+ 2

I want to remove everything after / in domain for each line it's erasing everything after first occurance.

using System; using System.Collections.Generic; using System.Linq; using System.Text; using System.Threading.Tasks; using System.Text.RegularExpressions; using System.IO; namespace SoloLearn { class Program { string str = "something@google.com/123 something@google.com/xyz something@google.com/abc"; if (str.Contains('/')) { int index = str.IndexOf('/'); str = str.Substring(0, index); } Console.WriteLine(str); } }

8th Apr 2022, 7:56 AM
Jojan
4 Respostas
+ 1
Use a loop : First just print str.Substring(0,index) ; form a new string from value of next space like str = str.Substring(str.IndexOf(' ', index) ; Now repeat the same steps until end of string.. May be code already given above by @jacob Hope it helps..
8th Apr 2022, 8:28 AM
Jayakrishna 🇮🇳
+ 1
I was doing this for single domain so I fixed in my existing code where it takes the domain instead of doing I after getting the results. So it is only happening in the beginning once which I had to remove instead haha.. thanks everyone!
8th Apr 2022, 8:29 AM
Jojan
+ 1
Jojan If you feel like learning Regex (not too complicated). You can parse strings very efficiently to match the desired patterns. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/api/system.text.regularexpressions.regex?view=net-6.0 Use this to generate some Regex. https://regex-generator.olafneumann.org/?sampleText=Something%40test.com%2Fxyz&flags=i&onlyPatterns=true&matchWholeLine=false&selection=9%7CCharacter,14%7CCharacter,18%7CCharacter Your pattern would be something like @.*\..*/ Sample code from link: using System; using System.Text.RegularExpressions; public class Sample { public static bool useRegex(String input) { const Regex regex = new Regex("@.*\\..*/", RegexOptions.IgnoreCase); return regex.IsMatch(input); } } Then all you need is to split the string into substrings. C# has a split method. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/api/system.text.regularexpressions.regex.split?view=net-6.0
8th Apr 2022, 9:14 AM
Adam McGregor
0
Do you mean you need output 123 xyz abc?
8th Apr 2022, 8:00 AM
Jayakrishna 🇮🇳