Regular Expression Functions
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Using Regular Expression Commands
Suppose you want to find the starting position of a string within another string.dog within The dog chased the cat, you would run the query SELECT INSTR('The dog chased the cat','dog');.5, indicating the position where it found dog.
But INSTR does not allow search strings that contain placeholders.? symbol.
| Search String | Placeholder | 
|---|---|
| 
             | Any string | 
| 
             | Any three letter string | 
| 
             | The string  | 
Regular expressions enable you to define search strings with placeholders.The . matches many target strings.The dog chased the frog and The rat chased the mouse.
Patterns contain literals and metacharacters.
The pattern The . contains the literals The,chased,the,mouse and frog..,{3,5} and |.
Regular Expression Functions
SingleStore has six built-in functions that allow you to work with regular expressions.
- 
        REGEXP: Searches a string for a regular expression pattern and returns1if the string is found,0otherwise.
- 
        RLIKE: Has the same functionality asREGEXP.
- 
        REGEXP_: Searches a string for a regular expression pattern and returns an integer indicating the beginning position or ending position of the matched substring.INSTR 
- 
        REGEXP_: Searches a string for a regular expression pattern and returns the matching substring.SUBSTR 
- 
        REGEXP_: Searches a string for the first occurrence of a regular expression pattern and replaces that occurrence with a replacement string.REPLACE Can also perform a search and replace of all occurrences. 
- 
        REGEXP_: Returns a JSON array of matching substring(s) within the first match of a regular expression pattern to a string.MATCH It supports both extended and advanced regular expression formats. You can set the global variable REGEXP_to specify which format you want to use.FORMAT 
Regular Expression Format - Advanced Regular Expression (ARE)
SingleStore supports advanced regular expressions (ARE) as defined in PostgreSQL.
You can use the ARE format with the built-in SingleStore functions RLIKE, REGEXP,REGEXP_,REGEXP_, and REGEXP_, which are described in the next section.
Set the global variable regexp_ to specify the regular expression format to be used by the built-in functions you call.
To use ARE globally, run:
SET GLOBAL regexp_format=advanced;You should set regexp_ to 'advanced' if you are developing new regular expression logic.
Advanced Regular Expression (ARE) Support
SingleStore supports ARE as defined in PostgreSQL.
Backreferences
A pattern containing a backreference matches the same string that it matched earlier in the string.\\n, where n is the number of the backreference.
For example, the pattern a(bc)d(ef)g\\1\\2 matches abcdefgbcef.
Escapes
Escapes make it easier to write some types of patterns.
| Metacharacter | Meaning | 
|---|---|
| 
                 | Matches any digit. | 
| 
                 | Matches a space. | 
| 
                 | Matches any alpha-numeric character including the underscore. | 
| 
                 | Matches any character except a digit. | 
| 
                 | Matches any character except a space. | 
| 
                 | Matches any non-alpha-numeric character. | 
| 
                 | Matches the beginning of a word. | 
| 
                 | Matches the end of a word. | 
Note
In PostgreSQL, escapes in patterns begin with one \ character.
In SingleStore, escapes in patterns also begin with one \ character.\ literal in an SingleStore string needs to be escaped with a leading \.\ characters.SELECT REGEXP_
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Last modified: September 25, 2025