Adsense Ad

Saturday, 13 May 2017

Oracle PLSQL: REGEXP_COUNT Function

REGEXP_COUNT Function

This Oracle tutorial explains how to use the Oracle/PLSQL REGEXP_COUNT function with syntax and examples.

Description

The Oracle/PLSQL REGEXP_COUNT function counts the number of times that a pattern occurs in a string. This function, introduced in Oracle 11g, will allow you to count the number of times a substring occurs in a string using regular expression pattern matching.

Syntax

The syntax for the REGEXP_COUNT function in Oracle is:
REGEXP_COUNT( string, pattern [, start_position [, atch_parameter ] ] )

Parameters or Arguments

string
The string to search. string can be CHAR, VARCHAR2, NCHAR, NVARCHAR2, CLOB, or NCLOB.
pattern
The regular expression matching information. It can be a combination of the following:
ValueDescription
^Matches the beginning of a string. If used with a match_parameter of 'm', it matches the start of a line anywhere within expression.
$Matches the end of a string. If used with a match_parameter of 'm', it matches the end of a line anywhere within expression.
*Matches zero or more occurrences.
+Matches one or more occurrences.
?Matches zero or one occurrence.
.Matches any character except NULL.
|Used like an "OR" to specify more than one alternative.
[ ]Used to specify a matching list where you are trying to match any one of the characters in the list.
[^ ]Used to specify a nonmatching list where you are trying to match any character except for the ones in the list.
( )Used to group expressions as a subexpression.
{m}Matches m times.
{m,}Matches at least m times.
{m,n}Matches at least m times, but no more than n times.
\nn is a number between 1 and 9. Matches the nth subexpression found within ( ) before encountering \n.
[..]Matches one collation element that can be more than one character.
[::]Matches character classes.
[==]Matches equivalence classes.
\dMatches a digit character.
\DMatches a nondigit character.
\wMatches a word character.
\WMatches a nonword character.
\sMatches a whitespace character.
\Smatches a non-whitespace character.
\AMatches the beginning of a string or matches at the end of a string before a newline character.
\ZMatches at the end of a string.
*?Matches the preceding pattern zero or more occurrences.
+?Matches the preceding pattern one or more occurrences.
??Matches the preceding pattern zero or one occurrence.
{n}?Matches the preceding pattern n times.
{n,}?Matches the preceding pattern at least n times.
{n,m}?Matches the preceding pattern at least n times, but not more than m times.
start_position
Optional. It is the position in string where the search will start. If omitted, it defaults to 1 which is the first position in the string.
match_parameter
Optional. It allows you to modify the matching behavior for the REGEXP_COUNT function. It can be a combination of the following:
ValueDescription
'c'Perform case-sensitive matching.
'i'Perform case-insensitive matching.
'n'Allows the period character (.) to match the newline character. By default, the period is a wildcard.
'm'expression is assumed to have multiple lines, where ^ is the start of a line and $ is the end of a line, regardless of the position of those characters in expression. By default, expression is assumed to be a single line.
'x'Whitespace characters are ignored. By default, whitespace characters are matched like any other character.

Note

  • If there are conflicting values provided for match_parameter, the REGEXP_COUNT function will use the last value.
  • If you omit the match_behavior parameter, the REGEXP_COUNT function will use the NLS_SORT parameter to determine if it should use a case-sensitive search, it will assume that string is a single line, and assume the period character to match any character (not the newline character).
  • If the REGEXP_COUNT function does not find any occurrence of pattern, it will return 0.

Applies To

The REGEXP_COUNT function can be used in the following versions of Oracle/PLSQL:
  • Oracle 12c, Oracle 11g

Example - Match on Single Character

Let's start by looking at the simplest case. Let's count the number of times the character 't' appears in a string.
For example:
SELECT REGEXP_COUNT ('TechOnTheNet is a great resource', 't')
FROM dual;

Result: 2
This example will return 2 because it is counting the number of occurrences of 't' in the string. Since we did not specify a match_parameter value, the REGEXP_COUNT function will perform a case-sensitive search which means that the 'T' characters will not be included in the count.
If we wanted to include both 't' and 'T' in our results and perform a case-insensitive search, we could modify our query as follows:
SELECT REGEXP_COUNT ('TechOnTheNet is a great resource', 't', 1, 'i')
FROM dual;

Result: 4
Now because we have provide a start_position of 1 and a match_parameter of 'i', the query will return 4 as the result. This time, both 't' and 'T' values would be included in the count.
If we wanted to count the number of 't' in a column, we could try something like this:
SELECT REGEXP_COUNT (last_name, 't', 1, 'i') AS total
FROM contacts;
This would count the number of 't' or 'T' values in the last_name field from the contacts table.

Example - Match on Multiple Characters

Let's look next at how we would use the REGEXP_COUNT function to match on a multi-character pattern.
For example:
SELECT REGEXP_COUNT ('The example shows how to use the REGEXP_COUNT function', 'the', 1, 'i')
FROM dual;

Result: 2
This example will return the number of times that the word 'the' appears in the string. It will perform a case-insensitive search so it will return 2.
For example:
SELECT REGEXP_COUNT ('The example shows how to use the REGEXP_COUNT function', 'the', 4, 'i')
FROM dual;

Result: 1
This example will return the number of times that the word 'the' appears in the string starting from position 4. In this case, it will return 1 because it will skip over the first 3 characters in the string before searching for the pattern.
Now, let's look how we would use the REGEXP_COUNT function with a table column and search for multiple characters.
For example:
SELECT REGEXP_COUNT (other_comments, 'the', 1, 'i')
FROM contacts;

Result: 3
In this example, we are going to count the number of occurrence of 'the' in the other_comments field in the contacts table.

Example - Match on more than one alternative

The next example that we will look at involves using the | pattern. The | pattern is used like an "OR" to specify more than one alternative.
For example:
SELECT REGEXP_COUNT ('Anderson', 'a|e|i|o|u')
FROM dual;

Result: 2
This example will return 2 because it is counting the number of vowels (a, e, i, o, or u) in the string 'Anderson'. Since we did not specify a match_parameter value, the REGEXP_COUNT function will perform a case-sensitive search which means that the 'A' in 'Anderson' will not be counted.
We could modify our query as follows to perform a case-insensitive search as follows:
SELECT REGEXP_COUNT ('Anderson', 'a|e|i|o|u', 1, 'i')
FROM dual;

Result: 3
Now because we have provide a start_position of 1 and a match_parameter of 'i', the query will return 3 as the result. This time, the 'A' in 'Anderson' will be included in the count.
Now, let's quickly show how you would use this function with a column.
So let's say we have a contact table with the following data:
contact_idlast_name
1000Anderson
2000Smith
3000Johnson
Now, let's run the following query:
SELECT contact_id, last_name, REGEXP_COUNT (last_name, 'a|e|i|o|u', 1, 'i') AS total
FROM contacts;
These are the results that would be returned by the query:
contact_idlast_nametotal
1000Anderson3
2000Smith1
3000Johnson2

No comments: