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Home/ Questions/Q 65967
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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T19:01:46+00:00 2026-05-10T19:01:46+00:00

I’m developing an algorithm to parse a number out of a series of short-ish

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I’m developing an algorithm to parse a number out of a series of short-ish strings. These strings are somewhat regular, but there’s a few different general forms and several exceptions. I’m trying to build a set of regexes that will handle the various forms and exceptions; I’ll apply them one after another to see if I get a match.

One of these forms goes something like this:

X (Y) Z 

Where:

  • X is a number I want to capture.
  • Z is static, pre-defined text. it’s basically how I determine whether this particular form is applicable or not.
  • Y is a string of unknown length and content, surrounded by parenthesis.

Also: Y is optional; it doesn’t always appear in a string with Z and X. So, I want to be able to extract the numbers from all of these strings:

  • 10 Z
  • 20 (foo) Z
  • 30 (bar) Z

Right now, I have a regex that will capture the first one:

([0-9]+) +Z 

My problem is that I don’t know how to construct a regex that will match a series of characters if and only if they’re enclosed in parenthesis. Can this be done in a single regex?

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  1. 2026-05-10T19:01:46+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 7:01 pm
    (\d+)\s+(\(.*?\))?\s?Z 

    Note the escaped parentheses, and the ? (zero or once) quantifiers. Any of the groups you don’t want to capture can be (?: non-capture groups).

    I agree about the spaces. \s is a better option there. I also changed the quantifier to insure there are digits at the beginning. As far as newlines, that would depend on context: if the file is parsed line by line it won’t be a problem. Another option is to anchor the start and end of the line (add a ^ at the front and a $ at the end).

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