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Home/ Questions/Q 661201
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T23:14:29+00:00 2026-05-13T23:14:29+00:00

In my work I have with great results used approximate string matching algorithms such

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In my work I have with great results used approximate string matching algorithms such as Damerau–Levenshtein distance to make my code less vulnerable to spelling mistakes.

Now I have a need to match strings against simple regular expressions such TV Schedule for \d\d (Jan|Feb|Mar|...). This means that the string TV Schedule for 10 Jan should return 0 while T Schedule for 10. Jan should return 2.

This could be done by generating all strings in the regex (in this case 100×12) and find the best match, but that doesn’t seam practical.

Do you have any ideas how to do this effectively?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T23:14:30+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 11:14 pm

    I found the TRE library, which seems to be able to do exactly fuzzy matching of regular expressions. Example: http://hackerboss.com/approximate-regex-matching-in-python/
    It only supports insertion, deletion and substitution though. No transposition. But I guess that works ok.

    I tried the accompanying agrep tool with the regexp on the following file:

    TV Schedule for 10Jan
    TVSchedule for Jan 10
    T Schedule for 10 Jan 2010
    TV Schedule for 10 March
    Tv plan for March
    

    and got

    $ agrep -s -E 100 '^TV Schedule for \d\d (Jan|Feb|Mar)$' filename
    1:TV Schedule for 10Jan
    8:TVSchedule for Jan 10
    7:T Schedule for 10 Jan 2010
    3:TV Schedule for 10 March
    15:Tv plan for March
    

    Thanks a lot for all your suggestions.

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