import Foundation
let pattern = #"operator\D+(\d+)"#
let regex = try! NSRegularExpression(pattern: pattern, options: .anchorsMatchLines)
let testString = #"""
I have following string dfed operator 11 - 145. I am trying to match string operator 11 and inside this matched string, i am trying to match string 11. Currently I successfully matched operator 11 with regex ((O|o)perator(i|I)?\s*)\d+(?=\s*(-|_)\s*\d+). As I am in javascript, I can not use lookbehinds.
Is my approach correct? Is there any way to accomplish this in regex? How can i match string 11 inside previously matched string operator 11?
"""#
let stringRange = NSRange(location: 0, length: testString.utf16.count)
let matches = regex.matches(in: testString, range: stringRange)
var result: [[String]] = []
for match in matches {
var groups: [String] = []
for rangeIndex in 1 ..< match.numberOfRanges {
let nsRange = match.range(at: rangeIndex)
guard !NSEqualRanges(nsRange, NSMakeRange(NSNotFound, 0)) else { continue }
let string = (testString as NSString).substring(with: nsRange)
groups.append(string)
}
if !groups.isEmpty {
result.append(groups)
}
}
print(result)
Please keep in mind that these code samples are automatically generated and are not guaranteed to work. If you find any syntax errors, feel free to submit a bug report. For a full regex reference for Swift 5.2, please visit: https://developer.apple.com/documentation/foundation/nsregularexpression