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I've got the regex

^(.)+?domain\.com

which machtes

www.domain.com or
domain.com or
something.domain.com but
.domain.com too.

What I want is to "filter out" the possibility of ".domain.com". It should match [something].domain.com and domain.com but NOT .domain.com. (or ..domain.com). It should be a valid subdomain. What would be the correct regex to get this done?

Updated question to clarify requirements.

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3 Answers

up vote 5 down vote accepted

This pattern will do it

^([^.]+\.)*domain\.com
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Thanks a lot - perfect! Exactly what I wanted. I'll accept it asap. – Andy Dec 30 '12 at 12:52
This will still allow e.g. many.parts.domain.com and even ..domain.com. Up to you whether that is desirable. – tripleee Dec 30 '12 at 12:55
@tripleee I believe many.parts.domain.com is perfectly OK to accept. ..domain.com does feel wrong. – Jan Dvorak Dec 30 '12 at 12:57
..domain.com is wrong that's true, but many.parts.domain.com would be right. Would there be a possibility to filter out .. (or ... or ....) out too? – Andy Dec 30 '12 at 12:59
@Andy see the Tripleee's answer + my suggestion. – Jan Dvorak Dec 30 '12 at 13:00
show 6 more comments

Actually it will match otherdomain.com too. A better approach might be to allow zero or one occurrences of non-dot+ dot:

^([^.]+\.)?domain.com$

As suggested in a comment, to allow many levels of subdomains, change ? to *.

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2  
I suggest * instead of ?. – Jan Dvorak Dec 30 '12 at 12:58

This will allow multiple subdomains and the domain itself

^(.*\.)?domain.com&
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