I have to use a ton of regex in my new job (plz save me), and I use ChatGPT for all of it. My job would be 10x harder if it wasn’t for ChatGPT. It provides extremely detailed examples and warns you of situations where the regex may not perform as expected. Seriously, try it out.

83 points

Just make sure to test the regex instead of blindly slapping it in assuming it works 🙂

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29 points

What if I say “it’s probably okay just this one time” before I do it every time?

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9 points

Ah I’ve tested this method, shit breaks a lot. Still my go to.

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4 points

Can we just have another LLM check the work for us? Like an LLM-GAN?

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8 points

The new Code Interpreter plugin that went live for this week for Plus users can actually execute Python code on a sandboxed environment. This allows you to add “Write and execute tests for the regex” to the end of your prompt.

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15 points
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Regex101 is a sandbox env specifically for Regex

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5 points
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Not just for writing, and testing samples. It will also explain the parts of the regex.

However it won’t generate examples that will pass the regex - which may be the biggest benefit of chatGPT.

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3 points

This is the way. Everything ChatGPT produces for me gets tested and debugged here.

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1 point

This is where I go to validate the work of ChatGPT. The debugging capabilities in that site are wonderful.

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30 points

I’ve tried it and found it wanting at regex and excel formulas, but I’m glad to hear it’s working for you! Are you using 4? I haven’t tried that one and I hear it’s better.

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16 points

I typically try 3.5 first and switch to 4 if the results aren’t great. 3.5 typically handles basic use cases quite well, for example, writing regex that detects jira ticket naming nomenclature. For more complex things, I go to 4.

It sometimes gets things wrong, but I’ve also found that just saying “that didn’t work” gets it to reevaluate for more complex situations

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22 points

it helps if you hold ChatGPTs hand and walk it through what you need. For example if you have a regex with 3 requirements, ask it to write a regex for the first requirement, then ask it to modify the previous output to add another requirement, and so on. that way you can sort of “audit” it as it generates the correct regex.

there is some more discussion of this in a similar post from a few days ago.

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4 points

So I was trying to write a regex for use with my ChatGPT discord bot. I wanted to trim off any final partial sentence at the end. I went around and around with it for a couple of hours because look ahead and look behind are just not something I do often enough.

It kept writing more and more complicated regex that didn’t work. The final solution, while not exactly perfect - it won’t keep a quote at the end of a sentence, and honorifics like Mr. and Dr. throw it - it wasn’t nearly as complicated as ChatGPT was making it. It still never did give me anything working - I just fucked around on regex101 until I got it right. As usual but having wasted 90 minutes or so.

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1 point

I’ve found that you need to be very careful when asking it to modify things it produced directly without making significant changes to the regex it provides. Once I get to the 3rd or 4th iteration of asking it to modify previous responses I’ve found the likelihood that it starts hallucinating to increase dramatically. The best solution I’ve found to this is to put your entire request in a single prompt that walks it through all requirements step-by-step.

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11 points

You can improve the reliability if you provide it test cases. You can now be the PM you wish you had for the robot that will eventually replace you.

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1 point

I hated everything about this comment, thanks.

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6 points

Also curious. If I had some AI help with regex that would be awesome. But I felt as you said it wouldn’t work great without 4. Which I don’t have.

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5 points

I agree, my regex experience was not great.

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24 points

If you think regex is the hard part of programming, then you’re in for a bad time.

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4 points

I often need to deal with half a dozen different programming languages in any day/week and the context switching can be difficult at times. When you’ve spent all day switching between JavaScript, Python, and YAML and suddenly need to draft some Regex, tools like ChatGPT can help immensely at reducing the mental burden of switching gears.

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15 points

The syntax of regular regexes is the same across languages though. It’s just the regex library which is different, but so is every other library between languages.

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1 point

If the project is less than a thousand lines of code in a language with a garbage collector, it probably is. Most other problems don’t require learning a DSL to handle them, and most other DSL’s aren’t nearly as terse.

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20 points

“i have this problem I know what I’ll do! I’ll use regex to fix it!”

Uses regex.

“Yay problem is now fixed it works!”

Now has 2 problems.

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1 point

totally!!!

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6 points
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