For example I have text like below :
case1:
(1) Hello, how are you?
case2:
Hi. (1) How're you doing?
Now I want to match the text which starts with (\d+).
I have tried the following regex but nothing is working.
^[\(\d+\)], ^\(\d+\).
[] are used to match any of the things you specify inside the brackets, and are to be followed by a quantifier.
The second regexp will work: ^\(\d+\), so check your code.
Check also so there's no space in front of the first parenthesis, or add \s* in front.
EDIT: Also, java can be tricky with escapes depending on if the regexp you type is directly translated to a regexp or is first a string literal. You may need to double escape your escapes.
In Java you have to escape parenthesis, so "\\(\\d+\\)" should match (1) in case one and two. Adding ^ as you did "^\\(\\d+\\)" will match only case1.
You have to use double back slashes within java string. Consider this
"\n" give you [line break]
"\\n" give you [backslash][n]
If you are going to downvote my post, at least comment to tell me WHY it's not useful.
I believe Java's Regex Engine supports Positive Lookbehind, in which case you can use the following regex:
(?<=[(][0-9]{1,9999}[)]\s?)\b.*$
Which matches:
The literal text (
Any digit [0-9], between 1 and 9999 times {1,9999}
The literal text )
A space, between 0 and 1 times \s?
A word boundary \b
Any character, between 0 and unlimited times .*
The end of a string $
Related
Imagine you are trying to pattern match "stackoverflow".
You want the following:
this is stackoverflow and it rocks [MATCH]
stackoverflow is the best [MATCH]
i love stackoverflow [MATCH]
typostackoverflow rules [NO MATCH]
i love stackoverflowtypo [NO MATCH]
I know how to parse out stackoverflow if it has spaces on both sites using:
/\s(stackoverflow)\s/
Same with if its at the start or end of a string:
/^(stackoverflow)\s/
/\s(stackoverflow)$/
But how do you specify "space or end of string" and "space or start of string" using a regular expression?
You can use any of the following:
\b #A word break and will work for both spaces and end of lines.
(^|\s) #the | means or. () is a capturing group.
/\b(stackoverflow)\b/
Also, if you don't want to include the space in your match, you can use lookbehind/aheads.
(?<=\s|^) #to look behind the match
(stackoverflow) #the string you want. () optional
(?=\s|$) #to look ahead.
(^|\s) would match space or start of string and ($|\s) for space or end of string. Together it's:
(^|\s)stackoverflow($|\s)
Here's what I would use:
(?<!\S)stackoverflow(?!\S)
In other words, match "stackoverflow" if it's not preceded by a non-whitespace character and not followed by a non-whitespace character.
This is neater (IMO) than the "space-or-anchor" approach, and it doesn't assume the string starts and ends with word characters like the \b approach does.
\b matches at word boundaries (without actually matching any characters), so the following should do what you want:
\bstackoverflow\b
In a previous question that i asked,
String split in java using advanced regex
someone gave me a fantastic answer to my problem (as described on the above link)
but i never managed to fully understand it. Can somebody help me? The regex i was given
is this"
"(?s)(?=(([^\"]+\"){2})*[^\"]*$)\\s+"
I can understand some basic things, but there are parts of this regex that even after
thoroughly searching google i could not find, like the question mark preceding the s in the
start, or how exactly the second parenthesis works with the question mark and the equation in the start. Is it possible also to expand it and make it able to work with other types of quotes, like “ ” for example?
Any help is really appreciated.
"(?s)(?=(([^\"]+\"){2})*[^\"]*$)\\s+" Explained;
(?s) # This equals a DOTALL flag in regex, which allows the `.` to match newline characters. As far as I can tell from your regex, it's superfluous.
(?= # Start of a lookahead, it checks ahead in the regex, but matches "an empty string"(1) read more about that [here][1]
(([^\"]+\"){2})* # This group is repeated any amount of times, including none. I will explain the content in more detail.
([^\"]+\") # This is looking for one or more occurrences of a character that is not `"`, followed by a `"`.
{2} # Repeat 2 times. When combined with the previous group, it it looking for 2 occurrences of text followed by a quote. In effect, this means it is looking for an even amount of `"`.
[^\"]* # Matches any character which is not a double quote sign. This means literally _any_ character, including newline characters without enabling the DOTALL flag
$ # The lookahead actually inspects until end of string.
) # End of lookahead
\\s+ # Matches one or more whitespace characters, including spaces, tabs and so on
That complicated group up there that is repeated twice will match in whitespaces in this string which is not in between two ";
text that has a "string in it".
When used with String.split, splitting the string into; [text, that, has, a, "string in it".]
It will only match if there are an even number of ", so the following will match on all spaces;
text that nearly has a "string in it.
Splitting the string into [text, that, nearly, has, a, "string, in, it.]
(1) When I say that a capture group matches "an empty string", I mean that it actually captures nothing, it only looks ahead from the point in the regex you are, and check a condition, nothing is actually captured. The actual capture is done by \\s+ which follows the lookahead.
The (?s) part is an embedded flag expression, enabling the DOTALL mode, which means the following:
In dotall mode, the expression . matches any character, including a line terminator. By default this expression does not match line terminators.
The (?=expr) is a look-ahead expression. This means that the regex looks to match expr, but then moves back to the same point before continuing with the rest of the evaluation.
In this case, it means that the regex matches any \\s+ occurence, that is followed by any even number of ", then followed by non-" until the end ($). In other words, it checks that there are an even number of " ahead.
It can definitely be expanded to other quotes too. The only problem is the ([^\"]+\"){2} part, that will probably have to be made to use a back-reference (\n) instead of the {2}.
This is fairly simple..
Concept
It split's at \s+ whenever there are even number of " ahead.
For example:
Hello hi "Hi World"
^ ^ ^
| | |->will not split here since there are odd number of "
----
|
|->split here because there are even number of " ahead
Grammar
\s matches a \n or \r or space or \t
+ is a quantifier which matches previous character or group 1 to many times
[^\"] would match anything except "
(x){2} would match x 2 times
a(?=bc) would match if a is followed by bc
(?=ab)a would first check for ab from current position and then return back to its position.It then matches a.(?=ab)c would not match c
With (?s)(singleline mode) . would match newlines.So,In this case no need of (?s) since there are no .
I would use
\s+(?=([^"]*"[^"]*")*[^"]*$)
I want to split a text into sentences. My text contains \n character in between. I want the splitting to be done at \n and .(dot). I cannot use BreakIterator as splitting condition for it is a space followed by a period (In the text I want to split, that isn't necessary).
Example:
i am a java programmer.i like coding in java. pi is 3.14\n regex not working
Should output:
['i am a java programmer', 'i like coding in java', 'pi is 3.14', 'regex not working']
I tried a simple regex which splits on either \n or .:
[\\\\n\\.]
This isn't working although, specifying separately works.
\\\\n
\\.
So can anyone give a regex that will split on either \n or . ?
Another problem is I don't want splitting to be done in case of decimals like 5.6.
This java regex should go it:
"\n|((?<!\\d)\\.(?!\\d))"
Points here:
you don't need to escape \n, ever
those weird looking things around the dot are negative look arounds, and means "the previous/next character must not be a digit
This regex says: "either a newline, or a literal dot that is not preceded or followed by a digit
FYI, you don't need to escape characters in a character class (between []) except for the brackets themselves.
Use string.split("[\n.]") to split at \n or .
Inside character class, . has no special meaning. So there is no need for escaping .
Edit: string.split("\n|[.](?<!\\d)(?!\\d)") avoids splitting of decimal numbers.
Here, for each . a lookbehind and a lookahead is there to check whether there is a digit on both sides. If both are not numbers, split is applied.
\n|\\.(?!\\d)|(?<!\\d)\\. avoids split for . with digits on both sides.
\n|(?<!\\d)[.](?!\\d) avoids split if any side has a digit
So what you require might be
string.split("\n|\\.(?!\\d)|(?<!\\d)\\.")
which splits something.4 but not 3.14
You need not double-escape stuff in a Java regex in the [] block:
[.\n]
should work.
Any Regex masters out there? I need a regular expression in Java that matches:
"RANDOMSTUFF SPECIFICWORD"
Including the quotation marks.
Thus I need
to match the first quote,
RANDOMSTUFF (any number of words with spaces between preceding SPECIFICWORD)
SPECIFICWORD (a specific word which I won't specify here.)
and the ending quote.
I don't want to match things such as:
RANDOMSTUFF SPECIFICWORD
"RANDOMSTUFF NOTTHESPECIFICWORD"
"RANDOMSTUFF SPECIFICWORD MORERANDOMSTUFF"
\".*\sSPECIFICWORD\"
If you don't want to allow quotes in between, use \"[^"]*\sSPECIFICWORD\"
. matches any character
* says 0 or more of the preceding character (in this case, 0 or more of any characters)
\s matches any whitespace character
SPECIFICWORD will be treated as a string literal, assuming there are no special characters (escape them if there are)
\" matches the quote
[^"] means any character except a quote (the ^ is what makes it 'except')
Also, this link could be useful. Regex's are powerful expressions and are applicable across virtually any language, so it would be a good thing to become comfortable with using them.
EDIT:
As several other posters have pointed out, adding ^ to the beginning and $ to the end will only match if the entire line matches.
^ matches the beginning of the line
$ matches the end of the line
^.*\s+SPECIFICWORD"$
'^' matches 'from the start of the line'
.* matches anything
\s+ matches 'any amount of whitespace, but at least some'
SPECIFICWORD" is a string literal
$ means 'this is the end of the line'
Note that ^ and $ are not always 'line'-based; most languages allow you to specify a 'multiline' mode that would cause them to match 'start of the string/end of the string' instead of one line at a time.
Will this string be matched as a line by line basis or will it be found within the text? If so, you can add anchors to ensure that it matches the string.
^(\".*\sSPECIFICWPRD\")$
Saying, at the start of the line, look for a double quote followed by zero or more random characters followed by a single whitespace, followed by the specific word, followed by a double quote at the end of the string.
Optionally, there are excellent tools for designing regex patterns and seeing what they match in real time.
Here are a couple of examples:
http://gskinner.com/RegExr/
http://regex101.com/r/zC3fM1
Try:
\"[\w\s]*SPECIFICWORD\"
Works like this:
\" matches opening quote
[\w\s]* matches zero or more of the characters from the following sets:
[a-zA-Z_0-9] (\w part)
[ \t\n\x0B\f\r] (\s part)
SPECIFICWORD matches the SPECIFICWORD
\" matches closing quote
I'm trying to compare following strings with regex:
#[xyz="1","2"'"4"] ------- valid
#[xyz] ------------- valid
#[xyz="a5","4r"'"8dsa"] -- valid
#[xyz="asd"] -- invalid
#[xyz"asd"] --- invalid
#[xyz="8s"'"4"] - invalid
The valid pattern should be:
#[xyz then = sign then some chars then , then some chars then ' then some chars and finally ]. This means if there is characters after xyz then they must be in format ="XXX","XXX"'"XXX".
Or only #[xyz]. No character after xyz.
I have tried following regex, but it did not worked:
String regex = "#[xyz=\"[a-zA-z][0-9]\",\"[a-zA-z][0-9]\"'\"[a-zA-z][0-9]\"]";
Here the quotations (in part after xyz) are optional and number of characters between quotes are also not fixed and there could also be some characters before and after this pattern like asdadad #[xyz] adadad.
You can use the regex:
#\[xyz(?:="[a-zA-z0-9]+","[a-zA-z0-9]+"'"[a-zA-z0-9]+")?\]
See it
Expressed as Java string it'll be:
String regex = "#\\[xyz=\"[a-zA-z0-9]+\",\"[a-zA-z0-9]+\"'\"[a-zA-z0-9]+\"\\]";
What was wrong with your regex?
[...] defines a character class. When you want to match literal [ and ] you need to escape it by preceding with a \.
[a-zA-z][0-9] match a single letter followed by a single digit. But you want one or more alphanumeric characters. So you need [a-zA-Z0-9]+
Use this:
String regex = "#\\[xyz(=\"[a-zA-z0-9]+\",\"[a-zA-z0-9]+\"'\"[a-zA-z0-9]+\")?\\]";
When you write [a-zA-z][0-9] it expects a letter character and a digit after it. And you also have to escape first and last square braces because square braces have special meaning in regexes.
Explanation:
[a-zA-z0-9]+ means alphanumeric character (but not an underline) one or more times.
(=\"[a-zA-z0-9]+\",\"[a-zA-z0-9]+\"'\"[a-zA-z0-9]+\")? means that expression in parentheses can be one time or not at all.
Since square brackets have a special meaning in regex, you used it by yourself, they define character classes, you need to escape them if you want to match them literally.
String regex = "#\\[xyz=\"[a-zA-z][0-9]\",\"[a-zA-z][0-9]\"'\"[a-zA-z][0-9]\"\\]";
The next problem is with '"[a-zA-z][0-9]' you define "first a letter, second a digit", you need to join those classes and add a quantifier:
String regex = "#\\[xyz=\"[a-zA-z0-9]+\",\"[a-zA-z0-9]+\"'\"[a-zA-z0-9]+\"\\]";
See it here on Regexr
there could also be some characters before and after this pattern like
asdadad #[xyz] adadad.
Regex should be:
String regex = "(.)*#\\[xyz(=\"[a-zA-z0-9]+\",\"[a-zA-z0-9]+\"'\"[a-zA-z0-9]+\")?\\](.)*";
The First and last (.)* will allow any string before the pattern as you have mentioned in your edit. As said by #ademiban this (=\"[a-zA-z0-9]+\",\"[a-zA-z0-9]+\"'\"[a-zA-z0-9]+\")? will come one time or not at all. Other mistakes are also very well explained by Others +1 to all other.