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Home/ Questions/Q 726813
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T06:29:41+00:00 2026-05-14T06:29:41+00:00

I have a regex, for example (ma|(t){1}) . It matches ma and t and

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I have a regex, for example (ma|(t){1}). It matches ma and t and doesn’t match bla.

I want to negate the regex, thus it must match bla and not ma and t, by adding something to this regex. I know I can write bla, the actual regex is however more complex.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T06:29:41+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 6:29 am

    Use negative lookaround: (?!pattern)

    Positive lookarounds can be used to assert that a pattern matches. Negative lookarounds is the opposite: it’s used to assert that a pattern DOES NOT match. Some flavor supports assertions; some puts limitations on lookbehind, etc.

    Links to regular-expressions.info

    • Lookahead and Lookbehind Zero-Width Assertions
    • Flavor comparison

    See also

    • How do I convert CamelCase into human-readable names in Java?
    • Regex for all strings not containing a string?
    • A regex to match a substring that isn’t followed by a certain other substring.

    More examples

    These are attempts to come up with regex solutions to toy problems as exercises; they should be educational if you’re trying to learn the various ways you can use lookarounds (nesting them, using them to capture, etc):

    • codingBat plusOut using regex
    • codingBat repeatEnd using regex
    • codingbat wordEnds using regex
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