Regular Expressions 101

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An explanation of your regex will be automatically generated as you type.
Detailed match information will be displayed here automatically.
  • All Tokens
  • Common Tokens
  • General Tokens
  • Anchors
  • Meta Sequences
  • Quantifiers
  • Group Constructs
  • Character Classes
  • Flags/Modifiers
  • Substitution
  • A single character of: a, b or c
    [abc]
  • A character except: a, b or c
    [^abc]
  • A character in the range: a-z
    [a-z]
  • A character not in the range: a-z
    [^a-z]
  • A character in the range: a-z or A-Z
    [a-zA-Z]
  • Any single character
    .
  • Alternate - match either a or b
    a|b
  • Any whitespace character
    \s
  • Any non-whitespace character
    \S
  • Any digit
    \d
  • Any non-digit
    \D
  • Any word character
    \w
  • Any non-word character
    \W
  • Match everything enclosed
    (?:...)
  • Capture everything enclosed
    (...)
  • Zero or one of a
    a?
  • Zero or more of a
    a*
  • One or more of a
    a+
  • Exactly 3 of a
    a{3}
  • 3 or more of a
    a{3,}
  • Between 3 and 6 of a
    a{3,6}
  • Start of string
    ^
  • End of string
    $
  • A word boundary
    \b
  • Non-word boundary
    \B

Regular Expression

/
/
gm

Test String

Code Generator

Generated Code

// include the latest version of the regex crate in your Cargo.toml extern crate regex; use regex::Regex; fn main() { let regex = Regex::new(r"(?m)^[+|-]?(90.0{6}|[0-8]?[0-9].[0-9]{6})$").unwrap(); let string = "// Valid values -90.000000 90.000000 1.000000 -1.000000 9.999999 88.888888 77.777777 66.666666 55.555555 44.444444 33.333333 22.222222 11.111111 00.000000 -9.999999 -88.888888 -77.777777 -66.666666 -55.555555 -44.444444 -33.333333 -22.222222 -11.111111 // Invalid values -90.000001 -90.000010 -90.000100 -90.001000 -90.010000 -90.100000 -91.000000 90.000001 90.000010 90.000100 90.001000 90.010000 90.100000 91.000000 +190.000000 190.000000 -190.000000 -90.00000 -90.0000 -90.000 -90.00 -90.0 -90. -90 -9 190.000000 90.00000 90.0000 90.000 90.00 90.0 90. 90 9 "; // result will be an iterator over tuples containing the start and end indices for each match in the string let result = regex.captures_iter(string); for mat in result { println!("{:?}", mat); } }

Please keep in mind that these code samples are automatically generated and are not guaranteed to work. If you find any syntax errors, feel free to submit a bug report. For a full regex reference for Rust, please visit: https://docs.rs/regex/latest/regex/