Capture groups not working in NSRegularExpression Capture groups not working in NSRegularExpression ios ios

Capture groups not working in NSRegularExpression


You will access the first group range using :

for (NSTextCheckingResult *match in matches) {    //NSRange matchRange = [match range];    NSRange matchRange = [match rangeAtIndex:1];    NSString *matchString = [htmlString substringWithRange:matchRange];    NSLog(@"%@", matchString);}


Don't parse HTML with regular expressions or NSScanner. Down that path lies madness.

This has been asked many times on SO.

parsing HTML on the iPhone

The data i am picking out is as simple as <td>Name: A name</td> and i think its simple enough to just use regular expressions instead of including a full blown HTML parser in the project.

Up to you and I'm a strong advocate for "first to market has huge advantage".

The difference being that with a proper HTML parser, you are considering the structure of the document. Using regular expressions, you are relying on the document never changing format in ways that are syntactically otherwise perfectly valid.

I.e. what if the input were <td class="name">Name: A name</td>? Your regex parser just broke on input that is both valid HTML and, from a tag contents perspective, identical to the original input.


In swift3

//: Playground - noun: a place where people can playimport UIKit/// Two groups. 1: [A-Z]+, 2: [0-9]+var pattern = "([A-Z]+)([0-9]+)"let regex = try NSRegularExpression(pattern: pattern, options:[.caseInsensitive])let str = "AA01B2C3DD4"let strLen = str.characters.countlet results = regex.matches(in: str, options: [], range: NSMakeRange(0, strLen))let nsStr = str as NSStringfor a in results {    let c = a.numberOfRanges     print(c)    let m0 = a.rangeAt(0)  //< Ex: 'AA01'    let m1 = a.rangeAt(1)  //< Group 1: Alpha chars, ex: 'AA'    let m2 = a.rangeAt(2)  //< Group 2: Digital numbers, ex: '01'    // let m3 = a.rangeAt(3) //< Runtime exceptions    let s = nsStr.substring(with: m2)    print(s)}