I want to search div id in an html doc with certain pattern. I want to match this pattern in regex:
foo_([[:digit:]]{1.8})
using xpath. W
Or use xpath function matches(string,pattern).
<xsl:if test="matches(name(.),'foo_')">
Unfortunately it's not regex, but it might be enough unless you have other foo_ tags you don't need, then I Guess you can add a few more "if" checks to cull them out.
Nikkou makes this very easy and readable:
doc.search('div').attr_matches('id', /post_message_\d{1,8}/)
How about this (updated):
XPath 1.0:
"//div[substring-before(@id, '_') = 'foo'
and substring-after(@id, '_') >= 0
and substring-after(@id, '_') <= 99999999]"
Edit #2: The OP made a change to the question. The following, even more reduced XPath 1.0 expression works for me:
"//div[substring(@id, 1, 13) = 'post_message_'
and substring(@id, 14) >= 0
and substring(@id, 14) <= 99999999]"
XPath 2.0 has a convenient matches() function:
"//div[matches(@id, '^foo_\d{1,8}$')]"
Apart from the better portability, I would expect the numerical expression (XPath 1.0 style) to perform better than the regex test, though this would only become noticeable when processing large data sets.
Original version of the answer:
"//div[substring-before(@id, '_') = 'foo'
and number(substring-after(@id, '_')) = substring-after(@id, '_')
and number(substring-after(@id, '_')) >= 0
and number(substring-after(@id, '_')) <= 99999999]"
The use of the number()
function is unnecessary, because the mathematical comparison operators coerce their arguments to numbers implicitly, any non-numbers will become NaN
and the greater than/less than tests will fail.
I also removed the encoding of the angle brackets, since this is an XML requirement, not an XPath requirement.
As already pointed out, in XPath 2.0 it would be good to use its standard regex capabilities with a function like the matches() function.
One possible XPath 1.0 solution:
//div[starts-with(@id, 'post_message_')
and
string-length(@id) = 21
and
translate(substring-after(@id, 'post_message_'),
'0123456789',
''
)
=
''
]
Do note the following:
The use of the standard XPath function starts-with().
The use of the standard XPath function string-length().
The use of the standard XPath function substring-after().
The use of the standard XPath function translate().