C# Regular Expressions Cheat Sheet
Character |
Description
|
\
|
Marks the next character as either a special character or escapes a literal. For example, "n" matches the character "n". "\n" matches a newline character. The sequence "\\" matches "\" and "\(" matches "(".
Note: double quotes may be escaped by doubling them: "<a href=""...>" |
^
|
Depending on whether the MultiLine option is set, matches the position before the first character in a line, or the first character in the string.
|
$
|
Depending on whether the MultiLine option is set, matches the position after the last character in a line, or the last character in the string.
|
*
|
Matches the preceding character zero or more times. For example, "zo*" matches either "z" or "zoo".
|
+
|
Matches the preceding character one or more times. For example, "zo+" matches "zoo" but not "z".
|
?
|
Matches the preceding character zero or one time. For example, "a?ve?" matches the "ve" in "never".
|
.
|
Matches any single character except a newline character.
|
(pattern)
|
Matches pattern and remembers the match. The matched substring can be retrieved from the resulting Matches collection, using Item [0]...[n]. To match parentheses characters ( ), use "\(" or "\)".
|
(?<name>pattern)
|
Matches pattern and gives the match a name.
|
(?:pattern)
|
A non-capturing group
|
(?=...)
|
A positive lookahead
|
(?!...)
|
A negative lookahead
|
(?<=...)
|
A positive lookbehind .
|
(?<!...)
|
A negative lookbehind .
|
x|y
|
Matches either x or y. For example, "z|wood" matches "z" or "wood". "(z|w)oo" matches "zoo" or "wood".
|
{n}
|
n is a non-negative integer. Matches exactly n times. For example, "o{2}" does not match the "o" in "Bob," but matches the first two o's in "foooood".
|
{n,}
|
n is a non-negative integer. Matches at least n times. For example, "o{2,}" does not match the "o" in "Bob" and matches all the o's in "foooood." "o{1,}" is equivalent to "o+". "o{0,}" is equivalent to "o*".
|
{n,m}
|
m and n are non-negative integers. Matches at least n and at most m times. For example, "o{1,3}" matches the first three o's in "fooooood." "o{0,1}" is equivalent to "o?".
|
[xyz]
|
A character set. Matches any one of the enclosed characters. For example, "[abc]" matches the "a" in "plain".
|
[^xyz]
|
A negative character set. Matches any character not enclosed. For example, "[^abc]" matches the "p" in "plain".
|
[a-z]
|
A range of characters. Matches any character in the specified range. For example, "[a-z]" matches any lowercase alphabetic character in the range "a" through "z".
|
[^m-z]
|
A negative range characters. Matches any character not in the specified range. For example, "[m-z]" matches any character not in the range "m" through "z".
|
\b
|
Matches a word boundary, that is, the position between a word and a space. For example, "er\b" matches the "er" in "never" but not the "er" in "verb".
|
\B
|
Matches a non-word boundary. "ea*r\B" matches the "ear" in "never early".
|
\d
|
Matches a digit character. Equivalent to [0-9].
|
\D
|
Matches a non-digit character. Equivalent to [^0-9].
|
\f
|
Matches a form-feed character.
|
\k
|
A back-reference to a named group.
|
\n
|
Matches a newline character.
|
\r
|
Matches a carriage return character.
|
\s
|
Matches any white space including space, tab, form-feed, etc. Equivalent to "[ \f\n\r\t\v]".
|
\S
|
Matches any nonwhite space character. Equivalent to "[^ \f\n\r\t\v]".
|
\t
|
Matches a tab character.
|
\v
|
Matches a vertical tab character.
|
\w
|
Matches any word character including underscore. Equivalent to "[A-Za-z0-9_]".
|
\W
|
Matches any non-word character. Equivalent to "[^A-Za-z0-9_]".
|
\num
|
Matches num, where num is a positive integer. A reference back to remembered matches. For example, "(.)\1" matches two consecutive identical characters.
|
\n
|
Matches n, where n is an octal escape value. Octal escape values must be 1, 2, or 3 digits long. For example, "\11" and "\011" both match a tab character. "\0011" is the equivalent of "\001" & "1". Octal escape values must not exceed 256. If they do, only the first two digits comprise the expression. Allows ASCII codes to be used in regular expressions.
|
\xn
|
Matches n, where n is a hexadecimal escape value. Hexadecimal escape values must be exactly two digits long. For example, "\x41" matches "A". "\x041" is equivalent to "\x04" & "1". Allows ASCII codes to be used in regular expressions.
|
\un
|
Matches a Unicode character expressed in hexadecimal notation with exactly four numeric digits. "\u0200" matches a space character.
|
\A
|
Matches the position before the first character in a string. Not affected by the MultiLine setting
|
\Z
|
Matches the position after the last character of a string. Not affected by the MultiLine setting.
|
\G
|
Specifies that the matches must be consecutive, without any intervening non-matching characters.
|
** c# 공통함수 소스 **
//휴대전화번호 유효성체크
public static bool cellPhoneCheck(string phoneNo)
{
bool bRet = true;
// 전화번호에서 "-" 와 공백 제거
string strPhoneNo = phoneNo.Replace("-", "");
strPhoneNo = strPhoneNo.Replace(" ", "");
Regex regex = new Regex(@"^01[016789]\d{3,4}\d{4}$");
Match m = regex.Match(strPhoneNo);
if (m.Success)
bRet = true;
else
bRet = false;
return bRet;
}
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