How, if possible, do I limit the number of times REGEXP searches for a specific pattern?

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I’m using a regular expression to search blocks of text that look like the following;
MSN_BER (0:31) Observation #1 Rx'd at: (58570.000) Msg. Time: (58568.000)
Forward to IMU: true Rcv Date: 2010121 Synch: f0f0 Rep Mode: Replay_Mode
State Time: 12:00:00.000 (58571.000)
State Position: -1500.0000, -5000.0000, 4100.0000
MSN_RAM (0:32) Observation #20 Rx'd at: (58569.000) Msg. Time: (58569.000)
Forward to IMU: true Rcv Date: 2010121 Synch: f0f0 Rep Mode: Replay_Mode
Fmt: 10 (AIRBORN__ARRAY_LOT) Length: 5678 Remote Num: 1 Number of Obsevations: 1
Type: 1 Track ID: 12345 Time Tag: 58573.00000000
Band ID: 1 AD ID: 21 Scan ID: 0 LRT/HRT: 1 Valid Flag: 0
MSN_RAM (0:32) Observation #30 Rx'd at: (58569.000) Msg. Time: (58569.000)
Forward to IMU: true Rcv Date: 2010121 Synch: f0f0 Rep Mode: Replay_Mode
Fmt: 10 (AIRBORN__ARRAY_LOT) Length: 5678 Remote Num: 1 Number of Obsevations: 2
Type: 1 Track ID: 12345 Time Tag: 58583.00000000
Band ID: 1 AD ID: 31 Scan ID: 0 LRT/HRT: 1 Valid Flag: 0
Type: 1 Track ID: 12345 Time Tag: 58585.00000000
Band ID: 1 AD ID: 32 Scan ID: 0 LRT/HRT: 1 Valid Flag: 0
Note: There is no 2nd MSN_BER data block.
I’m using the following search pattern and REGEXP function to extract the time tag and AD ID values:
exp = '([\d\.]+)\s+Band[^A]+?AD ID:\s+(\d+).';
tokens3 = regexp(bufferSplit{BlockId}, exp, 'tokens');
This results in: tokens3 = {1x2 cell} {1x2 cell} {1x2 cell},
where the time tag and AD ID are contained in the cells for each occurrence in the block of text.
>> tokens3{1,1}
ans = '58573.00000000' '21'
>> tokens3{1,2}
ans = '58583.00000000' '31'
>> tokens3{1,3}
ans = '58585.00000000' '32'
What I’m attempting to accomplish is limit the search pattern. Specifically, limit the number of times to search for the time tag and AD ID values based on the fact that there is no 2nd MSN_BER data block. I know the command option 'once' will return only the first match found. However, there could be multiple occurrences of the AD ID and its associated time tag.
The result of this would be: tokens3 = {1x2 cell}
>> tokens3{1,1}
ans = '58573.00000000' '21'
Can this be accomplished using the REGEXP function?
  3 Comments
Brad
Brad on 15 Nov 2013
Cedric, it is based on the file contents.
The reason I'm wanting to limit the search is because the text files that contain these data blocks are not consistent (Some times the MSN_BER blocks of data are missing).
Normally, the data blocks populate the text file in this order:
MSN_BER
MSN_RAM
Type: - this block of data could occur between 1 and several hundred times
MSN_BER
MSN_RAM
Type: - this block of data could occur between 1 and several hundred times
. . . .
. . .
So what I have to do is account for the possibility of missing MSN_BER blocks by not parsing out and saving all of the associated Time Tag and AD ID values (within the Type: blocks) - for each missing MSN_BER. I'm finding this to be quite tedious do to the fact that the Type: blocks of data could occur a varying number of times.
I took Walter's advice and rebuilt my expression to include a look ahead assertion:
exp = '([\d\.]+)\s+Band[^A]+?AD ID:\s+(\d+).+\w*(?=MSN)';
It worked great for the first test - where only a single block of Type: data is present. However, when multiple blocks of Type: data are present, it only accounts for the first occurence.
Cedric
Cedric on 16 Nov 2013
So you have a situation like the following?
MSN_BER
...
MSN_RAM
...
Type: - this block of data could occur between 1 and several hundred times
MSN_RAM ** No MSN_BER, so Type entries should be discarded.
...
Type: - this block of data could occur between 1 and several hundred times
MSN_BER
...
MSN_RAM
...
Type: - this block of data could occur between 1 and several hundred times
If, so, what do you want to achieve? Is it to get a stat on time of all types which belong to any MSN_BER, or is it a stat per MSN_BER, or anything else?

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Accepted Answer

Cedric
Cedric on 16 Nov 2013
Edited: Cedric on 17 Nov 2013
I'll answer assuming that my last comment under your question is correct. It is nice to implement complex regular expressions for learning, but in practice one often gets better results by splitting a one shot complex call/pattern into a series of simpler calls/patterns. Here is an example: I am using the following content:
MSN_BER (0:31) Observation #1 Rx'd at: (58570.000) Msg. Time: (58568.000)
Forward to IMU: true Rcv Date: 2010121 Synch: f0f0 Rep Mode: Replay_Mode
State Time: 12:00:00.000 (58571.000)
State Position: -1500.0000, -5000.0000, 4100.0000
MSN_RAM (0:32) Observation #20 Rx'd at: (58569.000) Msg. Time: (58569.000)
Forward to IMU: true Rcv Date: 2010121 Synch: f0f0 Rep Mode: Replay_Mode
Fmt: 10 (AIRBORN__ARRAY_LOT) Length: 5678 Remote Num: 1 Number of Obsevations: 1
Type: 1 Track ID: 12345 Time Tag: 58573.00000000
Band ID: 1 AD ID: 21 Scan ID: 0 LRT/HRT: 1 Valid Flag: 0
Type: 1 Track ID: 12345 Time Tag: 58574.00000000
Band ID: 1 AD ID: 21 Scan ID: 0 LRT/HRT: 1 Valid Flag: 0
MSN_RAM (0:32) Observation #30 Rx'd at: (58569.000) Msg. Time: (58569.000)
Forward to IMU: true Rcv Date: 2010121 Synch: f0f0 Rep Mode: Replay_Mode
Fmt: 10 (AIRBORN__ARRAY_LOT) Length: 5678 Remote Num: 1 Number of Obsevations: 2
Type: 1 Track ID: 12345 Time Tag: 58583.00000000
Band ID: 1 AD ID: 31 Scan ID: 0 LRT/HRT: 1 Valid Flag: 0
Type: 1 Track ID: 12345 Time Tag: 58585.00000000
Band ID: 1 AD ID: 32 Scan ID: 0 LRT/HRT: 1 Valid Flag: 0
MSN_BER (0:31) Observation #1 Rx'd at: (58570.000) Msg. Time: (58568.000)
Forward to IMU: true Rcv Date: 2010121 Synch: f0f0 Rep Mode: Replay_Mode
State Time: 12:00:00.000 (58571.000)
State Position: -1500.0000, -5000.0000, 4100.0000
MSN_RAM (0:32) Observation #20 Rx'd at: (58569.000) Msg. Time: (58569.000)
Forward to IMU: true Rcv Date: 2010121 Synch: f0f0 Rep Mode: Replay_Mode
Fmt: 10 (AIRBORN__ARRAY_LOT) Length: 5678 Remote Num: 1 Number of Obsevations: 1
Type: 1 Track ID: 12345 Time Tag: 58578.00000000
Band ID: 1 AD ID: 41 Scan ID: 0 LRT/HRT: 1 Valid Flag: 0
Type: 1 Track ID: 12345 Time Tag: 58579.00000000
Band ID: 1 AD ID: 41 Scan ID: 0 LRT/HRT: 1 Valid Flag: 0
which is made of two MSN_BER/MSN_RAM blocks framing an MSN_RAM only block. I assume that you want to get all AD IDs and time tags of MSN_BER/MSN_RAM blocks.
The first step is to read the file and get valid MSN_BER/MSN_RAM blocks:
content = fileread( 'bradFile.txt' ) ;
BER_blocks = regexp( content, 'MSN_BER.+?RAM(?:[^R]+|R(?!AM))*', 'match' ) ;
Running this produces..
>> BER_blocks
BER_blocks =
[1x766 char] [1x762 char]
If you display these two blocks, you'll see that the first doesn't include the MSN_RAM block. The first part of the pattern is trivial, and the second part matches all characters which are not 'R' or all 'R''s not followed by 'AM'. This is one (not too inefficient) way to exclude a given string from the match.
The second step is to extract AD IDs and time tags from each block.
data = cell( size( BER_blocks )) ;
for bId = 1 : numel( BER_blocks )
tokens = regexp( BER_blocks{bId}, 'Time Tag:\s*([\d\.]+).+?AD ID:\s*(\d+)', ...
'tokens' ) ;
data{bId} = reshape( str2double( [tokens{:}] ), 2, [] ).' ;
end
Which leads, based on the above content, to the following data cell array (each cell contains time tag and AD ID of one MSN_BER/MSN_RAM block) ..
>> celldisp( data )
data{1} =
58573 21
58574 21
data{2} =
58578 41
58579 41
You can then concatenate these cells' content if you want to have one big array instead of one array per block:
>> data = vertcat( data{:} )
data =
58573 21
58574 21
58578 41
58579 41
Let me know if it's not what you wanted.
  2 Comments
Brad
Brad on 18 Nov 2013
Cedric, this appears to work just fine! In hindsight I should have been paying closer attention to my data. I've got a long ways to go with these regular expressions. Thanks for taking a look at this.
Cedric
Cedric on 18 Nov 2013
You're welcome. And we actually all have a long way to go with these regular expressions, so I sympathize!

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More Answers (1)

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 12 Nov 2013
After a pattern, perhaps enclosed in () or (?:), you can put {minimum,maximum} counts. For example
'(?:\d\w){3,7}'
would match 3, 4, 5, 6, or 7 occurrences of \d\w repeated.
  7 Comments
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 14 Nov 2013
Sorry, the look-ahead should be ?= rather than ?:
'((?:\w+=).*?)(?=MSN_RAM)'
?: is an example of a Grouping Operator and ?= is an example of a Lookaround Assertion
The \w+= was just a sample pattern I tossed in for illustration; it matches a "word" followed by an equals sign.
The structure would be
(pattern_to_repeat)?*(?=pattern_to_stop_before)
Brad
Brad on 15 Nov 2013
Walter,
So I got a search pattern that works for these blocks of data when there is a single occurence of the Type: block (which contains the AD ID and Time Tag values).
exp = '([\d\.]+)\s+Band[^A]+?AD ID:\s+(\d+).+\?*(?=MSN)';
However, when there are multiple Type: blocks, I get only the first occurence. I'm sure it's due to the look ahead (?=MSN)
So I've attempted to add a repeating pattern for the expression. So far, the only luck I've had is with the following;
exp = '(([\d\.]+)\s+Band[^A]+?AD ID:\s+(\d+).)+\?*((?:\w*).*?)(?=MSN)';
This found only the first occurrence of the Type: blocks and produced NaNs instead of true Time Tag and AD ID values.
I am completely stumped as to how to get the repeating pattern. Maybe this is outside the functionality of REGEXP.

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