Regular expressions allow for everything that LIKE
allows for, and much more, but have a completely different syntax. However, since the rules for LIKE
are so simple(where %
means zero-or-more characters and _
means one character), and both LIKE
arguments and regular expressions are expressed in strings, we can create a regular expression that takes a LIKE
argument (e.g. abc_ef% *usd
) and turn it into the equivalent regular expression (e.g. \Aabc.ef.* \*usd\z
):
@"\A" + new Regex(@"\.|\$|\^|\{|\[|\(|\||\)|\*|\+|\?|\\").Replace(toFind, ch => @"\" + ch).Replace('_', '.').Replace("%", ".*") + @"\z"
From that we can build a Like()
method:
public static class MyStringExtensions
{
public static bool Like(this string toSearch, string toFind)
{
return new Regex(@"\A" + new Regex(@"\.|\$|\^|\{|\[|\(|\||\)|\*|\+|\?|\\").Replace(toFind, ch => @"\" + ch).Replace('_', '.').Replace("%", ".*") + @"\z", RegexOptions.Singleline).IsMatch(toSearch);
}
}
And hence:
bool willBeTrue = "abcdefg".Like("abcd_fg");
bool willAlsoBeTrue = "abcdefg".Like("ab%f%");
bool willBeFalse = "abcdefghi".Like("abcd_fg");