C# Regular Expression Recipes—Verifying the Syntax of a Regular Expression
Microsoft .NET Framework, ASP.NET, Visual C# (CSharp, C Sharp, C-Sharp) Developer Training, Visual Studio
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Contents |
Verifying the Syntax of a Regular Expression
Problem
You have either constructed a regular expression dynamically from your code or based on user input. You need to test the validity of this regular expression’s syntax before you actually use it.
Solution
Use the following method to test the validity of a regular expression’s syntax:
using System; using System.Text.RegularExpressions; public static bool VerifyRegEx(string testPattern) { bool isValid = true; if ((testPattern != null) && (testPattern.Trim( ).Length > 0)) { try { Regex.Match("", testPattern); } catch (ArgumentException) { // BAD PATTERN: Syntax error isValid = false; } } else { //BAD PATTERN: Pattern is null or blank isValid = false; } return (isValid); }
To use this method, pass it the regular expression that you wish to verify:
public static void TestUserInputRegEx(string regEx) { if (VerifyRegEx(regEx)) Console.WriteLine("This is a valid regular expression."); else Console.WriteLine("This is not a valid regular expression."); }
Discussion
The VerifyRegEx method calls the static Regex.Match method, which is useful for running
quick regular expressions against a string. The static Regex.Match method
returns a single Match object. By using this static method to run a regular expression
against a string (in this case a blank string), we can determine whether the regular
expression is invalid by watching for a thrown exception. The Regex.Match method
will throw an ArgumentException if the regular expression is not syntactically correct.
The Message property of this exception contains the reason the regular expression
failed to run, and the ParamName property contains the regular expression passed to
the Match method. Both of these properties are read-only.
Before testing the regular expression with the static Match method, the regular expression
is tested to see if it is null or blank. A null regular expression string returns an
ArgumentNullException when passed in to the Match method. On the other hand, if a
blank regular expression is passed in to the Match method, no exception is thrown (as
long as a valid string is also passed to the first parameter of the Match method).
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