Consider the following code snippet:
String input = "Print this";
System.out.println(input.matches("\\bthis\\b"));
Output
false
What could be possibly wrong with this approach? If it is wrong, then what is the right solution to find the exact word match?
PS: I have found a variety of similar questions here but none of them provide the solution I am looking for.
Thanks in advance.
When you use the matches() method, it is trying to match the entire input. In your example, the input "Print this" doesn't match the pattern because the word "Print" isn't matched.
So you need to add something to the regex to match the initial part of the string, e.g.
.*\\bthis\\b
And if you want to allow extra text at the end of the line too:
.*\\bthis\\b.*
Alternatively, use a Matcher object and use Matcher.find() to find matches within the input string:
Pattern p = Pattern.compile("\\bthis\\b");
Matcher m = p.matcher("Print this");
m.find();
System.out.println(m.group());
Output:
this
If you want to find multiple matches in a line, you can call find() and group() repeatedly to extract them all.
Full example method for matcher:
public static String REGEX_FIND_WORD="(?i).*?\\b%s\\b.*?";
public static boolean containsWord(String text, String word) {
String regex=String.format(REGEX_FIND_WORD, Pattern.quote(word));
return text.matches(regex);
}
Explain:
(?i) - ignorecase
.*? - allow (optionally) any characters before
\b - word boundary
%s - variable to be changed by String.format (quoted to avoid regex
errors)
\b - word boundary
.*? - allow (optionally) any characters after
For a good explanation, see: http://www.regular-expressions.info/java.html
myString.matches("regex") returns true or false depending whether the
string can be matched entirely by the regular expression. It is
important to remember that String.matches() only returns true if the
entire string can be matched. In other words: "regex" is applied as if
you had written "^regex$" with start and end of string anchors. This
is different from most other regex libraries, where the "quick match
test" method returns true if the regex can be matched anywhere in the
string. If myString is abc then myString.matches("bc") returns false.
bc matches abc, but ^bc$ (which is really being used here) does not.
This writes "true":
String input = "Print this";
System.out.println(input.matches(".*\\bthis\\b"));
You may use groups to find the exact word. Regex API specifies groups by parentheses. For example:
A(B(C))D
This statement consists of three groups, which are indexed from 0.
0th group - ABCD
1st group - BC
2nd group - C
So if you need to find some specific word, you may use two methods in Matcher class such as: find() to find statement specified by regex, and then get a String object specified by its group number:
String statement = "Hello, my beautiful world";
Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile("Hello, my (\\w+).*");
Matcher m = pattern.matcher(statement);
m.find();
System.out.println(m.group(1));
The above code result will be "beautiful"
Is your searchString going to be regular expression? if not simply use String.contains(CharSequence s)
System.out.println(input.matches(".*\\bthis$"));
Also works. Here the .* matches anything before the space and then this is matched to be word in the end.
Related
I am trying to match a multi line text using java. When I use the Pattern class with the Pattern.MULTILINE modifier, I am able to match, but I am not able to do so with (?m).
The same pattern with (?m) and using String.matches does not seem to work.
I am sure I am missing something, but no idea what. Am not very good at regular expressions.
This is what I tried
String test = "User Comments: This is \t a\ta \n test \n\n message \n";
String pattern1 = "User Comments: (\\W)*(\\S)*";
Pattern p = Pattern.compile(pattern1, Pattern.MULTILINE);
System.out.println(p.matcher(test).find()); //true
String pattern2 = "(?m)User Comments: (\\W)*(\\S)*";
System.out.println(test.matches(pattern2)); //false - why?
First, you're using the modifiers under an incorrect assumption.
Pattern.MULTILINE or (?m) tells Java to accept the anchors ^ and $ to match at the start and end of each line (otherwise they only match at the start/end of the entire string).
Pattern.DOTALL or (?s) tells Java to allow the dot to match newline characters, too.
Second, in your case, the regex fails because you're using the matches() method which expects the regex to match the entire string - which of course doesn't work since there are some characters left after (\\W)*(\\S)* have matched.
So if you're simply looking for a string that starts with User Comments:, use the regex
^\s*User Comments:\s*(.*)
with the Pattern.DOTALL option:
Pattern regex = Pattern.compile("^\\s*User Comments:\\s+(.*)", Pattern.DOTALL);
Matcher regexMatcher = regex.matcher(subjectString);
if (regexMatcher.find()) {
ResultString = regexMatcher.group(1);
}
ResultString will then contain the text after User Comments:
This has nothing to do with the MULTILINE flag; what you're seeing is the difference between the find() and matches() methods. find() succeeds if a match can be found anywhere in the target string, while matches() expects the regex to match the entire string.
Pattern p = Pattern.compile("xyz");
Matcher m = p.matcher("123xyzabc");
System.out.println(m.find()); // true
System.out.println(m.matches()); // false
Matcher m = p.matcher("xyz");
System.out.println(m.matches()); // true
Furthermore, MULTILINE doesn't mean what you think it does. Many people seem to jump to the conclusion that you have to use that flag if your target string contains newlines--that is, if it contains multiple logical lines. I've seen several answers here on SO to that effect, but in fact, all that flag does is change the behavior of the anchors, ^ and $.
Normally ^ matches the very beginning of the target string, and $ matches the very end (or before a newline at the end, but we'll leave that aside for now). But if the string contains newlines, you can choose for ^ and $ to match at the start and end of any logical line, not just the start and end of the whole string, by setting the MULTILINE flag.
So forget about what MULTILINE means and just remember what it does: changes the behavior of the ^ and $ anchors. DOTALL mode was originally called "single-line" (and still is in some flavors, including Perl and .NET), and it has always caused similar confusion. We're fortunate that the Java devs went with the more descriptive name in that case, but there was no reasonable alternative for "multiline" mode.
In Perl, where all this madness started, they've admitted their mistake and gotten rid of both "multiline" and "single-line" modes in Perl 6 regexes. In another twenty years, maybe the rest of the world will have followed suit.
str.matches(regex) behaves like Pattern.matches(regex, str) which attempts to match the entire input sequence against the pattern and returns
true if, and only if, the entire input sequence matches this matcher's pattern
Whereas matcher.find() attempts to find the next subsequence of the input sequence that matches the pattern and returns
true if, and only if, a subsequence of the input sequence matches this matcher's pattern
Thus the problem is with the regex. Try the following.
String test = "User Comments: This is \t a\ta \ntest\n\n message \n";
String pattern1 = "User Comments: [\\s\\S]*^test$[\\s\\S]*";
Pattern p = Pattern.compile(pattern1, Pattern.MULTILINE);
System.out.println(p.matcher(test).find()); //true
String pattern2 = "(?m)User Comments: [\\s\\S]*^test$[\\s\\S]*";
System.out.println(test.matches(pattern2)); //true
Thus in short, the (\\W)*(\\S)* portion in your first regex matches an empty string as * means zero or more occurrences and the real matched string is User Comments: and not the whole string as you'd expect. The second one fails as it tries to match the whole string but it can't as \\W matches a non word character, ie [^a-zA-Z0-9_] and the first character is T, a word character.
The multiline flag tells regex to match the pattern to each line as opposed to the entire string for your purposes a wild card will suffice.
I need a regex to match a particular string, say 1.4.5 in the below string . My string will be like
absdfsdfsdfc1.4.5kdecsdfsdff
I have a regex which is giving [c1.4.5k] as an output. But I want to match only 1.4.5. I have tried this pattern:
[^\\W](\\d\\.\\d\\.\\d)[^\\d]
But no luck. I am using Java.
Please let me know the pattern.
When I read your expression [^\\W](\\d\\.\\d\\.\\d)[^\\d] correctly, then you want a word character before and not a digit ahead. Is that correct?
For that you can use lookbehind and lookahead assertions. Those assertions do only check their condition, but they do not match, therefore that stuff is not included in the result.
(?<=\\w)(\\d\\.\\d\\.\\d)(?!\\d)
Because of that, you can remove the capturing group. You are also repeating yourself in the pattern, you can simplify that, too:
(?<=\\w)\\d(?:\\.\\d){2}(?!\\d)
Would be my pattern for that. (The ?: is a non capturing group)
Your requirements are vague. Do you need to match a series of exactly 3 numbers with exactly two dots?
[0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]+
Which could be written as
([0-9]+\.){2}[0-9]+
Do you need to match x many cases of a number, seperated by x-1 dots in between?
([0-9]+\.)+[0-9]+
Use look ahead and look behind.
(?<=c)[\d\.]+(?=k)
Where c is the character that would be immediately before the 1.4.5 and k is the character immediately after 1.4.5. You can replace c and k with any regular expression that would suit your purposes
I think this one should do it : ([0-9]+\\.?)+
Regular Expression
((?<!\d)\d(?:\.\d(?!\d))+)
As a Java string:
"((?<!\\d)\\d(?:\\.\\d(?!\\d))+)"
String str= "absdfsdfsdfc**1.4.5**kdec456456.567sdfsdff22.33.55ffkidhfuh122.33.44";
String regex ="[0-9]{1}\\.[0-9]{1}\\.[0-9]{1}";
Matcher matcher = Pattern.compile( regex ).matcher( str);
if (matcher.find())
{
String year = matcher.group(0);
System.out.println(year);
}
else
{
System.out.println("no match found");
}
I'm sure this type of question gets posted a lot here. I have this regex:
^\[.*\]
which should match
[Test]Hi there
And according to RegexPal, it does. However, in this Java SCCE it doesn't:
final String pat = "^\\[.*\\]";
final String str = "[Test]Hi there";
System.out.println(pat);
System.out.println(str);
System.out.println(str.matches(pat));
Output:
^\[.*\]
[Test]Hi there
false
Why doesn't it match?
"match" in Java means "matches the whole string":
Attempts to match the entire region against the pattern.
Since your regex doesn't accept any characters after the last ] it will not "match" anything that has characters after the ].
You can use find to see if the string contains something that's matched by your regex (it will still have to be anchored at the beginning, since you use ^).
In other words ^\[.*\] will not match [Test]Hi there, but it will find [Test] within [Test]Hi there.
Because String#match will try to match your regex against the whole string. What you're looking for is Pattern.compile(pat).matcher(str).find(), see Matcher.
Possible duplicate: Print regex matches in java
I am using Matcher class in java to match a string with a particular regular expression which I converted into a Pattern using the Pattern class. I know my regex works because when I do Matcher.find(), I am getting true values where I am supposed to. But I want to print out the stings that are producing those true values (meaning print out the strings that match my regex) and I don't see a method in the matcher class to achieve that. Please do let me know if anyone has encountered such a problem before. I apologize as this question is fairly rudimentary but I am fairly new to regex and hence am still finding my way around the regex world.
Assuming mis your matcher:
m.group() will return the matched string.
[EDIT] Added info regarding matched groups
Also, if your regex has portions inside parenthesis, m.group(n) will return the string that matches the nth group inside parenthesis;
Pattern p = Pattern.compile("mary (.*) bob");
Matcher m = p.matcher("since that day mary loves bob");
m.group() returns "mary loves bob".
m.group(1) return "loves".
I'm trying to write a regular expression to mach an IRC PRIVMSG string. It is something like:
:nick!name#some.host.com PRIVMSG #channel :message body
So i wrote the following code:
Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile("^:.*\\sPRIVMSG\\s#.*\\s:");
Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(msg);
if(matcher.matches()) {
System.out.println(msg);
}
It does not work. I got no matches. When I test the regular expression using online javascript testers, I got matches.
I tried to find the reason, why it doesn't work and I found that there's something wrong with the whitespace symbol. The following pattern will give me some matches:
Pattern.compile("^:.*");
But the pattern with \s will not:
Pattern.compile("^:.*\\s");
It's confusing.
The java matches method strikes again! That method only returns true if the entire string matches the input. You didn't include anything that captures the message body after the second colon, so the entire string is not a match. It works in testers because 'normal' regex is a 'match' if any part of the input matches.
Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile("^:.*?\\sPRIVMSG\\s#.*?\\s:.*$");
Should match
If you look at the documentation for matches(), uou will notice that it is trying to match the entire string. You need to fix your regexp or use find() to iterate through the substring matches.