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using reqular expression wrong

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  • Chris KawaC Offline
    Chris KawaC Offline
    Chris Kawa
    Lifetime Qt Champion
    wrote on last edited by
    #3

    Yes, you've got it reversed. remove doesn't take an expression that you want as a result. It removes everything that matches, so you have to provide an expression that describes all that is to be removed, not all that is to stay.

    To remove everything but letters, digits and spaces you could use e.g. "[^\\w\\d ]+".
    ^ means "everything but"
    \w is "any word character"
    \d is "any digit"
    + means "one or more times"
    Note that you need to use double \ because it's an escape character in C++ strings.

    A 1 Reply Last reply
    4
    • Chris KawaC Chris Kawa

      Yes, you've got it reversed. remove doesn't take an expression that you want as a result. It removes everything that matches, so you have to provide an expression that describes all that is to be removed, not all that is to stay.

      To remove everything but letters, digits and spaces you could use e.g. "[^\\w\\d ]+".
      ^ means "everything but"
      \w is "any word character"
      \d is "any digit"
      + means "one or more times"
      Note that you need to use double \ because it's an escape character in C++ strings.

      A Offline
      A Offline
      Anonymous_Banned275
      wrote on last edited by
      #4

      @Chris-Kawa Thanks, as mentioned by JonB it still leaves "some stuff" . It is not desirable.

      How is this for crazy idea

      remove all ascii - as in present
      Exclusive OR original with removed result
      that should give the original ascii only

      Not sure if it would work / copy the original ascci where "zeroes" are valid .

      Perhaps some additional "conversion" would be needed .

      Is there QString with "exclusive or " function ?

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • Chris KawaC Offline
        Chris KawaC Offline
        Chris Kawa
        Lifetime Qt Champion
        wrote on last edited by
        #5

        But wouldn't that be doing the work twice? It's easier to just enhance the expression to match the unwanted stuff. I don't know the format of those control characters but I'm sure you can define them as a regexp e.g. if you want to remove \u0001 and the likes it would be something like "\\\\u[\\d]{4}" ( \ followed by letter u followed by 4 digits).

        A 1 Reply Last reply
        3
        • A Anonymous_Banned275

          I am trying to learn and use "regular expression" to remove control characters from QString.
          I am obviously using it wrong because it works in " reverse " - removes all valid ascii characters.

          Any help would be appreciated.

          code

                        qDebug() <<"stream raw line  \n " << line ;
                          // apply QReg expression
                          line.remove(QRegularExpression("[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z_0-9]*"));
                          qDebug() <<"QRegularExpression applied  \n " << line ;
          

          output / result

          stream raw line  
            "\u0001\u001B[1;39m\u0002export                                            \u0001\u001B[0m\u0002Print environment variables"
          QRegularExpression applied  
            "\u0001\u001B[1;39\u0002                                            \u0001\u001B[0\u0002  "
          
          JonBJ Offline
          JonBJ Offline
          JonB
          wrote on last edited by
          #6

          @AnneRanch

          \u0001\u001B[1;39m\u0002export
          \u0001\u001B[0m\u0002Print environment variables
          

          In the two examples you gave it appears the "ANSI escape sequence" is enclosed in \u0001 ... \u0002 in both cases. If this is always the case then it's very easy, something like:

          line.remove(QRegularExpression("\\001[^\\002]*\\002"));
          

          ought do it.

          However, if that is not always the case you would have to write a regular expression to match (so as to remove) all these "ANSI escape sequences". Which are something like:

          <ESC> [ ... <letter>
          

          at least in the cases you show. But you would have to go through and find lots of examples of these in the output you want to parse, as I believe there may be a variety of sequences other than the two you show so far.

          Chris KawaC 1 Reply Last reply
          1
          • Chris KawaC Chris Kawa

            But wouldn't that be doing the work twice? It's easier to just enhance the expression to match the unwanted stuff. I don't know the format of those control characters but I'm sure you can define them as a regexp e.g. if you want to remove \u0001 and the likes it would be something like "\\\\u[\\d]{4}" ( \ followed by letter u followed by 4 digits).

            A Offline
            A Offline
            Anonymous_Banned275
            wrote on last edited by
            #7

            @Chris-Kawa ...doing it twice is OK and using "exclusive or " would eliminate knowing the control code or having to figure out the expression ( I am basically lazy to do that ...)

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • VRoninV Offline
              VRoninV Offline
              VRonin
              wrote on last edited by VRonin
              #8

              Try this

              qDebug() <<"stream raw line  \n " << line ;
              QString sanitisedLine;
              for (const QRegularExpressionMatch &match : QRegularExpression("[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z_0-9]*").globalMatch(line))
              sanitisedLine.append(match.captured(0));
              qDebug() <<"QRegularExpression applied  \n " << sanitisedLine;
              

              "La mort n'est rien, mais vivre vaincu et sans gloire, c'est mourir tous les jours"
              ~Napoleon Bonaparte

              On a crusade to banish setIndexWidget() from the holy land of Qt

              A 1 Reply Last reply
              1
              • JonBJ JonB

                @AnneRanch

                \u0001\u001B[1;39m\u0002export
                \u0001\u001B[0m\u0002Print environment variables
                

                In the two examples you gave it appears the "ANSI escape sequence" is enclosed in \u0001 ... \u0002 in both cases. If this is always the case then it's very easy, something like:

                line.remove(QRegularExpression("\\001[^\\002]*\\002"));
                

                ought do it.

                However, if that is not always the case you would have to write a regular expression to match (so as to remove) all these "ANSI escape sequences". Which are something like:

                <ESC> [ ... <letter>
                

                at least in the cases you show. But you would have to go through and find lots of examples of these in the output you want to parse, as I believe there may be a variety of sequences other than the two you show so far.

                Chris KawaC Offline
                Chris KawaC Offline
                Chris Kawa
                Lifetime Qt Champion
                wrote on last edited by
                #9

                @JonB With a small caveat that \ is an escape sequence both in C++ and in regexp, so to have an actual \ character matched you need 4 of those, so "\\\\0001[^\\\\0002]*\\\\0002". Yeah, the trouble we make for ourselves as an industry :P

                JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • Chris KawaC Chris Kawa

                  @JonB With a small caveat that \ is an escape sequence both in C++ and in regexp, so to have an actual \ character matched you need 4 of those, so "\\\\0001[^\\\\0002]*\\\\0002". Yeah, the trouble we make for ourselves as an industry :P

                  JonBJ Offline
                  JonBJ Offline
                  JonB
                  wrote on last edited by JonB
                  #10

                  @Chris-Kawa
                  I'm intending to pass \001 & \002 like that to regular expression. Then let it handle it. Which I think it will treat as number-character. Now that you make me think about that I'm wondering where I got that idea from....?

                  You are going to pass \\0001. What do you think that is going to do/be parsed as in reg exp?

                  Let's be clear: the OP's output like:

                  \u0001\u001B
                  

                  is representing ASCII-char-1 and ASCII-char-27 (i.e. "Escape") bytes in that output, are we agreed?

                  Maybe modern reg exps even accept \u0001 as a (Unicode??) character entity, I don't know?

                  Chris KawaC 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • JonBJ JonB

                    @Chris-Kawa
                    I'm intending to pass \001 & \002 like that to regular expression. Then let it handle it. Which I think it will treat as number-character. Now that you make me think about that I'm wondering where I got that idea from....?

                    You are going to pass \\0001. What do you think that is going to do/be parsed as in reg exp?

                    Let's be clear: the OP's output like:

                    \u0001\u001B
                    

                    is representing ASCII-char-1 and ASCII-char-27 (i.e. "Escape") bytes in that output, are we agreed?

                    Maybe modern reg exps even accept \u0001 as a (Unicode??) character entity, I don't know?

                    Chris KawaC Offline
                    Chris KawaC Offline
                    Chris Kawa
                    Lifetime Qt Champion
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #11

                    @JonB Ah, fair enough. I thought \u0001 is an actual string (6 characters) and not a single character.

                    JonBJ 2 Replies Last reply
                    0
                    • Chris KawaC Chris Kawa

                      @JonB Ah, fair enough. I thought \u0001 is an actual string (6 characters) and not a single character.

                      JonBJ Offline
                      JonBJ Offline
                      JonB
                      wrote on last edited by JonB
                      #12

                      @Chris-Kawa
                      No, these are byte representations. Like:

                      \u0001\u001B[1;39m\u0002export
                      

                      From the past, the OP is obtaining from something like the output of a program running, or intended to run, in a terminal.

                      I happen to know that there is a ANSI terminal escape sequence like:

                      Esc [ row-number ; column-number m
                      

                      which I think is "move cursor to row-col", \u001B == 27 decimal == Escape char.

                      All this stuff can be found in table at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#CSIsection

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      2
                      • Chris KawaC Chris Kawa

                        @JonB Ah, fair enough. I thought \u0001 is an actual string (6 characters) and not a single character.

                        JonBJ Offline
                        JonBJ Offline
                        JonB
                        wrote on last edited by JonB
                        #13

                        @Chris-Kawa
                        You raise a good question though. I'm not sure whether QRegularExpression will interpret my \001 as I intended.

                        How would you write the QRegularExpression to include matching characters like ASCII-1 or ASCII-27? I haven't kept up with how to reperesent that in reg exps nowadays? Maybe it's actually \u0001 & \u001B, is that a single (Unicode?) char sequence recognised in QRegularExpression??

                        UPDATE
                        I just looked on https://regex101.com/ and it does say

                        \ddd

                        Matches the 8-bit character with the given octal value.

                        so I think my original dim recollection for using \001 & \002 may have been right/OK after all :)

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • VRoninV VRonin

                          Try this

                          qDebug() <<"stream raw line  \n " << line ;
                          QString sanitisedLine;
                          for (const QRegularExpressionMatch &match : QRegularExpression("[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z_0-9]*").globalMatch(line))
                          sanitisedLine.append(match.captured(0));
                          qDebug() <<"QRegularExpression applied  \n " << sanitisedLine;
                          
                          A Offline
                          A Offline
                          Anonymous_Banned275
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #14

                          @VRonin

                          I am missing something here , I do not understand the error .

                          6ec658f0-4a0b-4ee7-8125-28777a12747f-image.png

                          I need to read-up on QRegularExpressionMatch - but I think you are on right track...

                          Would you kindly explain in few words what the code is doing ?
                          I think that would help me...

                          JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • A Anonymous_Banned275

                            @VRonin

                            I am missing something here , I do not understand the error .

                            6ec658f0-4a0b-4ee7-8125-28777a12747f-image.png

                            I need to read-up on QRegularExpressionMatch - but I think you are on right track...

                            Would you kindly explain in few words what the code is doing ?
                            I think that would help me...

                            JonBJ Offline
                            JonBJ Offline
                            JonB
                            wrote on last edited by JonB
                            #15

                            @AnneRanch

                            I am missing something here , I do not understand the error .

                            https://doc.qt.io/qt-6/qregularexpressionmatchiterator.html#details

                            Starting with Qt 6.0, it is also possible to simply use the result of QRegularExpression::globalMatch in a range-based for loop, for instance like this:
                            ...
                            for (const QRegularExpressionMatch &match : re.globalMatch(subject)) {

                            Are you using Qt6 or Qt5?

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            1
                            • A Offline
                              A Offline
                              Anonymous_Banned275
                              wrote on last edited by Anonymous_Banned275
                              #16

                              I hope this post does not distracts from the discussion .

                              1. I believe the whole concept to "search for individual ascii characters" was misleading . I have been there before and using "words" "w" should make more sense from start. .

                              2. The code snippet is "work in progress", hence has some stuff not really needed at this point.

                              3. As seen , I can retieve "word" LIST m but I am stomped on how to get QString, not a :list":

                              SOLVED
                              QString test = match.captured();
                              qDebug() <<"match name from ( list ) " << test;

                              Code

                                              line = stream.readLine();
                                              //qDebug() <<"Stream raw line  ";
                                              qDebug() <<"stream raw line  \n " << line ;
                              
                                              // extracts the words
                              QRegularExpression re("(\\w+)");
                              QString subject(line);
                              QString *capture_name; //  = "                            ";
                              QRegularExpressionMatchIterator i = re.globalMatch(subject);
                              while (i.hasNext()) {
                                  QRegularExpressionMatch match = i.next();
                                  //  qDebug() <<"match (next)     " << i.next() ;
                                   qDebug() <<"match     " << match ;
                              
                              THIS SORT OF WORKS 
                                   qDebug() <<"match   list  " << match.capturedTexts();
                              
                              HOW TO GET INDIVIDUAL QSTRING HERE 
                              **?????**
                               **//     qDebug() <<"match  name ( from  list )  " << match.captured(*capture_name);**
                              HOW TO GET INDIVIDUAL QSTRING HERE 
                              
                              }
                              
                              
                              

                              Output

                              Stream file 
                              Stream file ArrayIndex  0
                              stream raw line  
                                "\u0001\u001B[1;39m\u0002Menu main:\u0001\u001B[0m\u0002"
                              match      QRegularExpressionMatch(Valid, has match: 0:(3, 4, "1"), 1:(3, 4, "1"))
                              match   list  match.captured( ("1", "1")
                              match      QRegularExpressionMatch(Valid, has match: 0:(5, 8, "39m"), 1:(5, 8, "39m"))
                              match   list   ("39m", "39m")
                              match      QRegularExpressionMatch(Valid, has match: 0:(9, 13, "Menu"), 1:(9, 13, "Menu"))
                              **match   list   ("Menu", "Menu")**
                              match      QRegularExpressionMatch(Valid, has match: 0:(14, 18, "main"), 1:(14, 18, "main"))
                              **match   list   ("main", "main")**
                              match      QRegularExpressionMatch(Valid, has match: 0:(22, 24, "0m"), 1:(22, 24, "0m"))
                              match   list   ("0m", "0m")
                              QRegularExpression remove ascii applied  
                                "\u0001\u001B[1;39\u0002 :\u0001\u001B[0\u0002"
                              single character DONE 
                              
                              VRoninV 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • A Offline
                                A Offline
                                Anonymous_Banned275
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #17

                                I am trying to simplify the process

                                This regular expression works and removes all control code

                                QString result = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\w\d ]+"));
                                qDebug() <<"QRegularExpression remove ascii applied \n " << result;

                                This regal expression DOES NOT WORK
                                I get run time error

                                QString::replace: invalid QRegularExpression object

                                It supposedly remove all control code

                                result  = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\\u0000-\\u007F]+"));
                                        qDebug() <<"QRegularExpression remove ascii applied  \n " << result;
                                

                                return result;

                                Christian EhrlicherC JonBJ 2 Replies Last reply
                                0
                                • A Anonymous_Banned275

                                  I am trying to simplify the process

                                  This regular expression works and removes all control code

                                  QString result = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\w\d ]+"));
                                  qDebug() <<"QRegularExpression remove ascii applied \n " << result;

                                  This regal expression DOES NOT WORK
                                  I get run time error

                                  QString::replace: invalid QRegularExpression object

                                  It supposedly remove all control code

                                  result  = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\\u0000-\\u007F]+"));
                                          qDebug() <<"QRegularExpression remove ascii applied  \n " << result;
                                  

                                  return result;

                                  Christian EhrlicherC Offline
                                  Christian EhrlicherC Offline
                                  Christian Ehrlicher
                                  Lifetime Qt Champion
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #18

                                  @AnneRanch said in using reqular expression wrong:

                                  This regal expression DOES NOT WORK

                                  Because \u0000 and \u007F are not valid for pcre -> https://www.regular-expressions.info/unicode.html#codepoint

                                  Qt Online Installer direct download: https://download.qt.io/official_releases/online_installers/
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                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  2
                                  • A Anonymous_Banned275

                                    I am trying to simplify the process

                                    This regular expression works and removes all control code

                                    QString result = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\w\d ]+"));
                                    qDebug() <<"QRegularExpression remove ascii applied \n " << result;

                                    This regal expression DOES NOT WORK
                                    I get run time error

                                    QString::replace: invalid QRegularExpression object

                                    It supposedly remove all control code

                                    result  = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\\u0000-\\u007F]+"));
                                            qDebug() <<"QRegularExpression remove ascii applied  \n " << result;
                                    

                                    return result;

                                    JonBJ Offline
                                    JonBJ Offline
                                    JonB
                                    wrote on last edited by JonB
                                    #19

                                    @AnneRanch
                                    As @Christian-Ehrlicher has said.

                                    That should be QRegularExpression("[^\\000-\\177]+")

                                    However it will not do what you intend. It will remove all ASCII characters, as the comment said, and return an empty string.

                                    I suspect you are wanting to try:

                                    result  = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\\000-\\037]+"));
                                    

                                    which will remove just the characters you have which are non-ASCII-printable control characters.
                                    Your \u0001\u001B[1;39m\u0002export should result in [1;39mexport.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • A Offline
                                      A Offline
                                      Anonymous_Banned275
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #20

                                      I am not sure linking to other forums is OK , but here is a part of it

                                      I am trying to port the Java code to C++ and this reference claims that
                                      the "controls characters " are identified as "[^\u0000-\u007F]"

                                      and that is my objective "remove" all control characters.

                                      And this removes ascii , not control characters>

                                      QString result = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\000-\037]+"));

                                      and that has been my issue since I started this - remove control characters using this expression "[^\000-\037]+"));

                                      I thin I am not using "remove" and plain "match the expression " correctly .

                                      https://stackoverflow.com/questions/24229262/match-non-printable-non-ascii-characters-and-remove-from-text
                                      public static string RemoveTroublesomeCharacters(string inString)
                                      {
                                      if (inString == null)
                                      {
                                      return null;
                                      }

                                      else
                                      {
                                          char ch;
                                          Regex regex = new Regex(@"[^\u0000-\u007F]", RegexOptions.IgnoreCase);
                                          Match charMatch = regex.Match(inString);
                                      
                                      JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • A Anonymous_Banned275

                                        I am not sure linking to other forums is OK , but here is a part of it

                                        I am trying to port the Java code to C++ and this reference claims that
                                        the "controls characters " are identified as "[^\u0000-\u007F]"

                                        and that is my objective "remove" all control characters.

                                        And this removes ascii , not control characters>

                                        QString result = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\000-\037]+"));

                                        and that has been my issue since I started this - remove control characters using this expression "[^\000-\037]+"));

                                        I thin I am not using "remove" and plain "match the expression " correctly .

                                        https://stackoverflow.com/questions/24229262/match-non-printable-non-ascii-characters-and-remove-from-text
                                        public static string RemoveTroublesomeCharacters(string inString)
                                        {
                                        if (inString == null)
                                        {
                                        return null;
                                        }

                                        else
                                        {
                                            char ch;
                                            Regex regex = new Regex(@"[^\u0000-\u007F]", RegexOptions.IgnoreCase);
                                            Match charMatch = regex.Match(inString);
                                        
                                        JonBJ Offline
                                        JonBJ Offline
                                        JonB
                                        wrote on last edited by JonB
                                        #21

                                        @AnneRanch
                                        That code you are trying to use is for regular expressions understood by .NET. They are not identical to those used by Qt.

                                        And this removes ascii , not control characters>

                                        QString result = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[^\\000-\\037]+"));

                                        Just remove the ^ I wrote (I forgot you were removing rather than retaining). Should be:

                                        QString result = inString.remove(QRegularExpression("[\\000-\\037]+"));
                                        
                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • A Anonymous_Banned275

                                          I hope this post does not distracts from the discussion .

                                          1. I believe the whole concept to "search for individual ascii characters" was misleading . I have been there before and using "words" "w" should make more sense from start. .

                                          2. The code snippet is "work in progress", hence has some stuff not really needed at this point.

                                          3. As seen , I can retieve "word" LIST m but I am stomped on how to get QString, not a :list":

                                          SOLVED
                                          QString test = match.captured();
                                          qDebug() <<"match name from ( list ) " << test;

                                          Code

                                                          line = stream.readLine();
                                                          //qDebug() <<"Stream raw line  ";
                                                          qDebug() <<"stream raw line  \n " << line ;
                                          
                                                          // extracts the words
                                          QRegularExpression re("(\\w+)");
                                          QString subject(line);
                                          QString *capture_name; //  = "                            ";
                                          QRegularExpressionMatchIterator i = re.globalMatch(subject);
                                          while (i.hasNext()) {
                                              QRegularExpressionMatch match = i.next();
                                              //  qDebug() <<"match (next)     " << i.next() ;
                                               qDebug() <<"match     " << match ;
                                          
                                          THIS SORT OF WORKS 
                                               qDebug() <<"match   list  " << match.capturedTexts();
                                          
                                          HOW TO GET INDIVIDUAL QSTRING HERE 
                                          **?????**
                                           **//     qDebug() <<"match  name ( from  list )  " << match.captured(*capture_name);**
                                          HOW TO GET INDIVIDUAL QSTRING HERE 
                                          
                                          }
                                          
                                          
                                          

                                          Output

                                          Stream file 
                                          Stream file ArrayIndex  0
                                          stream raw line  
                                            "\u0001\u001B[1;39m\u0002Menu main:\u0001\u001B[0m\u0002"
                                          match      QRegularExpressionMatch(Valid, has match: 0:(3, 4, "1"), 1:(3, 4, "1"))
                                          match   list  match.captured( ("1", "1")
                                          match      QRegularExpressionMatch(Valid, has match: 0:(5, 8, "39m"), 1:(5, 8, "39m"))
                                          match   list   ("39m", "39m")
                                          match      QRegularExpressionMatch(Valid, has match: 0:(9, 13, "Menu"), 1:(9, 13, "Menu"))
                                          **match   list   ("Menu", "Menu")**
                                          match      QRegularExpressionMatch(Valid, has match: 0:(14, 18, "main"), 1:(14, 18, "main"))
                                          **match   list   ("main", "main")**
                                          match      QRegularExpressionMatch(Valid, has match: 0:(22, 24, "0m"), 1:(22, 24, "0m"))
                                          match   list   ("0m", "0m")
                                          QRegularExpression remove ascii applied  
                                            "\u0001\u001B[1;39\u0002 :\u0001\u001B[0\u0002"
                                          single character DONE 
                                          
                                          VRoninV Offline
                                          VRoninV Offline
                                          VRonin
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #22

                                          @AnneRanch said in using reqular expression wrong:

                                          THIS SORT OF WORKS
                                          qDebug() <<"match list " << match.capturedTexts();

                                          HOW TO GET INDIVIDUAL QSTRING HERE

                                          match.captured(0);

                                          "La mort n'est rien, mais vivre vaincu et sans gloire, c'est mourir tous les jours"
                                          ~Napoleon Bonaparte

                                          On a crusade to banish setIndexWidget() from the holy land of Qt

                                          JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                                          0

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