is never special inside a character class, so [^0-9.] would work as well. This wonderful site allows debugging and testing regular expressions (many flavors available). An absolute must have in your bookmarks.Another excellent RegExp tutorial. Don't forget downloading your copy of up-to-date pcretest.exe and pcregrep.exe hereRegExp tutorial: enough to get startedPCRE v8.33 regexp documentation latest available release and currently implemented in AutoIt beta. SQLitespeed is another feature-rich premier SQLite manager (includes import/export). Well worth a try.SQLite Expert (freeware Personal Edition or payware Pro version) is a very useful SQLite database manager.An excellent eBook covering almost every aspect of SQLite3: a must-read for anyone doing serious work.SQL tutorial (covers "generic" SQL, but most of it applies to SQLite as well)A work-in-progress SQLite3 tutorial. Don't miss other LxyzTHW pages!SQLite official website with full documentation (may be newer than the SQLite library that comes standard with AutoIt) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
guinness Posted April 3, 2014 Share Posted April 3, 2014 - [ ] (though place at the end of the class is just fine e.g. [][]) and have to be escaped in a class. Unless jchd proves otherwise. UDF List: _AdapterConnections() • _AlwaysRun() • _AppMon() • _AppMonEx() • _ArrayFilter/_ArrayReduce • _BinaryBin() • _CheckMsgBox() • _CmdLineRaw() • _ContextMenu() • _ConvertLHWebColor()/_ConvertSHWebColor() • _DesktopDimensions() • _DisplayPassword() • _DotNet_Load()/_DotNet_Unload() • _Fibonacci() • _FileCompare() • _FileCompareContents() • _FileNameByHandle() • _FilePrefix/SRE() • _FindInFile() • _GetBackgroundColor()/_SetBackgroundColor() • _GetConrolID() • _GetCtrlClass() • _GetDirectoryFormat() • _GetDriveMediaType() • _GetFilename()/_GetFilenameExt() • _GetHardwareID() • _GetIP() • _GetIP_Country() • _GetOSLanguage() • _GetSavedSource() • _GetStringSize() • _GetSystemPaths() • _GetURLImage() • _GIFImage() • _GoogleWeather() • _GUICtrlCreateGroup() • _GUICtrlListBox_CreateArray() • _GUICtrlListView_CreateArray() • _GUICtrlListView_SaveCSV() • _GUICtrlListView_SaveHTML() • _GUICtrlListView_SaveTxt() • _GUICtrlListView_SaveXML() • _GUICtrlMenu_Recent() • _GUICtrlMenu_SetItemImage() • _GUICtrlTreeView_CreateArray() • _GUIDisable() • _GUIImageList_SetIconFromHandle() • _GUIRegisterMsg() • _GUISetIcon() • _Icon_Clear()/_Icon_Set() • _IdleTime() • _InetGet() • _InetGetGUI() • _InetGetProgress() • _IPDetails() • _IsFileOlder() • _IsGUID() • _IsHex() • _IsPalindrome() • _IsRegKey() • _IsStringRegExp() • _IsSystemDrive() • _IsUPX() • _IsValidType() • _IsWebColor() • _Language() • _Log() • _MicrosoftInternetConnectivity() • _MSDNDataType() • _PathFull/GetRelative/Split() • _PathSplitEx() • _PrintFromArray() • _ProgressSetMarquee() • _ReDim() • _RockPaperScissors()/_RockPaperScissorsLizardSpock() • _ScrollingCredits • _SelfDelete() • _SelfRename() • _SelfUpdate() • _SendTo() • _ShellAll() • _ShellFile() • _ShellFolder() • _SingletonHWID() • _SingletonPID() • _Startup() • _StringCompact() • _StringIsValid() • _StringRegExpMetaCharacters() • _StringReplaceWholeWord() • _StringStripChars() • _Temperature() • _TrialPeriod() • _UKToUSDate()/_USToUKDate() • _WinAPI_Create_CTL_CODE() • _WinAPI_CreateGUID() • _WMIDateStringToDate()/_DateToWMIDateString() • Au3 script parsing • AutoIt Search • AutoIt3 Portable • AutoIt3WrapperToPragma • AutoItWinGetTitle()/AutoItWinSetTitle() • Coding • DirToHTML5 • FileInstallr • FileReadLastChars() • GeoIP database • GUI - Only Close Button • GUI Examples • GUICtrlDeleteImage() • GUICtrlGetBkColor() • GUICtrlGetStyle() • GUIEvents • GUIGetBkColor() • Int_Parse() & Int_TryParse() • IsISBN() • LockFile() • Mapping CtrlIDs • OOP in AutoIt • ParseHeadersToSciTE() • PasswordValid • PasteBin • Posts Per Day • PreExpand • Protect Globals • Queue() • Resource Update • ResourcesEx • SciTE Jump • Settings INI • SHELLHOOK • Shunting-Yard • Signature Creator • Stack() • Stopwatch() • StringAddLF()/StringStripLF() • StringEOLToCRLF() • VSCROLL • WM_COPYDATA • More Examples... Updated: 22/04/2018 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ZombieKillz Posted April 3, 2014 Share Posted April 3, 2014 (edited) After jchd's comment, it would only work if the string ended after the version number. If you have "Microsoft Office Hotfix 4.5.24 BETA", it would match " BETA" as well. Instead use this --> [^0-9.] Edit: gcue, To answer your question about the period being literal. If I understand the definition, then one period would be literal or one character or string but this reg expression is finding all periods and numbers in your string. Further to my point above, if you had other numbers and/or periods in your string then it will find those as well. Edited April 3, 2014 by ZombieKillz Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jchd Posted April 3, 2014 Share Posted April 3, 2014 After jchd's comment, it would only work if the string ended after the version number. If you have "Microsoft Office Hotfix 4.5.24 BETA", it would match " BETA" as well. Are you sure? Try it: ConsoleWrite(StringRegExpReplace("Microsoft Office Hotfix 4.5.24 BETA", "[^\d.]", "") & @LF) This wonderful site allows debugging and testing regular expressions (many flavors available). An absolute must have in your bookmarks.Another excellent RegExp tutorial. Don't forget downloading your copy of up-to-date pcretest.exe and pcregrep.exe hereRegExp tutorial: enough to get startedPCRE v8.33 regexp documentation latest available release and currently implemented in AutoIt beta. SQLitespeed is another feature-rich premier SQLite manager (includes import/export). Well worth a try.SQLite Expert (freeware Personal Edition or payware Pro version) is a very useful SQLite database manager.An excellent eBook covering almost every aspect of SQLite3: a must-read for anyone doing serious work.SQL tutorial (covers "generic" SQL, but most of it applies to SQLite as well)A work-in-progress SQLite3 tutorial. Don't miss other LxyzTHW pages!SQLite official website with full documentation (may be newer than the SQLite library that comes standard with AutoIt) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ZombieKillz Posted April 3, 2014 Share Posted April 3, 2014 Great! You proved to me and gcue that there is more than one way to skin a cat. I used a regex tool I have and did not put the code into AutoIT (eww). I also proved that my original post ([^0-9.]) and my last one ([^0-9.]) works as well, now that I've put both into AutoIT ConsoleWrite as you've demonstrated. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mikell Posted April 3, 2014 Share Posted April 3, 2014 (edited) I also proved that my original post ([^0-9.]) and my last one ([^0-9.]) works as well The first one is good but not the last one which is made for checking the backslash too - as guinness noticed msgbox(0,"", StringRegExpReplace("Microsoft Office Hotfix 4.5.\24 BETA", "[^0-9\.]+", "$1") ) msgbox(0,"", StringRegExpReplace("Microsoft Office Hotfix 4.5.\24 BETA", "[^0-9\\.]+", "$1") ) Edited April 3, 2014 by mikell Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ZombieKillz Posted April 3, 2014 Share Posted April 3, 2014 Where in the OP is there a slash? (rhetorical question) This is my last comment as this is no longer helping anyone. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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