Skip to content
World Cup Kickoff Time Converter is liveSee kickoff times in your time zone and add calendar reminders.

Extract Data from Text

Extract emails, URLs, domains, IP addresses, hashtags, numbers, and dates from pasted text in your browser, with optional dedupe and TXT export.

1

Input text

Paste the text you want to scan.

Characters

0 / 50,000

2

Pattern types

Select information types and review counts.

3

Extracted matches

Filter, copy, or download the matched lines.

Total 0Output 0Types 3
Extract Data from Text

Quick Start

1
Paste the source text.
2
Choose the pattern types to extract.
3
Filter matches, then copy or download them.

Common Scenarios

Pull emails or domains from pasted contact lists and pages.

Extract IP addresses, URLs, numbers, or dates from logs.

Collect hashtags from campaign notes or social copy.

Pattern Types

Email, URL, domain, IPv4, hashtag, number, and ISO date patterns are supported.
Dedupe keeps the first match and removes later identical matches.

Usage Advice

Select only the pattern types you need to reduce noisy results.
Review extracted domains from URLs and emails before import.
Process huge logs in chunks to keep review manageable.

Limitations & Compatibility

Matches are pattern-based and are not proof that an email, URL, domain, or IP is reachable.
This is not a full HTML parser, phone parser, address parser, or custom regex builder.
Number extraction can include IDs, dates, versions, or counts depending on your text.

Privacy & Security

Pattern extraction runs locally in your browser. Source text may stay as a browser draft, and selected pattern types, dedupe, and case options may be kept in browser storage. If saved workspaces or WebDAV sync are enabled, that input and those options may be saved through that sync. Extracted matches, per-type stats, match-limit notices, and TXT downloads are regenerated from the current input and options; this tool does not upload files or attachments.

FAQ

6

Continue with these related tools for the next step.

All tool processing happens locally in your browser.