Here are two ways to extract 5 digits. In the first one \\1 refers to the portion matched between the parentheses in the regular expression.
In the second one strapply is like apply where the object to be worked on is the first argument (array for apply, string for strapply) the second modifies it (which dimension for apply, regular expression for strapply) and the last is a function which acts on each value (typically each row or column for apply and each match for strapply). In this case we use c as our function to just return all the results. They are returned in a list with one component per string but here test is just a single string so we get a list one long and we ask for the contents of the first component using [[1]]. # 1 - sub sub(".*(\\d{5}).*", "\\1", test) # 2 - strapply - see http://gsubfn.googlecode.com library(gsubfn) strapply(test, "\\d{5}", c)[[1]] On Wed, May 5, 2010 at 5:13 PM, steven mosher <mosherste...@gmail.com> wrote: > Given a text like > > I want to be able to extract a matched regular expression from a piece of > text. > > this apparently works, but is pretty ugly > # some html > test<-"</tr><tr><th>88958</th><th>Abcdsef</th><th>67.8S</th><th>68.9\nW</th><th>26m</th>" > # a pattern to extract 5 digits >> pattern<-"[0-9]{5}" > # regexpr returns a start point[1] and an attribute "match.length" > attr(,"match.length) > # get the substring from the start point to the stop point.. where stop = > start +length-1 >> > answer<-substr(test,regexpr(pattern,test)[1],regexpr(pattern,test)[1]+attr(regexpr(pattern,test),"match.length")-1) >> answer > [1] "88958" > > I tried using sub(pattern, replacement, x ) with a regexp that captured the > group. I'd found an example of this in the mails > but it didnt seem to work.. ______________________________________________ R-help@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.