using System;
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;
public class Example
{
public static void Main()
{
string pattern = @"\[.\]
";
string input = @"[2] O. Y. Abramov, “Industry Best Practices And The Role Of TRIZ In Developing New Products,” in ResearchGate, 2013.
[3] D. Cavallucci, S. Fuhlhaber, and A. Riwan, “Assisting Decisions in Inventive Design of Complex Engineering Systems,” Procedia Eng., vol. 131, pp. 975–983, 2015.
[4] W. Yan, H. Liu, C. Zanni-Merk, and D. Cavallucci, “IngeniousTRIZ: An automatic ontology-based system for solving inventive problems,” Knowl.-Based Syst., vol. 75, pp. 52–65, Feb. 2015.
[5] B.Campbell,“Brainstorming and TRIZ,” TRIZ J., 2003. February,http://www.triz journal.com/archives/2003/02/index.htm.
[6] A. Aamodt and E. Plaza, “Case-based reasoning: Foundational issues, methodological variations, and system approaches,” AI Commun., vol. 7, no. 1, pp. 39–59, 1994.";
foreach (Match m in Regex.Matches(input, pattern))
{
Console.WriteLine("'{0}' found at index {1}.", m.Value, m.Index);
}
}
}
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 C#, please visit: https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.text.regularexpressions.regex(v=vs.110).aspx