REGEXP_SUBSTR searches a string for a pattern and returns the matching string.
VARCHAR2 | CLOB
REGEXP_SUBSTR(source_char, pattern
[, position
[, occurrence
[, match_parameter ]
]
]
)
source_char is the text expression that will be searched.
pattern is the text expression to search for. It is usually a text literal and can contain up to 512 bytes.
position is a nonzero integer indicating the character of source_char where the function begins the search. When position is negative, then the function counts and searches backward from the end of string. The default value of position is 1, which means that the function begins searching at the first character of source_char.
occurrence is an integer indicating which occurrence of pattern the function should search for. The value of occurrence must be positive. The default values of occurrence is 1, meaning the function searches for the first occurrence of pattern.
match_parameter is a text expression that lets you change the default matching behavior of
the function. You can specify one or more of the following values:
c: Case-sensitive matching.
i: Case-insensitive matching.
m: Treat the source string as multiple lines. The function interprets ^ and $ as the start and end, respectively, of any line anywhere in the source string, rather than only at the start or end of the entire source string. By default, the function treats the source string as a single line. .
n: Newline character is among the characters matched by a period (the wildcard character). By default, it is not.
x: Ignore whitespace characters.
REGEXP_SUBSTR('7 W 96th St, New York, New York', 'new york', 10, 2, 'i') starts searching at the tenth character and matches the second instance of New York in a case-insensitive match.
REGEXP_SUBSTR('parsley, sage, rosemary, thyme', ',[^,]+,', 1) matches the first substring enclosed in single quotes ('), and returns the value , sage,.
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