Password validation with regex Arabic and English characters in swift - ios

I want to validate the password to include at least 1 Arabic or English letter and at least 1 Arabic or English number and at leats 8 length password, my old code that was made for English only was like :
let passwordRegex = "^(?=.*[A-Za-z])(?=.*\\d)[A-Za-z\\d]{8,}$"
if (!NSPredicate(format:"SELF MATCHES %#",passwordRegex).evaluate(with: password)){
return false
}
and then i found this answer for Arabic characters and digits, then i tried to merge both like this :
let passwordRegex = "^(?=.*[A-Za-zء-ي])(?=.*٠-٩\\d)[A-Za-zء-ي٠-٩\\d]{8,}$"
if (!NSPredicate(format:"SELF MATCHES %#",passwordRegex).evaluate(with: password)){
return false
}
please advise what's wrong, thanks in advance

Since an English or Arabic letter regex (as described in this answer you linked to, also, see this answer, too) is [a-zA-Za-z\u0621-\u064A] and an English or Arabic digit regex is [0-9\u0660-\u0669] you may use
let passwordRegex = "^(?=.*[a-zA-Z\\u0621-\\u064A])(?=.*[0-9\\u0660-\\u0669])[a-zA-Za-z\\u0621-\\u064A0-9\\u0660-\\u0669]{8,}$"
NOTE: you do not need the outer ^ and $ anchors because MATCHES requires the pattern to match the whole string input.
Another way to match an Arabic letter with ICU regex used in Swift is to use [\p{L}&&[\p{script=Arabic}]] (it is an intersection inside a character class, it matches any letter but from the Arabic character set). Same with a digit: [\p{N}&&[\p{script=Arabic}]]. Then, the regex will look like
let passwordRegex = "^(?=.*[\\p{L}&&[\\p{script=Arabic}A-Za-z]])(?=.*[\\p{N}&&[\\p{script=Arabic}0-9]])[\\p{L}\\p{N}&&[\\p{script=Arabic}a-zA-Z0-9]]{8,}$"
So, here
[\\p{L}&&[\\p{script=Arabic}A-Za-z]] - any letter but it should belong to either ASCII letters or Arabic script
[\\p{N}&&[\\p{script=Arabic}0-9]] - any digit but either from 0-9 range or Arabic script
[\\p{L}\\p{N}&&[\\p{script=Arabic}a-zA-Z0-9]] - any letter or digit but only from the ASCII 0-9, A-Z, a-z and Arabic script.
Note also, that in order to match any letters, you may use\p{L} and to match any digits you may use \d (they are Unicode aware in ICU library). So, *in case t does not matter if the letters or digits are Arabic, English, Greek or whatever, you may use
let passwordRegex = "^(?=.*\\p{L})(?=.*\\d)[\\p{L}\\d]{8,}$"

Related

Split words contained in string based on uppercase

I have a string that has no spaces, what marks every single word is the uppercase letter at the beginning of each word, what would be the best way for extracting them?
here's what i've got:
str = "TheseAreAFewWordsAndThis-one-contains-wildcards"
Desired output would be:
These
Are
A
Few
Words
And
This-one-contains-wildcards
I don't need to treat any magical characters as such, they can stay in the string no problems
for wrd in str:gmatch("%u%U*") do print(wrd) end
"%u%U*" is a string pattern that matches a single capital letter followed by any number of non capital letter characters.
Please read https://www.lua.org/manual/5.4/manual.html#6.4.1

Check password length with regex [duplicate]

I want a regular expression to check that:
A password contains at least eight characters, including at least one number and includes both lower and uppercase letters and special characters, for example #, ?, !.
It cannot be your old password or contain your username, "password", or "websitename"
And here is my validation expression which is for eight characters including one uppercase letter, one lowercase letter, and one number or special character.
(?=^.{8,}$)((?=.*\d)|(?=.*\W+))(?![.\n])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*[a-z]).*$"
How can I write it for a password must be eight characters including one uppercase letter, one special character and alphanumeric characters?
Minimum eight characters, at least one letter and one number:
"^(?=.*[A-Za-z])(?=.*\d)[A-Za-z\d]{8,}$"
Minimum eight characters, at least one letter, one number and one special character:
"^(?=.*[A-Za-z])(?=.*\d)(?=.*[#$!%*#?&])[A-Za-z\d#$!%*#?&]{8,}$"
Minimum eight characters, at least one uppercase letter, one lowercase letter and one number:
"^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d)[a-zA-Z\d]{8,}$"
Minimum eight characters, at least one uppercase letter, one lowercase letter, one number and one special character:
"^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d)(?=.*[#$!%*?&])[A-Za-z\d#$!%*?&]{8,}$"
Minimum eight and maximum 10 characters, at least one uppercase letter, one lowercase letter, one number and one special character:
"^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d)(?=.*[#$!%*?&])[A-Za-z\d#$!%*?&]{8,10}$"
You may use this regex with multiple lookahead assertions (conditions):
^(?=.*?[A-Z])(?=.*?[a-z])(?=.*?[0-9])(?=.*?[#?!#$%^&*-]).{8,}$
This regex will enforce these rules:
At least one upper case English letter, (?=.*?[A-Z])
At least one lower case English letter, (?=.*?[a-z])
At least one digit, (?=.*?[0-9])
At least one special character, (?=.*?[#?!#$%^&*-])
Minimum eight in length .{8,} (with the anchors)
Regular expressions don't have an AND operator, so it's pretty hard to write a regex that matches valid passwords, when validity is defined by something AND something else AND something else...
But, regular expressions do have an OR operator, so just apply DeMorgan's theorem, and write a regex that matches invalid passwords:
Anything with less than eight characters OR anything with no numbers OR anything with no uppercase OR or anything with no lowercase OR anything with no special characters.
So:
^(.{0,7}|[^0-9]*|[^A-Z]*|[^a-z]*|[a-zA-Z0-9]*)$
If anything matches that, then it's an invalid password.
Use the following Regex to satisfy the below conditions:
Conditions:
Min 1 uppercase letter.
Min 1 lowercase letter.
Min 1 special character.
Min 1 number.
Min 8 characters.
Max 30 characters.
Regex:
/^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d)(?=.*[#$#!%&*?])[A-Za-z\d#$#!%&*?]{8,30}$/
Just a small improvement for #anubhava's answer: Since special character are limited to the ones in the keyboard, use this for any special character:
^(?=.*?[A-Z])(?=(.*[a-z]){1,})(?=(.*[\d]){1,})(?=(.*[\W]){1,})(?!.*\s).{8,}$
This regex will enforce these rules:
At least one upper case English letter
At least one lower case English letter
At least one digit
At least one special character
Minimum eight in length
I had some difficulty following the most popular answer for my circumstances. For example, my validation was failing with characters such as ; or [. I was not interested in white-listing my special characters, so I instead leveraged [^\w\s] as a test - simply put - match non word characters (including numeric) and non white space characters. To summarize, here is what worked for me...
at least 8 characters
at least 1 numeric character
at least 1 lowercase letter
at least 1 uppercase letter
at least 1 special character
/^(?=.*?[A-Z])(?=.*?[a-z])(?=.*?[0-9])(?=.*?[^\w\s]).{8,}$/
JSFiddle Link - simple demo covering various cases
 
✅ The following 4 regex patterns can help you to write almost any password validation
 
 
Pattern 1:
 
Password must contain one digit from 1 to 9, one lowercase letter, one uppercase letter, one special character, no space, and it must be 8-16 characters long.
/^(?=.*[0-9])(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\W)(?!.* ).{8,16}$/
 
Explanation:
 
(?=.*[0-9]) means that the password must contain a single digit from 1 to 9.
 
(?=.*[a-z]) means that the password must contain one lowercase letter.
 
(?=.*[A-Z]) means that the password must contain one uppercase letter.
 
(?=.*\W) means that the password must contain one special character.
 
.{8,16} means that the password must be 8-16 characters long. We must use this at the end of the regex, just before the $ symbol.
 
What are ^ and $:
 
^ indicates the beginning of the string. $ indicates the end of the string.
If we don't use these ^ & $, the regex will not be able to determine the maximum length of the password. In the above example, we have a condition that the password can't be longer than 16 characters, to make that condition work, we have used these ^ & $
 
Remove maximum length restriction:
 
Instead of .{8,16}, if we used .{8,}, it would mean that the password must be at least 8 characters long. So, there will not be any condition for checking the maximum length of the password.
 
Don't accept any number(digit):
 
Instead of (?=.*[0-9]), if we used (?!.*[0-9]), it would mean that the password must not contain any digit from 1-9 (Difference with the (?=.*[0-9]) is the use of ! instead of =)
 
Don't accept any spcecial character:
 
Instead of (?=.*\W), if we used (?!.*\W), it would mean that the password must not contain any special characters (The difference with the (?=.*\W) is the use of ! instead of =)
 
Alternative Syntax for number(digit):
 
Instead of (?=.*[0-9]), we could have used (?=.*\d). (?=.*\d) also means that the password must contain a single digit from 1 to 9.
 
 
Pattern 2:
 
Password must contain one digit from 1 to 9, one lowercase letter, one uppercase letter, one underscore but no other special character, no space and it must be 8-16 characters long.
/^(?=.*[0-9])(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*_)(?!.*\W)(?!.* ).{8,16}$/
 
Difference with the Pattern 1
 
Here, we have used (?=.*_) which wasn't on the Pattern 1.
 
(?=.*_)(?!.*\W) means that the password must contain an underscore but can not contain any other special character.
 
Pattern 3:
 
Password must contain one digit from 1 to 9, one lowercase letter, one uppercase letter, one underscore, no space and it must be 8-16 characters long. Usage of any other special character other than underscore is optional.
/^(?=.*[0-9])(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*_)(?!.* ).{8,16}$/
 
Difference with the Pattern 2
 
Here, we have not used (?!.*\W) what was on the Pattern 2.
 
But it still has the (?=.*_)
 
By just removing the (?!.*\W), special characters have become optional. Now, one underscore is required but any other special character can be used or not as it's optional.
 
Pattern 4:
 
Password must contain one digit from 1 to 9, one lowercase letter, one uppercase letter, and one underscore, and it must be 8-16 characters long. Usage of any other special character and usage of space is optional.
/^(?=.*[0-9])(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z]).{8,16}$/
 
Difference with the Pattern 3
 
Here, we have not used (?=.*_) & (?!.* ) which was on the Pattern 3.
 
By removing (?=.*_), it's no longer mandatory to pass one underscore. Now, passing special characters is optional.
 
By removing the (?!.* ), usage of space has become optional too.
I would reply to Peter Mortensen, but I don't have enough reputation.
His expressions are perfect for each of the specified minimum requirements. The problem with his expressions that don't require special characters is that they also don't ALLOW special characters, so they also enforce maximum requirements, which I don't believe the OP requested. Normally you want to allow your users to make their password as strong as they want; why restrict strong passwords?
So, his "minimum eight characters, at least one letter and one number" expression:
^(?=.*[A-Za-z])(?=.*\d)[A-Za-z\d]{8,}$
achieves the minimum requirement, but the remaining characters can only be letter and numbers. To allow (but not require) special characters, you should use something like:
^(?=.*[A-Za-z])(?=.*\d).{8,}$ to allow any characters
or
^(?=.*[A-Za-z])(?=.*\d)[A-Za-z\d$#$!%*#?&]{8,}$ to allow specific special characters
Likewise, "minimum eight characters, at least one uppercase letter, one lowercase letter and one number:"
^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d)[a-zA-Z\d]{8,}$
meets that minimum requirement, but only allows letters and numbers. Use:
^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d).{8,}$ to allow any characters
or
^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d)[A-Za-z\d$#$!%*?&]{8,} to allow specific special characters.
A more "generic" version(?), allowing none English letters as special characters.
^(?=\S*[a-z])(?=\S*[A-Z])(?=\S*\d)(?=\S*[^\w\s])\S{8,}$
var pwdList = [
'##V4-\3Z`zTzM{>k',
'12qw!"QW12',
'123qweASD!"#',
'1qA!"#$%&',
'Günther32',
'123456789',
'qweASD123',
'qweqQWEQWEqw',
'12qwAS!'
],
re = /^(?=\S*[a-z])(?=\S*[A-Z])(?=\S*\d)(?=\S*[^\w\s])\S{8,}$/;
pwdList.forEach(function (pw) {
document.write('<span style="color:'+ (re.test(pw) ? 'green':'red') + '">' + pw + '</span><br/>');
});
Import the JavaScript file jquery.validate.min.js.
You can use this method:
$.validator.addMethod("pwcheck", function (value) {
return /[\#\#\$\%\^\&\*\(\)\_\+\!]/.test(value) && /[a-z]/.test(value) && /[0-9]/.test(value) && /[A-Z]/.test(value)
});
At least one upper case English letter
At least one lower case English letter
At least one digit
At least one special character
For standard password requirements I found this to be useful:
At least 1 alphabet
At least 1 digit
Contains no space
Optional special characters e.g. #$!%*#?&^_-
Minimum 8 characters long
/^(?=.*[A-Za-z])(?=.*\d)[A-Za-z\d#$!%*#?&^_-]{8,}$/
You can also set the upper limit for example {8,32} up to 32 characters long.
Try this one:
Minimum six characters
At least one uppercase character
At least one lowercase character
At least one special character
Expression:
"/^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d)(?=.*[$#$!%*?&.])[A-Za-z\d$#$!%*?&.]{6, 20}/"
Optional Special Characters:
At least one special character
At least one number
Special characters are optional
Minimum six characters and maximum 16 characters
Expression:
"/^(?=.*\d)(?=.*[a-zA-Z]).{6,20}$/"
If the min and max condition is not required then remove .{6, 16}
6 is minimum character limit
20 is maximum character limit
?= means match expression
This worked for me:
^(?=.*[0-9])(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*[#$!%*?&])([a-zA-Z0-9#$!%*?&]{8,})$
At least 8 characters long;
One lowercase, one uppercase, one number and one special character;
No whitespaces.
Not directly answering the question, but does it really have to be a regex?
I used to do lots of Perl, and got used to solving problems with regexes. However, when they get more complicated with all the look-aheads and other quirks, you need to write dozens of unit tests to kill all those little bugs.
Furthermore, a regex is typically a few times slower than an imperative or a functional solution.
For example, the following (not very FP) Scala function solves the original question about three times faster than the regex of the most popular answer. What it does is also so clear that you don't need a unit test at all:
def validatePassword(password: String): Boolean = {
if (password.length < 8)
return false
var lower = false
var upper = false
var numbers = false
var special = false
password.foreach { c =>
if (c.isDigit) numbers = true
else if (c.isLower) lower = true
else if (c.isUpper) upper = true
else special = true
}
lower && upper && numbers && special
}
For a more strict validation where the following is required:
At least One Upper Case Character
At least one Lower Case character
At least one digit
At least one symbol/special character #$!%*#?&^_-
Minimum 8 characters/digits
Regex:
/(?=.*\d)(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*[#$!%*#?&^_-]).{8,}/
I hope it helps someone with a more stringent.
What about considering the following regex solution:
^(?=.*[\w])(?=.*[\W])[\w\W]{8,}$
Which validates the following:
At least one lowercase
At least one uppercase
At least one digit
At least one special character
At least it should have 8 characters long.
Check it out working at the following link https://regex101.com/r/qPmC06/4/
^(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[0-9])(?=.*[!##$%^&*()_+,.\\\/;':"-]).{8,}$
Another option is to make use of contrast in the lookahead assertions using a negated character class, optionally matching any character except that is listed before matching the character that should be matched.
^(?=[^A-Z\n]*[A-Z])(?=[^a-z\n]*[a-z])(?=[^0-9\n]*[0-9])(?=[^#?!#$%^&*\n-]*[#?!#$%^&*-]).{8,}$
See a regex demo
In parts, the pattern matches:
^ Start of string
(?=[^A-Z\n]*[A-Z]) Positive lookahead, assert 0+ times any char except A-Z or a newline. Then match a char A-Z
(?=[^a-z\n]*[a-z]) The same approach for a char a-z
(?=[^0-9\n]*[0-9]) The same approach for a digit 0-9
(?=[^#?!#$%^&*\n-]*[#?!#$%^&*-]) The same approach for a char that you would consider special
.{8,} Match 8 or more times any character except a newline
$ End of string
Notes
A dot can also match a space. If you do not want to allow matching a space, then .{8,} can be changed to \S{8,} to match 8 or more non whitespace characters
Using either . or \S can match more characters than are specified in the lookahead assertions. If you only want to match the characters that are used in the assertions, you can change .{8,} to match only the allowed characters [#?!#$%^&*A-Za-z0-9-]{8,} using a character class
const regex = /^(?=[^A-Z\n]*[A-Z])(?=[^a-z\n]*[a-z])(?=[^0-9\n]*[0-9])(?=[^#?!#$%^&*\n-]*[#?!#$%^&*-]).{8,}$/;
[
"abcA1#!A",
"#!asdfSFD1;",
"# a f F1 ;",
"1111111111",
"aaaaaaaa",
"11111111",
"AAAAAAAA",
"########",
"aA1#"
].forEach(s =>
console.log(regex.test(s) ? `Match --> ${s}` : `No match --> ${s}`)
);
/^(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[0-9]).*$/
this the simple way to use it while validate atleast 1 uppercase 1 lowercase and 1 number
and this is the example while I use in express validation
check('password')
.notEmpty()
.withMessage('Password cannot be null')
.bail()
.isLength({ min: 6 })
.withMessage('Password must be at least 6 characters')
.bail()
.matches(/^(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[0-9]).*$/)
.withMessage(
'Must have atleast 1 uppercase, 1 lowercase letter and 1 number'
),
Testing this one in 2020:
^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d)(?=.*[#$!%*?&])[A-Za-z\d#$!%*?&]{8,}$
Verify yourself
const regex = /^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d)(?=.*[#$!%*?&])[A-Za-z\d#$!%*?&]{8,}$/;
const str = `some12*Nuts`;
let m;
if ((m = regex.exec(str)) !== null) {
// The result can be accessed through the `m`-variable.
m.forEach((match, groupIndex) => {
console.log(`Found match, group ${groupIndex}: ${match}`);
});
}
#ClasG has already suggested:
^(?=\S*[a-z])(?=\S*[A-Z])(?=\S*\d)(?=\S*[^\w\s])\S{8,}$
but it does not accept _(underscore) as a special character (eg. Aa12345_).
An improved one is:
^(?=\S*[a-z])(?=\S*[A-Z])(?=\S*\d)(?=\S*([^\w\s]|[_]))\S{8,}$
I've found many problems here, so I made my own.
Here it is in all it's glory, with tests:
^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d)(?=.*([^a-zA-Z\d\s])).{9,}$
https://regex101.com/r/DCRR65/4/tests
Things to look out for:
doesn't use \w because that includes _, which I'm testing for.
I've had lots of troubles matching symbols, without matching the end of the line.
Doesn't specify symbols specifically, this is also because different locales may have different symbols on their keyboards that they may want to use.
Demo:
function password_check() {
pass = document.getElementById("password").value;
console.log(pass);
regex = /^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d)(?=.*[#$!%*?&])[A-Za-z\d#$!%*?&]{8,}$/;
if (regex.exec(pass) == null) {
alert('invalid password!')
}
else {
console.log("valid");
}
}
<input type="text" id="password" value="Sample#1">
<input type="button" id="submit" onclick="password_check()" value="submit">
var strongRegex = new RegExp("^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*[0-9])(?=.*[!##\$%\^&\*])(?=.{8,})");
var mediumRegex = new RegExp("^(((?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z]))|((?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[0-9]))|((?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*[0-9])))(?=.{6,})");
Best For javascript
Keep it simple stupid:
This should do the trick for you, always.
Regex: ^(.{0,7}|[^a-z]{1,}|[^A-Z]{1,}|[^\d]{1,}|[^\W]{1,})$|[\s]
If your password matches the regex above, it is invalid.
If there's no match, your password is valid and contains has at least 8 characters, one upper case letter, one lower case letter and one symbol or special character. And it also contains no spaces, tabs or line breaks.
Breakdown of Regex
.{0,7} - matches if password has between 0 to 7 characters.
[^a-z]{1,} - matches if no lower case is found
[^A-Z]{1,} - matches if no upper case is found
[^\d]{1,} - matches if no number (between [0-9]) is found
[\s] - matches if a white space, tab or line break is found.
With this approach there's no limit or restriction in terms of symbols allowed. If you want to limit to few symbols allowable, just change [^\W] with [^YourSymbols].
(?=.*[0-9])(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*[##$%^&+-]).{6}
According to your need this pattern should work just fine. Try this,
^(?=(.*\d){1})(.*\S)(?=.*[a-zA-Z\S])[0-9a-zA-Z\S]{8,}
Just create a string variable, assign the pattern, and create a boolean method which returns true if the pattern is correct, else false.
Sample:
String pattern = "^(?=(.*\d){1})(.*\S)(?=.*[a-zA-Z\S])[0-9a-zA-Z\S]{8,}";
String password_string = "Type the password here"
private boolean isValidPassword(String password_string) {
return password_string.matches(Constants.passwordPattern);
}
Use the following Regex to satisfy the below conditions:
Conditions: 1] Min 1 special character.
2] Min 1 number.
3] Min 8 characters or More
Regex: ^(?=.*\d)(?=.*[#$#!%&*?])[A-Za-z\d#$#!%&*?]{8,}$
Can Test Online: https://regex101.com
Just we can do this by using HTML5.
Use below code in pattern attribute,
pattern="(?=^.{8,}$)((?=.*\d)(?=.*\W+))(?![.\n])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*[a-z]).*$"
It will work perfectly.
You can use the below regular expression pattern to check the password whether it matches your expectations or not.
((?=.*\\d)(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*[~!##$%^&*()]).{8,20})

Swift - Complex Regular Expression on Password Field [duplicate]

I want a regular expression to check that:
A password contains at least eight characters, including at least one number and includes both lower and uppercase letters and special characters, for example #, ?, !.
It cannot be your old password or contain your username, "password", or "websitename"
And here is my validation expression which is for eight characters including one uppercase letter, one lowercase letter, and one number or special character.
(?=^.{8,}$)((?=.*\d)|(?=.*\W+))(?![.\n])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*[a-z]).*$"
How can I write it for a password must be eight characters including one uppercase letter, one special character and alphanumeric characters?
Minimum eight characters, at least one letter and one number:
"^(?=.*[A-Za-z])(?=.*\d)[A-Za-z\d]{8,}$"
Minimum eight characters, at least one letter, one number and one special character:
"^(?=.*[A-Za-z])(?=.*\d)(?=.*[#$!%*#?&])[A-Za-z\d#$!%*#?&]{8,}$"
Minimum eight characters, at least one uppercase letter, one lowercase letter and one number:
"^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d)[a-zA-Z\d]{8,}$"
Minimum eight characters, at least one uppercase letter, one lowercase letter, one number and one special character:
"^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d)(?=.*[#$!%*?&])[A-Za-z\d#$!%*?&]{8,}$"
Minimum eight and maximum 10 characters, at least one uppercase letter, one lowercase letter, one number and one special character:
"^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d)(?=.*[#$!%*?&])[A-Za-z\d#$!%*?&]{8,10}$"
You may use this regex with multiple lookahead assertions (conditions):
^(?=.*?[A-Z])(?=.*?[a-z])(?=.*?[0-9])(?=.*?[#?!#$%^&*-]).{8,}$
This regex will enforce these rules:
At least one upper case English letter, (?=.*?[A-Z])
At least one lower case English letter, (?=.*?[a-z])
At least one digit, (?=.*?[0-9])
At least one special character, (?=.*?[#?!#$%^&*-])
Minimum eight in length .{8,} (with the anchors)
Regular expressions don't have an AND operator, so it's pretty hard to write a regex that matches valid passwords, when validity is defined by something AND something else AND something else...
But, regular expressions do have an OR operator, so just apply DeMorgan's theorem, and write a regex that matches invalid passwords:
Anything with less than eight characters OR anything with no numbers OR anything with no uppercase OR or anything with no lowercase OR anything with no special characters.
So:
^(.{0,7}|[^0-9]*|[^A-Z]*|[^a-z]*|[a-zA-Z0-9]*)$
If anything matches that, then it's an invalid password.
Use the following Regex to satisfy the below conditions:
Conditions:
Min 1 uppercase letter.
Min 1 lowercase letter.
Min 1 special character.
Min 1 number.
Min 8 characters.
Max 30 characters.
Regex:
/^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d)(?=.*[#$#!%&*?])[A-Za-z\d#$#!%&*?]{8,30}$/
Just a small improvement for #anubhava's answer: Since special character are limited to the ones in the keyboard, use this for any special character:
^(?=.*?[A-Z])(?=(.*[a-z]){1,})(?=(.*[\d]){1,})(?=(.*[\W]){1,})(?!.*\s).{8,}$
This regex will enforce these rules:
At least one upper case English letter
At least one lower case English letter
At least one digit
At least one special character
Minimum eight in length
I had some difficulty following the most popular answer for my circumstances. For example, my validation was failing with characters such as ; or [. I was not interested in white-listing my special characters, so I instead leveraged [^\w\s] as a test - simply put - match non word characters (including numeric) and non white space characters. To summarize, here is what worked for me...
at least 8 characters
at least 1 numeric character
at least 1 lowercase letter
at least 1 uppercase letter
at least 1 special character
/^(?=.*?[A-Z])(?=.*?[a-z])(?=.*?[0-9])(?=.*?[^\w\s]).{8,}$/
JSFiddle Link - simple demo covering various cases
 
✅ The following 4 regex patterns can help you to write almost any password validation
 
 
Pattern 1:
 
Password must contain one digit from 1 to 9, one lowercase letter, one uppercase letter, one special character, no space, and it must be 8-16 characters long.
/^(?=.*[0-9])(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\W)(?!.* ).{8,16}$/
 
Explanation:
 
(?=.*[0-9]) means that the password must contain a single digit from 1 to 9.
 
(?=.*[a-z]) means that the password must contain one lowercase letter.
 
(?=.*[A-Z]) means that the password must contain one uppercase letter.
 
(?=.*\W) means that the password must contain one special character.
 
.{8,16} means that the password must be 8-16 characters long. We must use this at the end of the regex, just before the $ symbol.
 
What are ^ and $:
 
^ indicates the beginning of the string. $ indicates the end of the string.
If we don't use these ^ & $, the regex will not be able to determine the maximum length of the password. In the above example, we have a condition that the password can't be longer than 16 characters, to make that condition work, we have used these ^ & $
 
Remove maximum length restriction:
 
Instead of .{8,16}, if we used .{8,}, it would mean that the password must be at least 8 characters long. So, there will not be any condition for checking the maximum length of the password.
 
Don't accept any number(digit):
 
Instead of (?=.*[0-9]), if we used (?!.*[0-9]), it would mean that the password must not contain any digit from 1-9 (Difference with the (?=.*[0-9]) is the use of ! instead of =)
 
Don't accept any spcecial character:
 
Instead of (?=.*\W), if we used (?!.*\W), it would mean that the password must not contain any special characters (The difference with the (?=.*\W) is the use of ! instead of =)
 
Alternative Syntax for number(digit):
 
Instead of (?=.*[0-9]), we could have used (?=.*\d). (?=.*\d) also means that the password must contain a single digit from 1 to 9.
 
 
Pattern 2:
 
Password must contain one digit from 1 to 9, one lowercase letter, one uppercase letter, one underscore but no other special character, no space and it must be 8-16 characters long.
/^(?=.*[0-9])(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*_)(?!.*\W)(?!.* ).{8,16}$/
 
Difference with the Pattern 1
 
Here, we have used (?=.*_) which wasn't on the Pattern 1.
 
(?=.*_)(?!.*\W) means that the password must contain an underscore but can not contain any other special character.
 
Pattern 3:
 
Password must contain one digit from 1 to 9, one lowercase letter, one uppercase letter, one underscore, no space and it must be 8-16 characters long. Usage of any other special character other than underscore is optional.
/^(?=.*[0-9])(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*_)(?!.* ).{8,16}$/
 
Difference with the Pattern 2
 
Here, we have not used (?!.*\W) what was on the Pattern 2.
 
But it still has the (?=.*_)
 
By just removing the (?!.*\W), special characters have become optional. Now, one underscore is required but any other special character can be used or not as it's optional.
 
Pattern 4:
 
Password must contain one digit from 1 to 9, one lowercase letter, one uppercase letter, and one underscore, and it must be 8-16 characters long. Usage of any other special character and usage of space is optional.
/^(?=.*[0-9])(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z]).{8,16}$/
 
Difference with the Pattern 3
 
Here, we have not used (?=.*_) & (?!.* ) which was on the Pattern 3.
 
By removing (?=.*_), it's no longer mandatory to pass one underscore. Now, passing special characters is optional.
 
By removing the (?!.* ), usage of space has become optional too.
I would reply to Peter Mortensen, but I don't have enough reputation.
His expressions are perfect for each of the specified minimum requirements. The problem with his expressions that don't require special characters is that they also don't ALLOW special characters, so they also enforce maximum requirements, which I don't believe the OP requested. Normally you want to allow your users to make their password as strong as they want; why restrict strong passwords?
So, his "minimum eight characters, at least one letter and one number" expression:
^(?=.*[A-Za-z])(?=.*\d)[A-Za-z\d]{8,}$
achieves the minimum requirement, but the remaining characters can only be letter and numbers. To allow (but not require) special characters, you should use something like:
^(?=.*[A-Za-z])(?=.*\d).{8,}$ to allow any characters
or
^(?=.*[A-Za-z])(?=.*\d)[A-Za-z\d$#$!%*#?&]{8,}$ to allow specific special characters
Likewise, "minimum eight characters, at least one uppercase letter, one lowercase letter and one number:"
^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d)[a-zA-Z\d]{8,}$
meets that minimum requirement, but only allows letters and numbers. Use:
^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d).{8,}$ to allow any characters
or
^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d)[A-Za-z\d$#$!%*?&]{8,} to allow specific special characters.
A more "generic" version(?), allowing none English letters as special characters.
^(?=\S*[a-z])(?=\S*[A-Z])(?=\S*\d)(?=\S*[^\w\s])\S{8,}$
var pwdList = [
'##V4-\3Z`zTzM{>k',
'12qw!"QW12',
'123qweASD!"#',
'1qA!"#$%&',
'Günther32',
'123456789',
'qweASD123',
'qweqQWEQWEqw',
'12qwAS!'
],
re = /^(?=\S*[a-z])(?=\S*[A-Z])(?=\S*\d)(?=\S*[^\w\s])\S{8,}$/;
pwdList.forEach(function (pw) {
document.write('<span style="color:'+ (re.test(pw) ? 'green':'red') + '">' + pw + '</span><br/>');
});
Import the JavaScript file jquery.validate.min.js.
You can use this method:
$.validator.addMethod("pwcheck", function (value) {
return /[\#\#\$\%\^\&\*\(\)\_\+\!]/.test(value) && /[a-z]/.test(value) && /[0-9]/.test(value) && /[A-Z]/.test(value)
});
At least one upper case English letter
At least one lower case English letter
At least one digit
At least one special character
For standard password requirements I found this to be useful:
At least 1 alphabet
At least 1 digit
Contains no space
Optional special characters e.g. #$!%*#?&^_-
Minimum 8 characters long
/^(?=.*[A-Za-z])(?=.*\d)[A-Za-z\d#$!%*#?&^_-]{8,}$/
You can also set the upper limit for example {8,32} up to 32 characters long.
Try this one:
Minimum six characters
At least one uppercase character
At least one lowercase character
At least one special character
Expression:
"/^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d)(?=.*[$#$!%*?&.])[A-Za-z\d$#$!%*?&.]{6, 20}/"
Optional Special Characters:
At least one special character
At least one number
Special characters are optional
Minimum six characters and maximum 16 characters
Expression:
"/^(?=.*\d)(?=.*[a-zA-Z]).{6,20}$/"
If the min and max condition is not required then remove .{6, 16}
6 is minimum character limit
20 is maximum character limit
?= means match expression
This worked for me:
^(?=.*[0-9])(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*[#$!%*?&])([a-zA-Z0-9#$!%*?&]{8,})$
At least 8 characters long;
One lowercase, one uppercase, one number and one special character;
No whitespaces.
Not directly answering the question, but does it really have to be a regex?
I used to do lots of Perl, and got used to solving problems with regexes. However, when they get more complicated with all the look-aheads and other quirks, you need to write dozens of unit tests to kill all those little bugs.
Furthermore, a regex is typically a few times slower than an imperative or a functional solution.
For example, the following (not very FP) Scala function solves the original question about three times faster than the regex of the most popular answer. What it does is also so clear that you don't need a unit test at all:
def validatePassword(password: String): Boolean = {
if (password.length < 8)
return false
var lower = false
var upper = false
var numbers = false
var special = false
password.foreach { c =>
if (c.isDigit) numbers = true
else if (c.isLower) lower = true
else if (c.isUpper) upper = true
else special = true
}
lower && upper && numbers && special
}
For a more strict validation where the following is required:
At least One Upper Case Character
At least one Lower Case character
At least one digit
At least one symbol/special character #$!%*#?&^_-
Minimum 8 characters/digits
Regex:
/(?=.*\d)(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*[#$!%*#?&^_-]).{8,}/
I hope it helps someone with a more stringent.
What about considering the following regex solution:
^(?=.*[\w])(?=.*[\W])[\w\W]{8,}$
Which validates the following:
At least one lowercase
At least one uppercase
At least one digit
At least one special character
At least it should have 8 characters long.
Check it out working at the following link https://regex101.com/r/qPmC06/4/
^(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[0-9])(?=.*[!##$%^&*()_+,.\\\/;':"-]).{8,}$
Another option is to make use of contrast in the lookahead assertions using a negated character class, optionally matching any character except that is listed before matching the character that should be matched.
^(?=[^A-Z\n]*[A-Z])(?=[^a-z\n]*[a-z])(?=[^0-9\n]*[0-9])(?=[^#?!#$%^&*\n-]*[#?!#$%^&*-]).{8,}$
See a regex demo
In parts, the pattern matches:
^ Start of string
(?=[^A-Z\n]*[A-Z]) Positive lookahead, assert 0+ times any char except A-Z or a newline. Then match a char A-Z
(?=[^a-z\n]*[a-z]) The same approach for a char a-z
(?=[^0-9\n]*[0-9]) The same approach for a digit 0-9
(?=[^#?!#$%^&*\n-]*[#?!#$%^&*-]) The same approach for a char that you would consider special
.{8,} Match 8 or more times any character except a newline
$ End of string
Notes
A dot can also match a space. If you do not want to allow matching a space, then .{8,} can be changed to \S{8,} to match 8 or more non whitespace characters
Using either . or \S can match more characters than are specified in the lookahead assertions. If you only want to match the characters that are used in the assertions, you can change .{8,} to match only the allowed characters [#?!#$%^&*A-Za-z0-9-]{8,} using a character class
const regex = /^(?=[^A-Z\n]*[A-Z])(?=[^a-z\n]*[a-z])(?=[^0-9\n]*[0-9])(?=[^#?!#$%^&*\n-]*[#?!#$%^&*-]).{8,}$/;
[
"abcA1#!A",
"#!asdfSFD1;",
"# a f F1 ;",
"1111111111",
"aaaaaaaa",
"11111111",
"AAAAAAAA",
"########",
"aA1#"
].forEach(s =>
console.log(regex.test(s) ? `Match --> ${s}` : `No match --> ${s}`)
);
/^(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[0-9]).*$/
this the simple way to use it while validate atleast 1 uppercase 1 lowercase and 1 number
and this is the example while I use in express validation
check('password')
.notEmpty()
.withMessage('Password cannot be null')
.bail()
.isLength({ min: 6 })
.withMessage('Password must be at least 6 characters')
.bail()
.matches(/^(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[0-9]).*$/)
.withMessage(
'Must have atleast 1 uppercase, 1 lowercase letter and 1 number'
),
Testing this one in 2020:
^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d)(?=.*[#$!%*?&])[A-Za-z\d#$!%*?&]{8,}$
Verify yourself
const regex = /^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d)(?=.*[#$!%*?&])[A-Za-z\d#$!%*?&]{8,}$/;
const str = `some12*Nuts`;
let m;
if ((m = regex.exec(str)) !== null) {
// The result can be accessed through the `m`-variable.
m.forEach((match, groupIndex) => {
console.log(`Found match, group ${groupIndex}: ${match}`);
});
}
#ClasG has already suggested:
^(?=\S*[a-z])(?=\S*[A-Z])(?=\S*\d)(?=\S*[^\w\s])\S{8,}$
but it does not accept _(underscore) as a special character (eg. Aa12345_).
An improved one is:
^(?=\S*[a-z])(?=\S*[A-Z])(?=\S*\d)(?=\S*([^\w\s]|[_]))\S{8,}$
I've found many problems here, so I made my own.
Here it is in all it's glory, with tests:
^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d)(?=.*([^a-zA-Z\d\s])).{9,}$
https://regex101.com/r/DCRR65/4/tests
Things to look out for:
doesn't use \w because that includes _, which I'm testing for.
I've had lots of troubles matching symbols, without matching the end of the line.
Doesn't specify symbols specifically, this is also because different locales may have different symbols on their keyboards that they may want to use.
Demo:
function password_check() {
pass = document.getElementById("password").value;
console.log(pass);
regex = /^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\d)(?=.*[#$!%*?&])[A-Za-z\d#$!%*?&]{8,}$/;
if (regex.exec(pass) == null) {
alert('invalid password!')
}
else {
console.log("valid");
}
}
<input type="text" id="password" value="Sample#1">
<input type="button" id="submit" onclick="password_check()" value="submit">
var strongRegex = new RegExp("^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*[0-9])(?=.*[!##\$%\^&\*])(?=.{8,})");
var mediumRegex = new RegExp("^(((?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z]))|((?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[0-9]))|((?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*[0-9])))(?=.{6,})");
Best For javascript
Keep it simple stupid:
This should do the trick for you, always.
Regex: ^(.{0,7}|[^a-z]{1,}|[^A-Z]{1,}|[^\d]{1,}|[^\W]{1,})$|[\s]
If your password matches the regex above, it is invalid.
If there's no match, your password is valid and contains has at least 8 characters, one upper case letter, one lower case letter and one symbol or special character. And it also contains no spaces, tabs or line breaks.
Breakdown of Regex
.{0,7} - matches if password has between 0 to 7 characters.
[^a-z]{1,} - matches if no lower case is found
[^A-Z]{1,} - matches if no upper case is found
[^\d]{1,} - matches if no number (between [0-9]) is found
[\s] - matches if a white space, tab or line break is found.
With this approach there's no limit or restriction in terms of symbols allowed. If you want to limit to few symbols allowable, just change [^\W] with [^YourSymbols].
(?=.*[0-9])(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*[##$%^&+-]).{6}
According to your need this pattern should work just fine. Try this,
^(?=(.*\d){1})(.*\S)(?=.*[a-zA-Z\S])[0-9a-zA-Z\S]{8,}
Just create a string variable, assign the pattern, and create a boolean method which returns true if the pattern is correct, else false.
Sample:
String pattern = "^(?=(.*\d){1})(.*\S)(?=.*[a-zA-Z\S])[0-9a-zA-Z\S]{8,}";
String password_string = "Type the password here"
private boolean isValidPassword(String password_string) {
return password_string.matches(Constants.passwordPattern);
}
Use the following Regex to satisfy the below conditions:
Conditions: 1] Min 1 special character.
2] Min 1 number.
3] Min 8 characters or More
Regex: ^(?=.*\d)(?=.*[#$#!%&*?])[A-Za-z\d#$#!%&*?]{8,}$
Can Test Online: https://regex101.com
Just we can do this by using HTML5.
Use below code in pattern attribute,
pattern="(?=^.{8,}$)((?=.*\d)(?=.*\W+))(?![.\n])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*[a-z]).*$"
It will work perfectly.
You can use the below regular expression pattern to check the password whether it matches your expectations or not.
((?=.*\\d)(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*[~!##$%^&*()]).{8,20})

Splitting strings using Ruby ignoring certain characters

I'm trying to split a string and counts the number os words using Ruby but I want ignore special characters.
For example, in this string "Hello, my name is Hugo ..." I'm splitting it by spaces but the last ... should't counts because it isn't a word.
I'm using string.inner_text.split(' ').length. How can I specify that special characters (such as ... ? ! etc.) when separated from the text by spaces are not counted?
Thank you to everyone,
Kind Regards,
Hugo
"Hello, my name is não ...".scan /[^*!#%\^\s\.]+/
# => ["Hello,", "my", "name", "is", "não"]
/[^*!#%\^]+/ will match anything other than *!#%\^. You can add more to this list which need not be matched
this is part answer, part response to #Neo's answer: why not use proper tools for the job?
http://www.ruby-doc.org/core-1.9.3/Regexp.html says:
POSIX bracket expressions are also similar to character classes. They provide a portable alternative to the above, with the added benefit that they encompass non-ASCII characters. For instance, /\d/ matches only the ASCII decimal digits (0-9); whereas /[[:digit:]]/ matches any character in the Unicode Nd category.
/[[:alnum:]]/ - Alphabetic and numeric character
/[[:alpha:]]/ - Alphabetic character
...
Ruby also supports the following non-POSIX character classes:
/[[:word:]]/ - A character in one of the following Unicode general categories Letter, Mark, Number, Connector_Punctuation
you want words, use str.scan /[[:word:]]+/

regex validation - grails constraints

I'm pretty new on grails, I'm having a problem in matches validation using regex. What I wanted to happen is my field can accept a combination of alphanumeric and specific special characters like period (.), comma (,) and dash (-), it may accept numbers (099) or letters only (alpha) , but it won't accept input that only has special characters (".-,"). Is it possible to filter this kind of input using regex?
please help. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
^[0-9a-zA-Z,.-]*?[0-9a-zA-Z]+?[0-9a-zA-Z,.-]*$
meaning:
/
^ beginning of the string
[...]*? 0 or more characters from this class (lazy matching)
[...]+? 1 or more characters from this class (lazy matching)
[...]* 0 or more characters from this class
$ end of the string
/
I think you could match that with a regular expression like this:
".*[0-9a-zA-Z.,-]+.*"
That means:
"." Begin with any character
"*" Have zero or more of these characters
"[0-9a-zA-Z.,-]" Have characters in the range 0-9, a-z, etc, or . or , or -
"+" Have one or more of this kind of character (so it's mandatory to have one in this set)
"." End with any character
"*" Have zero or more of these characters
This is working ok for me, hope it helps!

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