Skip Headers
Oracle® Database SQL Language Reference
11g Release 2 (11.2)

Part Number E26088-02
Go to Documentation Home
Home
Go to Book List
Book List
Go to Table of Contents
Contents
Go to Index
Index
Go to Master Index
Master Index
Go to Feedback page
Contact Us

Go to previous page
Previous
Go to next page
Next
PDF · Mobi · ePub
SQLRF06303

REGEXP_SUBSTR

SQLRF51692Syntax

Description of regexp_substr.gif follows
Description of the illustration regexp_substr.gif

SQLRF51693Purpose

REGEXP_SUBSTR extends the functionality of the SUBSTR function by letting you search a string for a regular expression pattern. It is also similar to REGEXP_INSTR, but instead of returning the position of the substring, it returns the substring itself. This function is useful if you need the contents of a match string but not its position in the source string. The function returns the string as VARCHAR2 or CLOB data in the same character set as source_char.

This function complies with the POSIX regular expression standard and the Unicode Regular Expression Guidelines. For more information, refer to Appendix D, "Oracle Regular Expression Support".

SQLRF51694Examples

The following example examines the string, looking for the first substring bounded by commas. Oracle Database searches for a comma followed by one or more occurrences of non-comma characters followed by a comma. Oracle returns the substring, including the leading and trailing commas.

SELECT
  REGEXP_SUBSTR('500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA',
                ',[^,]+,') "REGEXPR_SUBSTR"
  FROM DUAL;

REGEXPR_SUBSTR
-----------------
, Redwood Shores,

The following example examines the string, looking for http:// followed by a substring of one or more alphanumeric characters and optionally, a period (.). Oracle searches for a minimum of three and a maximum of four occurrences of this substring between http:// and either a slash (/) or the end of the string.

SELECT
  REGEXP_SUBSTR('http://www.example.com/products',
                'http://([[:alnum:]]+\.?){3,4}/?') "REGEXP_SUBSTR"
  FROM DUAL;

REGEXP_SUBSTR
----------------------
http://www.example.com/

The next two examples use the subexpr argument to return a specific subexpression of pattern. The first statement returns the first subexpression in pattern:

SELECT REGEXP_SUBSTR('1234567890', '(123)(4(56)(78))', 1, 1, 'i', 1) 
"REGEXP_SUBSTR" FROM DUAL;

REGEXP_SUBSTR
-------------------
123

The next statement returns the fourth subexpression in pattern:

SELECT REGEXP_SUBSTR('1234567890', '(123)(4(56)(78))', 1, 1, 'i', 4) 
"REGEXP_SUBSTR" FROM DUAL;

REGEXP_SUBSTR
-------------------
78
Reader Comment

   

Comments, corrections, and suggestions are forwarded to authors every week. By submitting, you confirm you agree to the terms and conditions. Use the OTN forums for product questions. For support or consulting, file a service request through My Oracle Support.

Hide Navigation

Quick Lookup

Database Library · Master Index · Master Glossary · Book List · Data Dictionary · SQL Keywords · Initialization Parameters · Advanced Search · Error Messages

Main Categories

This Document

New and changed documents:
RSS Feed HTML RSS Feed PDF