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REGEXP_LIKE



REGEXP_LIKE function is used to check that whether the string matches regular expression.

Syntax

REGEXP_LIKE(<expr>, <pat[, match_type]>)

Arguments

ArgumentsDescription
<expr>The string expr that to be matched
<pat>The regular expression
[match_type]Optional. match_type argument is a string that specifying how to perform matching

match_type may contain any or all the following characters:

  • c: Case-sensitive matching.
  • i: Case-insensitive matching.
  • m: Multiple-line mode. Recognize line terminators within the string. The default behavior is to match line terminators only at the start and end of the string expression.
  • n: The . character matches line terminators. The default is for . matching to stop at the end of a line.
  • u: Unix-only line endings. Not be supported now.

Return Type

BIGINT: Returns 1 if the string expr matches the regular expression specified by the pattern pat, 0 otherwise. If expr or pat is NULL, the return value is NULL.

Examples

SELECT REGEXP_LIKE('a', '^[a-d]'); +----------------------------+ | REGEXP_LIKE('a', '^[a-d]') | +----------------------------+ | 1 | +----------------------------+ SELECT REGEXP_LIKE('abc', 'ABC'); +---------------------------+ | REGEXP_LIKE('abc', 'ABC') | +---------------------------+ | 1 | +---------------------------+ SELECT REGEXP_LIKE('abc', 'ABC', 'c'); +--------------------------------+ | REGEXP_LIKE('abc', 'ABC', 'c') | +--------------------------------+ | 0 | +--------------------------------+ SELECT REGEXP_LIKE('new*\n*line', 'new\\*.\\*line'); +-------------------------------------------+ | REGEXP_LIKE('new* *line', 'new\*.\*line') | +-------------------------------------------+ | 0 | +-------------------------------------------+ SELECT REGEXP_LIKE('new*\n*line', 'new\\*.\\*line', 'n'); +------------------------------------------------+ | REGEXP_LIKE('new* *line', 'new\*.\*line', 'n') | +------------------------------------------------+ | 1 | +------------------------------------------------+

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