This question was an epic failure, but here\'s the working solution. It\'s based on Gumbo\'s answer (Gumbo\'s was close to working so I chose it as the accepte
If you simply don't want a dash at the end and beginning, try ^[^-].*?[^-]$
Edit: Bah, you keep changing it.
It should be something like this:
^[a-zA-Z0-9]+(-[a-zA-Z0-9]+)*$
You are telling it to look for only one char, either a-z, A-Z, 0-9 or -, that is what [] does.
So if you do [abc]
you will match only "a", or "b" or "c". not "abc"
Have fun.
Try this regular expression:
^[a-zA-Z0-9]+(-[a-zA-Z0-9]+)*$
This regular expression does only allow hyphens to separate sequences of one or more characters of [a-zA-Z0-9]
.
Edit Following up your comment: The expression (…)*
allows the part inside the group to be repeated zero or more times. That means
a(bc)*
is the same as
a|abc|abcbc|abcbcbc|abcbcbcbc|…
Edit Now that you changed the requirements: As you probably don’t want to restrict each hyphen separated part of the words in its length, you will need a look-ahead assertion to take the length into account:
(?=[a-zA-Z0-9-]{4,25}$)^[a-zA-Z0-9]+(-[a-zA-Z0-9]+)*$
The current regex is simple and fairly readable. Rather than making it long and complicated, have you considered applying the other constraints with normal Python string processing tools?
import re
def fits_pattern(string):
if (4 <= len(string) <= 25 and
"--" not in string and
not string.startswith("-") and
not string.endswith("-")):
return re.match(r"[a-zA-Z0-9\-]", string)
else:
return None