无码视频在线观看,99人妻,国产午夜视频,久久久久国产一级毛片高清版新婚

  • 始創(chuàng)于2000年 股票代碼:831685
    咨詢熱線:0371-60135900 注冊有禮 登錄
    • 掛牌上市企業(yè)
    • 60秒人工響應
    • 99.99%連通率
    • 7*24h人工
    • 故障100倍補償
    全部產(chǎn)品
    您的位置: 網(wǎng)站首頁 > 幫助中心>文章內(nèi)容

    Oracle SQL 語句中正則表達式的應用

    發(fā)布時間:  2012/9/20 17:48:20

    REGEXP_LIKE(匹配)
    REGEXP_INSTR (包含)
    REGEXP_REPLACE(替換)
    REGEXP_SUBSTR(提取)

    如 手機號碼的表達式: ^[1]{1}[35]{1}[[:digit:]]{9}$
    查詢客戶信息表(tKHXX)中有手機號碼(SJHM)的可以這樣查詢

    1. SELECT * FORM tKHXX where  REGEXP_LIKE(SJHM,  '^[1]{1}[35]{1}[[:digit:]]{9}$' )  -
     

    SELECT * FORM tKHXX where REGEXP_LIKE(SJHM, '^[1]{1}[35]{1}[[:digit:]]{9}$'
    針對這個表達式解釋一下
    ^ 表示開始
    $ 表示結(jié)束
    []內(nèi)部為匹配范圍
    {}里的內(nèi)容表時個數(shù)

    手機號碼的特點是以 1開頭接著是3或5再加9位的數(shù)字 所以這么理解
    1開頭 表達式為 ^[1]{1} 意為 開始1位里包含1
    3或5 表達式為 [35]{1}
    9位數(shù)字結(jié)束 為: [[:digit:]]{9}$ 這里[:digit:]為特殊寫法,代表為數(shù)字 再加個結(jié)束符$

    用則表達式很簡單,更高效
    下面列一些參考,來自網(wǎng)絡 :)

    Anchoring Characters
    ^ Anchoring Characters
    $ Anchor the expression to the end of a line

    Equivalence Classes
    = =
    Oracle supports the equivalence classes through the POSIX '[==]' syntax. A base letter and all of its accented versions constitute an equivalence class. For example, the equivalence class '[=a=]' matches ?and ? The equivalence classes are valid only inside the bracketed expression
    Match Options
    c Case sensitive matching
    i Case insensitive matching
    m Treat source string as multi-line activating Anchor chars
    n Allow the period (.) to match any newline character
    Posix Characters

    [:alnum:] Alphanumeric characters
    [:alpha:] Alphabetic characters
    [:blank:] Blank Space Characters
    [:cntrl:] Control characters (nonprinting)
    [:digit:] Numeric digits
    [:graph:] Any [:punct:], [:upper:], [:lower:], and [:digit:] chars
    [:lower:] Lowercase alphabetic characters
    [:print:] Printable characters
    [:punct:] Punctuation characters
    [:space:] Space characters (nonprinting), such as carriage return, newline, vertical tab, and form feed
    [:upper:] Uppercase alphabetic characters
    [:xdigit:] Hexidecimal characters
    Quantifier Characters

    * Match 0 or more times
    ? Match 0 or 1 time
    + Match 1 or more times
    {m} Match exactly m times
    {m,} Match at least m times
    {m, n} Match at least m times but no more than n times
    \n Cause the previous expression to be repeated n times

    Alternative Matching And Grouping Characters
    | Separates alternates, often used with grouping operator ()
    ( ) Groups subexpression into a unit for alternations, for quantifiers, or for backreferencing (see "Backreferences" section)
    [char] Indicates a character list; most metacharacters inside a character list are understood as literals, with the exception of character classes, and the ^ and - metacharacters

    下面是個測試例子及環(huán)境
    測試表
    1. CREATE TABLE test ( 
    2. testcol VARCHAR2(50)); 
    3.  
    4. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('abcde'); 
    5. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('12345'); 
    6. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('1a4A5'); 
    7. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('12a45'); 
    8. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('12aBC'); 
    9. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('12abc'); 
    10. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('12ab5'); 
    11. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('12aa5'); 
    12. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('12AB5'); 
    13. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('ABCDE'); 
    14. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('123-5'); 
    15. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('12.45'); 
    16. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('1a4b5'); 
    17. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('1 3 5'); 
    18. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('1  45'); 
    19. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('1   5'); 
    20. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('a  b  c  d'); 
    21. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('a b  c   d    e'); 
    22. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('a              e'); 
    23. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('Steven'); 
    24. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('Stephen'); 
    25. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('111.222.3333'); 
    26. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('222.333.4444'); 
    27. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('333.444.5555'); 
    28. COMMIT; 

    CREATE TABLE test ( testcol VARCHAR2(50)); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('abcde'); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('12345'); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('1a4A5'); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('12a45'); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('12aBC'); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('12abc'); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('12ab5'); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('12aa5'); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('12AB5'); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('ABCDE'); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('123-5'); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('12.45'); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('1a4b5'); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('1 3 5'); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('1 45'); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('1 5'); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('a b c d'); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('a b c d e'); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('a e'); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('Steven'); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('Stephen'); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('111.222.3333'); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('222.333.4444'); INSERT INTO test VALUES ('333.444.5555'); COMMIT;
    REGEXP_INSTR
    REGEXP_INSTR(<source_string>, <pattern>, <start_position>, <occurrence>, <return_option>, <match_parameter>)

    Find words beginning with 's' or 'r' or 'p' followed by any 4 alphabetic characters: case insensitive
    1. SELECT REGEXP_INSTR('500 Oracle Pkwy, Redwood Shores, CA', '[o][[:alpha:]]{3}', 1, 1, 0, 'i') RESULT 
    2. FROM dual; 
    3.  
    4. SELECT REGEXP_INSTR('500 Oracle Pkwy, Redwood Shores, CA', '[o][[:alpha:]]{3}', 1, 1, 1, 'i') RESULT 
    5. FROM dual; 
    6.  
    7. SELECT REGEXP_INSTR('500 Oracle Pkwy, Redwood Shores, CA', '[o][[:alpha:]]{3}', 1, 2, 0, 'i') RESULT 
    8. FROM dual; 
    9.  
    10. SELECT REGEXP_INSTR('500 Oracle Pkwy, Redwood Shores, CA', '[o][[:alpha:]]{3}', 1, 2, 1, 'i') RESULT 
    11. FROM dual; 

    SELECT REGEXP_INSTR('500 Oracle Pkwy, Redwood Shores, CA', '[o][[:alpha:]]{3}', 1, 1, 0, 'i') RESULT FROM dual; SELECT REGEXP_INSTR('500 Oracle Pkwy, Redwood Shores, CA', '[o][[:alpha:]]{3}', 1, 1, 1, 'i') RESULT FROM dual; SELECT REGEXP_INSTR('500 Oracle Pkwy, Redwood Shores, CA', '[o][[:alpha:]]{3}', 1, 2, 0, 'i') RESULT FROM dual; SELECT REGEXP_INSTR('500 Oracle Pkwy, Redwood Shores, CA', '[o][[:alpha:]]{3}', 1, 2, 1, 'i') RESULT FROM dual;
    Find the postiion of try, trying, tried or tries

    1. SELECT REGEXP_INSTR('We are trying to make the subject easier.', 'tr(y(ing)?|(ied)|(ies))') RESULTNUM 
    2. FROM dual; 

    SELECT REGEXP_INSTR('We are trying to make the subject easier.', 'tr(y(ing)?|(ied)|(ies))') RESULTNUM FROM dual;
    REGEXP_LIKE

    REGEXP_LIKE(<source_string>, <pattern>, <match_parameter>)

    AlphaNumeric Characters
    1. SELECT * 
    2. FROM test 
    3. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:alnum:]]'); 
    4.  
    5. SELECT * 
    6. FROM test 
    7. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:alnum:]]{3}'); 
    8.  
    9. SELECT * 
    10. FROM test 
    11. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:alnum:]]{5}'); 

    SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:alnum:]]'); SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:alnum:]]{3}'); SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:alnum:]]{5}');
    Alphabetic Characters:
    1. SELECT * 
    2. FROM test 
    3. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:alpha:]]'); 
    4.  
    5. SELECT * 
    6. FROM test 
    7. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:alpha:]]{3}'); 
    8.  
    9. SELECT * 
    10. FROM test 
    11. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:alpha:]]{5}'); 

    SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:alpha:]]'); SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:alpha:]]{3}'); SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:alpha:]]{5}')
    Control Characters
    1. INSERT INTO test VALUES ('zyx' || CHR(13) || 'wvu'); 
    2. COMMIT; 
    3.  
    4. SELECT * 
    5. FROM test 
    6. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:cntrl:]]{1}'); 

    INSERT INTO test VALUES ('zyx' || CHR(13) || 'wvu'); COMMIT; SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:cntrl:]]{1}');
    Digits
    1. SELECT * 
    2. FROM test 
    3. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:digit:]]'); 
    4.  
    5. SELECT * 
    6. FROM test 
    7. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:digit:]]{3}'); 
    8.  
    9. SELECT * 
    10. FROM test 
    11. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:digit:]]{5}'); 

    SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:digit:]]'); SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:digit:]]{3}'); SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:digit:]]{5}');
    Lower Case
    1. SELECT * 
    2. FROM test 
    3. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:lower:]]'); 
    4.  
    5. SELECT * 
    6. FROM test 
    7. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:lower:]]{2}'); 
    8.  
    9. SELECT * 
    10. FROM test 
    11. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:lower:]]{3}'); 
    12.  
    13. SELECT * 
    14. FROM test 
    15. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:lower:]]{5}'); 

    SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:lower:]]'); SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:lower:]]{2}'); SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:lower:]]{3}'); SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:lower:]]{5}');
    Printable Characters
    1. SELECT * 
    2. FROM test 
    3. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:print:]]{5}'); 
    4.  
    5. SELECT * 
    6. FROM test 
    7. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:print:]]{6}'); 
    8.  
    9. SELECT * 
    10. FROM test 
    11. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:print:]]{7}'); 

    SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:print:]]{5}'); SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:print:]]{6}'); SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:print:]]{7}');
    Punctuation
    1. TRUNCATE TABLE test; 
    2.  
    3. SELECT * 
    4. FROM test 
    5. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:punct:]]'); 

    TRUNCATE TABLE test; SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:punct:]]');
    Spaces
    1. SELECT * 
    2. FROM test 
    3. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:space:]]'); 
    4.  
    5. SELECT * 
    6. FROM test 
    7. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:space:]]{2}'); 
    8.  
    9. SELECT * 
    10. FROM test 
    11. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:space:]]{3}'); 
    12.  
    13. SELECT * 
    14. FROM test 
    15. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:space:]]{5}'); 

    SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:space:]]'); SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:space:]]{2}'); SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:space:]]{3}'); SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:space:]]{5}')
    Upper Case
    1. SELECT * 
    2. FROM test 
    3. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:upper:]]'); 
    4.  
    5. SELECT * 
    6. FROM test 
    7. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:upper:]]{2}'); 
    8.  
    9. SELECT * 
    10. FROM test 
    11. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:upper:]]{3}');  

    SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:upper:]]'); SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:upper:]]{2}'); SELECT * FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '[[:upper:]]{3}');
    Values Starting with 'a%b'

    1. SELECT testcol 
    2. FROM test 
    3. WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '^ab*');  

    SELECT testcol FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '^ab*');
    'a' is the third value

    1. SELECT testcol 
    2. ROM test  WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '^..a.');  

    SELECT testcol FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '^..a.');
    Contains two consecutive occurances of the letter 'a' or 'z'

    1. SELECT testcol  FROM test  WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '([az])\1', 'i');  

    SELECT testcol FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '([az])\1', 'i')
    Begins with 'Ste' ends with 'en' and contains either 'v' or 'ph' in the center

    1. SELECT testcol FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '^Ste(v|ph)en$');  

    SELECT testcol FROM test WHERE REGEXP_LIKE(testcol, '^Ste(v|ph)en$');

    Use a regular expression in a check constraint

    1. CREATE TABLE mytest (c1 VARCHAR2(20),  
    2. CHECK (REGEXP_LIKE(c1, '^[[:alpha:]]+$')));  
    3. Identify SSN 
    4.  
    5. Thanks: Byron Bush HIOUG  
    6.  
    7.  
    8. CREATE TABLE ssn_test ( 
    9. ssn_col  VARCHAR2(20)); 
    10.  
    11. INSERT INTO ssn_test VALUES ('111-22-3333'); 
    12. INSERT INTO ssn_test VALUES ('111=22-3333'); 
    13. INSERT INTO ssn_test VALUES ('111-A2-3333'); 
    14. INSERT INTO ssn_test VALUES ('111-22-33339'); 
    15. INSERT INTO ssn_test VALUES ('111-2-23333'); 
    16. INSERT INTO ssn_test VALUES ('987-65-4321'); 
    17. COMMIT; 
    18.  
    19. SELECT ssn_col 
    20. from ssn_test 
    21. WHERE regexp_like(ssn_col,'^[0-9]{3}-[0-9]{2}-[0-9]{4}$');  

    CREATE TABLE mytest (c1 VARCHAR2(20), CHECK (REGEXP_LIKE(c1, '^[[:alpha:]]+$'))); Identify SSN Thanks: Byron Bush HIOUG CREATE TABLE ssn_test ( ssn_col VARCHAR2(20)); INSERT INTO ssn_test VALUES ('111-22-3333'); INSERT INTO ssn_test VALUES ('111=22-3333'); INSERT INTO ssn_test VALUES ('111-A2-3333'); INSERT INTO ssn_test VALUES ('111-22-33339'); INSERT INTO ssn_test VALUES ('111-2-23333'); INSERT INTO ssn_test VALUES ('987-65-4321'); COMMIT; SELECT ssn_col from ssn_test WHERE regexp_like(ssn_col,'^[0-9]{3}-[0-9]{2}-[0-9]{4}$'
    REGEXP_REPLACE

    Syntax REGEXP_REPLACE(<source_string>, <pattern>,<replace_string>, <position>, <occurrence>, <match_parameter>)

    Looks for the pattern xxx.xxx.xxxx and reformats pattern to (xxx) xxx-xxxx col testcol format a15
    col result format a15

    1. SELECT testcol, REGEXP_REPLACE(testcol,'([[:digit:]]{3})\.([[:digit:]]{3})\.([[:digit:]]{4})', 
    2. '(\1) \2-\3') RESULT 
    3. FROM test 
    4. WHERE LENGTH(testcol) = 12;  

    SELECT testcol, REGEXP_REPLACE(testcol,'([[:digit:]]{3})\.([[:digit:]]{3})\.([[:digit:]]{4})', '(\1) \2-\3') RESULT FROM test WHERE LENGTH(testcol) = 12;
    Put a space after every character

    1. SELECT testcol, REGEXP_REPLACE(testcol, '(.)', '\1 ') RESULT 
    2. FROM test   WHERE testcol like 'S%';  

    SELECT testcol, REGEXP_REPLACE(testcol, '(.)', '\1 ') RESULT FROM test WHERE testcol like 'S%';
    Replace multiple spaces with a single space

    1. SELECT REGEXP_REPLACE('500    Oracle    Parkway, Redwood    Shores, CA', '( ){2,}', ' ') RESULT 
    2. FROM dual;  

    SELECT REGEXP_REPLACE('500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA', '( ){2,}', ' ') RESULT FROM dual
    Insert a space between a lower case character followed by an upper case character

    1. SELECT REGEXP_REPLACE('George McGovern', '([[:lower:]])([[:upper:]])', '\1 \2') CITY 
    2. FROM dual;  

    SELECT REGEXP_REPLACE('George McGovern', '([[:lower:]])([[:upper:]])', '\1 \2') CITY FROM dual;
    Replace the period with a string (note use of '\')

    1. SELECT REGEXP_REPLACE('We are trying to make the subject easier.','\.',' for you.') REGEXT_SAMPLE 
    2. FROM dual;  

    SELECT REGEXP_REPLACE('We are trying to make the subject easier.','\.',' for you.') REGEXT_SAMPLE FROM dual;

    REGEXP_SUBSTR

    Syntax REGEXP_SUBSTR(source_string, pattern[, position [, occurrence[, match_parameter]]])

    Searches for a comma followed by one or more occurrences of non-comma characters followed by a comma

    1. SELECT REGEXP_SUBSTR('500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA', ',[^,]+,') RESULT 
    2. FROM dual;  

    SELECT REGEXP_SUBSTR('500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA', ',[^,]+,') RESULT FROM dual;

    Look for http:// followed by a substring of one or more alphanumeric characters and optionally, a period (.) col result format a50

    1. SELECT REGEXP_SUBSTR('Go to http://www.Oracle.com/products and click on database', 
    2. 'http://([[:alnum:]]+\.?){3,4}/?') RESULT 
    3. FROM dual;  

    SELECT REGEXP_SUBSTR('Go to http://www.Oracle.com/products and click on database', 'http://([[:alnum:]]+\.?){3,4}/?') RESULT FROM dual;

    Extracts try, trying, tried or tries

    SELECT REGEXP_SUBSTR('We are trying to make the subject easier.','tr(y(ing)?|(ied)|(ies))')
    FROM dual;
    Extract the 3rd field treating ':' as a delimiter SELECT REGEXP_SUBSTR('system/pwd@orabase:1521:sidval',
    '[^:]+', 1, 3) RESULT
    FROM dual;

    Extract from string with vertical bar delimiter
    1. CREATE TABLE regexp ( 
    2. testcol VARCHAR2(50)); 
    3.  
    4. INSERT INTO regexp 
    5. (testcol) 
    6. VALUES 
    7. ('One|Two|Three|Four|Five'); 
    8.  
    9. SELECT * FROM regexp; 
    10.  
    11. SELECT REGEXP_SUBSTR(testcol,'[^|]+', 1, 3) 
    12. FROM regexp;  

    CREATE TABLE regexp ( testcol VARCHAR2(50)); INSERT INTO regexp (testcol) VALUES ('One|Two|Three|Four|Five'); SELECT * FROM regexp; SELECT REGEXP_SUBSTR(testcol,'[^|]+', 1, 3) FROM regexp;

    Equivalence classes
    1. SELECT REGEXP_SUBSTR('iSelfSchooling NOT ISelfSchooling', '[[=i=]]SelfSchooling') RESULT  
    2. FROM dual;   

    SELECT REGEXP_SUBSTR('iSelfSchooling NOT ISelfSchooling', '[[=i=]]SelfSchooling') RESULT FROM dual;


     


    本文出自:億恩科技【mszdt.com】

    服務器租用/服務器托管中國五強!虛擬主機域名注冊頂級提供商!15年品質(zhì)保障!--億恩科技[ENKJ.COM]

  • 您可能在找
  • 億恩北京公司:
  • 經(jīng)營性ICP/ISP證:京B2-20150015
  • 億恩鄭州公司:
  • 經(jīng)營性ICP/ISP/IDC證:豫B1.B2-20060070
  • 億恩南昌公司:
  • 經(jīng)營性ICP/ISP證:贛B2-20080012
  • 服務器/云主機 24小時售后服務電話:0371-60135900
  • 虛擬主機/智能建站 24小時售后服務電話:0371-60135900
  • 專注服務器托管17年
    掃掃關(guān)注-微信公眾號
    0371-60135900
    Copyright© 1999-2019 ENKJ All Rights Reserved 億恩科技 版權(quán)所有  地址:鄭州市高新區(qū)翠竹街1號總部企業(yè)基地億恩大廈  法律顧問:河南亞太人律師事務所郝建鋒、杜慧月律師   京公網(wǎng)安備41019702002023號
      1
     
     
     
     

    0371-60135900
    7*24小時客服服務熱線