re = /<tag2><tag3>([^<]+)<\/tag3><\/tag2>/
str = '<tag1><tag2><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3></tag2></tag1>
<tag1><tag2><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3></tag2></tag1>
<tag1><tag2><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3></tag2></tag1>
<tag1><tag2><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3></tag2></tag1>
<tag1><tag2><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3></tag2></tag1>
<tag1><tag2><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3></tag2></tag1>
<tag1><tag2><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3></tag2></tag1>
<tag1><tag2><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3><tag3>Some randome chars</tag3></tag2></tag1>'
# Print the match result
str.scan(re) do |match|
puts match.to_s
end
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 Ruby, please visit: http://ruby-doc.org/core-2.2.0/Regexp.html