I have a MySQL database and I have a query as:
SELECT `id`, `originaltext` FROM `source` WHERE `originaltext` regexp '[0-9][0-9]'
This detects all originaltexts which have numbers with 2 digits in it.
I need MySQL to return those numbers as a field, so i can manipulate them further.
Ideally, if I can add additional criteria that is should be > 20 would be great, but i can do that separately as well.
If you want to return a part of a string :
Locate()
will return the starting postion of the matching string which becomes starting position ofFunction Substring()
There isn't any syntax in MySQL for extracting text using regular expressions. You can use the REGEXP to identify the rows containing two consecutive digits, but to extract them you have to use the ordinary string manipulation functions which is very difficult in this case.
Alternatives:
SUBSTRING(originaltext from '%#[0-9]{2}#%' for '#')
.I'm having the same issue, and this is the solution I found (but it won't work in all cases) :
LOCATE()
to find the beginning and the end of the string you wan't to matchMID()
to extract the substring in between...If you want more regular expression power in your database, you can consider using LIB_MYSQLUDF_PREG. This is an open source library of MySQL user functions that imports the PCRE library. LIB_MYSQLUDF_PREG is delivered in source code form only. To use it, you'll need to be able to compile it and install it into your MySQL server. Installing this library does not change MySQL's built-in regex support in any way. It merely makes the following additional functions available:
PREG_CAPTURE extracts a regex match from a string. PREG_POSITION returns the position at which a regular expression matches a string. PREG_REPLACE performs a search-and-replace on a string. PREG_RLIKE tests whether a regex matches a string.
All these functions take a regular expression as their first parameter. This regular expression must be formatted like a Perl regular expression operator. E.g. to test if regex matches the subject case insensitively, you'd use the MySQL code PREG_RLIKE('/regex/i', subject). This is similar to PHP's preg functions, which also require the extra // delimiters for regular expressions inside the PHP string.
If you want something more simpler, you could alter this function to suit better your needs.
I used my code as a Stored Procedure (Function), shall work to extract any number built from digits in a single block. This is a part of my wider library.
I know it's been quite a while since this question was asked but came across it and thought it would be a good challenge for my custom regex replacer - see this blog post.
...And the good news is it can, although it needs to be called quite a few times. See this online rextester demo, which shows the workings that got to the SQL below.