Learn how to use MustCompile for regular expressions in Go. Includes examples of regex compilation.
last modified April 20, 2025
This tutorial explains how to use the regexp.MustCompile function in Go. We’ll cover regular expression basics and provide practical examples.
A regular expression is a sequence of characters that defines a search pattern. It’s used for pattern matching within strings.
The regexp.MustCompile function compiles a regular expression pattern into a reusable Regexp object. It panics if the pattern is invalid.
The simplest use of regexp.MustCompile checks if a string matches a pattern. Here we check for a simple word match.
basic_match.go
package main
import ( “fmt” “regexp” )
func main() {
re := regexp.MustCompile(hello
)
fmt.Println(re.MatchString("hello there")) // true
fmt.Println(re.MatchString("goodbye")) // false
}
We compile the pattern “hello” with MustCompile and use MatchString to test strings. The function returns true if the pattern is found.
A common use case is validating email addresses. This example shows a basic email pattern matcher using MustCompile.
email_match.go
package main
import ( “fmt” “regexp” )
func main() {
pattern := ^[a-zA-Z0-9._%+-]+@[a-zA-Z0-9.-]+\.[a-zA-Z]{2,}$
re := regexp.MustCompile(pattern)
emails := []string{
"user@example.com",
"invalid.email",
"another.user@domain.co.uk",
}
for _, email := range emails {
if re.MatchString(email) {
fmt.Printf("%s is valid\n", email)
} else {
fmt.Printf("%s is invalid\n", email)
}
}
}
The pattern matches standard email formats. Note that MustCompile will panic if the pattern is invalid, unlike Compile.
regexp.MustCompile can extract parts of matched strings. Here we extract date components from a formatted string.
submatches.go
package main
import ( “fmt” “regexp” )
func main() {
re := regexp.MustCompile((\d{4})-(\d{2})-(\d{2})
)
date := “2025-04-20”
matches := re.FindStringSubmatch(date)
if matches != nil {
fmt.Println("Year:", matches[1])
fmt.Println("Month:", matches[2])
fmt.Println("Day:", matches[3])
}
}
We use parentheses to create capture groups. FindStringSubmatch returns all matches, with the full match at index 0 and groups after.
Compiled regex patterns can be used for search-and-replace operations. This example demonstrates simple text replacement.
replace.go
package main
import ( “fmt” “regexp” )
func main() {
re := regexp.MustCompile(\b(\w+)\s+\1\b
)
text := “This is is a test test sentence.”
result := re.ReplaceAllString(text, "$1")
fmt.Println(result)
}
The pattern finds consecutive duplicate words. The replacement keeps just one instance of each duplicated word using the backreference $1.
Regex patterns can split strings more flexibly than strings.Split. Here we split on multiple delimiters.
split.go
package main
import ( “fmt” “regexp” )
func main() {
re := regexp.MustCompile([,;]\s*
)
text := “apple,banana; cherry, date;elderberry”
parts := re.Split(text, -1)
for _, part := range parts {
fmt.Println(part)
}
}
The pattern matches commas or semicolons followed by optional whitespace. Split divides the string at each match.
Go provides two compilation functions. MustCompile panics on invalid patterns while Compile returns an error.
must_vs_regular.go
package main
import ( “fmt” “regexp” )
func main() {
// Safe with MustCompile when pattern is known good
re1 := regexp.MustCompile(valid
)
fmt.Println(re1.MatchString(“valid pattern”))
// Compile is safer for dynamic patterns
re2, err := regexp.Compile(`valid`)
if err != nil {
fmt.Println("Error:", err)
return
}
fmt.Println(re2.MatchString("valid pattern"))
}
MustCompile is preferred for static patterns known at compile time. Use Compile when processing user-supplied patterns.
For better performance, compile regex patterns once and reuse them. Global variables are ideal for this.
global_regex.go
package main
import ( “fmt” “regexp” )
var dateRe = regexp.MustCompile((\d{4})-(\d{2})-(\d{2})
)
func main() { dates := []string{ “2025-04-20”, “2023-12-25”, “invalid-date”, }
for _, date := range dates {
if dateRe.MatchString(date) {
fmt.Printf("%s is valid\n", date)
} else {
fmt.Printf("%s is invalid\n", date)
}
}
}
The global dateRe is compiled once at program start. This avoids recompiling the pattern for each function call.
Go regexp package documentation
This tutorial covered the regexp.MustCompile function in Go with practical examples of pattern matching and text manipulation.
My name is Jan Bodnar, and I am a passionate programmer with extensive programming experience. I have been writing programming articles since 2007. To date, I have authored over 1,400 articles and 8 e-books. I possess more than ten years of experience in teaching programming.
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