POSIX operators
A POSIX regular expression is a sequence of characters that specifies a match pattern. A string matches a regular expression if it is a member of the regular set described by the regular expression.
POSIX regular expressions provide a more powerful means for pattern matching than the LIKE and SIMILAR TO operators. POSIX regular expression patterns can match any portion of a string, unlike the SIMILAR TO operator, which returns true only if its pattern matches the entire string.
Note
Regular expression matching using POSIX operators is computationally expensive. We recommend using LIKE whenever possible, especially when processing a very large number of rows. For example, the following queries are functionally identical, but the query that uses LIKE runs several times faster than the query that uses a regular expression:
select count(*) from event where eventname ~ '.*(Ring|Die).*'; select count(*) from event where eventname LIKE '%Ring%' OR eventname LIKE '%Die%';
Syntax
expression [ ! ] ~ pattern
Arguments
- expression
-
A valid UTF-8 character expression, such as a column name.
- !
-
Negation operator. Does not match the regular expression.
- ~
-
Perform a case-sensitive match for any substring of expression.
Note
A
~~
is a synonym for LIKE. - pattern
-
A string literal that represents a regular expression pattern.
If pattern does not contain wildcard characters, then the pattern only represents the string itself.
To search for strings that include metacharacters, such as ‘. * | ?
‘, and so on, escape the character using two backslashes ('
\\
'). Unlike SIMILAR TO
and LIKE
, POSIX
regular expression syntax does not support a user-defined escape character.
Either of the character expressions can be CHAR or VARCHAR data types. If they differ, Amazon Redshift converts pattern to the data type of expression.
All of the character expressions can be CHAR or VARCHAR data types. If the expressions differ in data type, Amazon Redshift converts them to the data type of expression.
POSIX pattern matching supports the following metacharacters:
POSIX | Description |
---|---|
. | Matches any single character. |
* |
Matches zero or more occurrences. |
+ |
Matches one or more occurrences. |
? |
Matches zero or one occurrence. |
| |
Specifies alternative matches; for example,
means E or
H . |
^ |
Matches the beginning-of-line character. |
$ |
Matches the end-of-line character. |
$ |
Matches the end of the string. |
[ ] | Brackets specify a matching list, that should
match one expression in the list. A caret (^ ) precedes
a nonmatching list, which matches any character except for the
expressions represented in the list. |
( ) |
Parentheses group items into a single logical item. |
{m} |
Repeat the previous item exactly m times. |
{m,} |
Repeat the previous item m or more times. |
{m,n} |
Repeat the previous item at least m and not more than n times. |
[: :] |
Matches any character within a POSIX character
class. In the following character classes, Amazon Redshift supports only
ASCII characters: [:alnum:] , [:alpha:] ,
[:lower:] , [:upper:] |
Amazon Redshift supports the following POSIX character classes.
Character Class | Description |
---|---|
[[:alnum:]] |
All ASCII alphanumeric characters |
[[:alpha:]] |
All ASCII alphabetic characters |
[[:blank:]] |
All blank space characters |
[[:cntrl:]] |
All control characters (nonprinting) |
[[:digit:]] |
All numeric digits |
[[:lower:]] |
All lowercase ASCII alphabetic characters |
[[:punct:]] |
All punctuation characters |
[[:space:]] |
All space characters (nonprinting) |
[[:upper:]] |
All uppercase ASCII alphabetic characters |
[[:xdigit:]] |
All valid hexadecimal characters |
Amazon Redshift supports the following Perl-influenced operators in regular
expressions. Escape the operator using two backslashes (‘\\
’).
Operator | Description | Equivalent character class expression |
---|---|---|
\\d |
A digit character | [[:digit:]] |
\\D |
A nondigit character | [^[:digit:]] |
\\w |
A word character | [[:word:]] |
\\W |
A nonword character | [^[:word:]] |
\\s |
A white space character | [[:space:]] |
\\S |
A non–white space character | [^[:space:]] |
\\b |
A boundary word |
Examples
The following table shows examples of pattern matching using POSIX operators:
Expression | Returns |
---|---|
'abc' ~ 'abc' |
True |
'abc' ~ 'a' |
True |
'abc' ~ 'A' |
False |
'abc' ~ '.*(b|d).*' |
True |
'abc' ~ '(b|c).*' |
True |
'AbcAbcdefgefg12efgefg12' ~
'((Ab)?c)+d((efg)+(12))+'
|
True |
'aaaaaab11111xy' ~
'a{6}.[1]{5}(x|y){2}'
|
True |
'$0.87' ~ '\\$[0-9]+(\\.[0-9][0-9])?'
|
True |
'ab c' ~ '[[:space:]]' |
True |
'ab c' ~ '\\s' |
True |
' ' ~ '\\S' |
False |
The following example finds cities whose names contain E
or
H
:
SELECT DISTINCT city FROM users WHERE city ~ '.*E.*|.*H.*' ORDER BY city LIMIT 5; city ----------------- Agoura Hills Auburn Hills Benton Harbor Beverly Hills Chicago Heights
The following example finds cities whose names don't contain E
or
H
:
SELECT DISTINCT city FROM users WHERE city !~ '.*E.*|.*H.*' ORDER BY city LIMIT 5;
city ----------------- Aberdeen Abilene Ada Agat Agawam
The following example uses the escape string ('\\
') to search
for strings that include a period.
SELECT venuename FROM venue WHERE venuename ~ '.*\\..*' ORDER BY venueid; venuename ------------------------------ St. Pete Times Forum Jobing.com Arena Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome U.S. Cellular Field Superpages.com Center E.J. Nutter Center Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre St. James Theatre