8.10. 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 asU+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 ofOld_Italic
. - Scripts must be specified directly, without the
Is
,script=
orsc=
prefixes. Example:\p{Hiragana}
- Blocks must be specified with the
In
prefix. Theblock=
andblk=
prefixes are not supported. Example:\p{Mongolian}
- Categories must be specified directly, without the
Is
,general_category=
orgc=
prefixes. Example:\p{L}
- Binary properties must be specified directly, without the
Is
. Example:\p{NoncharacterCodePoint}
- All underscores in names must be removed. For example, use
regexp_extract_all
(string, pattern) -> array(varchar)
Returns the substring(s) matched by the regular expression pattern
in string
:
SELECT regexp_extract_all('1a 2b 14m', '\d+'); -- [1, 2, 14]
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
:
SELECT regexp_extract_all('1a 2b 14m', '(\d+)([a-z]+)', 2); -- ['a', 'b', 'm']
regexp_extract
(string, pattern) → varchar
Returns the first substring matched by the regular expression pattern
in string
:
SELECT regexp_extract('1a 2b 14m', '\d+'); -- 1
regexp_extract
(string, pattern, group) → varchar
Finds the first occurrence of the regular expression pattern
in string
and returns the capturing group number group
:
SELECT regexp_extract('1a 2b 14m', '(\d+)([a-z]+)', 2); -- 'a'
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, except 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 $
:
SELECT regexp_like('1a 2b 14m', '\d+b'); -- true
regexp_replace
(string, pattern) → varchar
Removes every instance of the substring matched by the regular expression pattern
from string
:
SELECT regexp_replace('1a 2b 14m', '\d+[ab] '); -- '14m'
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 (\$
):
SELECT regexp_replace('1a 2b 14m', '(\d+)([ab]) ', '3c$2 '); -- '3ca 3cb 14m'
regexp_replace
(string, pattern, function) → varchar
Replaces every instance of the substring matched by the regular expression pattern
in string
using function
. The lambda expression function
is invoked for each match with the capturing groups passed as an array. Capturing group numbers start at one; there is no group for the entire match (if you need this, surround the entire expression with parenthesis).
SELECT regexp_replace('new york', '(\w)(\w*)', x -> upper(x[1]) || lower(x[2])); --'New York'
regexp_split
(string, pattern) -> array(varchar)
Splits string
using the regular expression pattern
and returns an array. Trailing empty strings are preserved:
SELECT regexp_split('1a 2b 14m', '\s*[a-z]+\s*'); -- [1, 2, 14, ]