Table of Contents
Overview
\d can be used to match digits in golang. In fact, \d can be used to match the entire range.
0-9
The regular expression for matching any digit will be
\d
In case you want to match only a particular digit, let’s say 5 then the regular expression will be that digit.
5
If you want to match two digits then below will be the regex
\d\d
Match a single digit
Let’s see an example
package main
import (
"fmt"
"regexp"
)
func main() {
sampleRegexp := regexp.MustCompile(`\d`)
fmt.Println("For regex \\d")
match := sampleRegexp.MatchString("1")
fmt.Printf("For 1: %t\n", match)
match = sampleRegexp.MatchString("4")
fmt.Printf("For 4: %t\n", match)
match = sampleRegexp.MatchString("9")
fmt.Printf("For 9: %t\n", match)
match = sampleRegexp.MatchString("a")
fmt.Printf("For a: %t\n", match)
sampleRegexp = regexp.MustCompile(`5`)
fmt.Println("\nFor regex 5")
match = sampleRegexp.MatchString("5")
fmt.Printf("For 5: %t\n", match)
match = sampleRegexp.MatchString("6")
fmt.Printf("For 6: %t\n", match)
}
Output
For regex \d
For 1: true
For 4: true
For 9: true
For a: false
For regex 5
For 5: true
For 6: false
In the above program, we have examples of two regexes
- \d – Match any digit
- 5 – Match only five
The first matches any single digit. That is why it matches
1
4
9
And it doesn’t match
a
The same is also evident from the output
The second regex matches only “5” and it doesn’t match “6” as is evident from the output
For regex 5
For 5: true
For 6: false
Match Repetition of digit
Quantifiers can be used to match the repetition of digits. Example
- \d+ – Match one or more digits
- \d* – Match zero or more digits
- \d{N} – Match N number of digits
package main
import (
"fmt"
"regexp"
)
func main() {
sampleRegexp := regexp.MustCompile(`\d+`)
fmt.Println(`For regex \d+`)
match := sampleRegexp.MatchString("12345")
fmt.Printf("For 12345: %t\n", match)
match = sampleRegexp.MatchString("")
fmt.Printf("For empty string: %t\n", match)
sampleRegexp = regexp.MustCompile(`\d*`)
fmt.Println()
fmt.Println(`For regex \d*`)
match = sampleRegexp.MatchString("12345")
fmt.Printf("For 12345: %t\n", match)
match = sampleRegexp.MatchString("")
fmt.Printf("For empty string: %t\n", match)
sampleRegexp = regexp.MustCompile(`\d{2}`)
fmt.Println()
fmt.Println(`For regex \d{2}`)
match = sampleRegexp.MatchString("12")
fmt.Printf("For 12: %t\n", match)
match = sampleRegexp.MatchString("1")
fmt.Printf("For 1: %t\n", match)
}
Output
For regex \d+
For 12345: true
For empty string: false
For regex \d*
For 12345: true
For empty string: true
For regex \d{2}
For 12: true
For 1: false
In the above program, we have examples of three regexes
- \d+
- \d*
- \d{N}
\d+ regex gives a match for “12345” but fails for an empty string
\d* gives a match for “12345” as well as an empty string
\d{2} matches a sequence of two digits. That is why it matches for “12” for fails for “1”
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