14.11. Regular Expression Functions
All of the regular expression functions use the Java pattern syntax, with a few notable exceptions:
- When using multi-line mode (enabled via the (?m) flag), only \n is recognized as a line terminator. Additionally, the (?d) flag is not supported and must not be used.
- Case-insensitive matching (enabled via the (?i) flag) is always performed in a Unicode-aware manner. However, context-sensitive and local-sensitive matching is not supported. Additionally, the (?u) flag is not supported and must not be used.
- Surrogate pairs are not supported. For example, \uD800\uDC00 is not treated as U+10000 and must be specified as \x{10000}.
- Boundaries (\b) are incorrectly handled for a non-spacing mark without a base character.
- \Q and \E are not supported in character classes (such as [A-Z123]) and are instead treated as literals.
- Unicode character classes (\p{prop}) are supported with
the following differences:
- All underscores in names must be removed. For example, use OldItalic instead of Old_Italic.
- Scripts must be specified directly, without the Is, script= or sc= prefixes. Example: \p{Hiragana}
- Blocks must be specified with the In prefix. The block= and blk= prefixes are not supported. Example: \p{Mongolian}
- Categories must be specified directly, without the Is, general_category= or gc= prefixes. Example: \p{L}
- Binary properties must be specified directly, without the Is. Example: \p{NoncharacterCodePoint}
- regexp_extract_all(string, pattern) → array<varchar>
Returns the substring(s) matched by the regular expression pattern in string.
- regexp_extract_all(string, pattern, group) → array<varchar>
Finds all occurrences of the regular expression pattern in string and returns the capturing group number group.
- regexp_extract(string, pattern) → varchar
Returns the first substring matched by the regular expression pattern in string.
- regexp_extract(string, pattern, group) → varchar
Finds the first occurrence of the regular expression pattern in string and returns the capturing group number group.
- regexp_like(string, pattern) → boolean
Evaluates the regular expression pattern and determines if it is contained within string.
This function is similar to the LIKE operator, expect that the pattern only needs to be contained within string, rather than needing to match all of string. In other words, this performs a contains operation rather than a match operation. You can match the entire string by anchoring the pattern using ^ and $.
- regexp_replace(string, pattern) → varchar
Removes every instance of the substring matched by the regular expression pattern from string.
- regexp_replace(string, pattern, replacement) → varchar
Replaces every instance of the substring matched by the regular expression pattern in string with replacement. Capturing groups can be referenced in replacement using $g for a numbered group or ${name} for a named group. A dollar sign ($) may be included in the replacement by escaping it with a backslash (\$).
- regexp_split(string, pattern) → array<varchar>
Splits string using the regular expression pattern and returns an array. Trailing empty strings are preserved.