Pattern Matching

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Revision as of 09:54, 4 July 2011 by Suhridk (talk | contribs)
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Intro

  • Classes in the java.util.regex package provide regular expressions support.
  • Basic example
import java.util.regex.*;

public class RegexTest1 {

	public static void main(String[] args) {
		
		Pattern p = Pattern.compile("lazy"); //The pattern to search for
		Matcher m = p.matcher("The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog"); //The source against which to match the pattern
		boolean found = false;
		while(m.find()) {
			System.out.println("Match found at " + m.start() + "," + m.end()); //Will print : Match found at 35,39
			found = true;
		}
		
		if(!found) {
			System.out.println("No match found");
		}
	}

}
  • Thumb rule: Regex matching runs from left to right and once a source character has been consumed, it cannot be reused.
  • In the below example, it will match the pattern "aba" starting at 0 and 4, but not at 2 since they are consumed during the match starting from 0.
import java.util.regex.*;

public class RegexTest2 {

	public static void main(String[] args) {
		
		Pattern p = Pattern.compile("aba");
		Matcher m = p.matcher("abababa");
		boolean found = false;
		while(m.find()) {
			System.out.println("Match found; starting at pos : " + m.start());
			found = true;
		}
		
		if(!found) {
			System.out.println("No match found");
		}
	}

}

Metacharacters

  • Regex keywords that have special search meaning.
  • \d - Matches a digit
  • \s - Matches a whitespace char
  • \w - Matches a word char (letters/digits or _)
public class RegexTest3 {

	public static void main(String[] args) {
		
		Pattern p = Pattern.compile("\\d");
		Matcher m = p.matcher("The 15th of August");
		boolean found = false;
		while(m.find()) {
			System.out.println("Match found; starting at pos : " + m.start());
			found = true;
		}

                // Match found; starting at pos : 4
                // Match found; starting at pos : 5
		
		if(!found) {
			System.out.println("No match found");
		}
	}

}
  • Set of characters to search for using []
    • [abc] - Only a's or b's or c's
    • [a-f] - Search for a,b,c,d,e,f chars
    • [a-fA-F] - small and caps
  • Dot - "." metacharacter matches any character

Quantifiers

  • Used to specify the number of occurrences of a search pattern
  • * - Zero or more occurrences
  •  ? - Zero or one occurrence.
  • + - One or more occurrence.
  • Example the pattern abc(\d)* will match -
    • abc0
    • abc13423
    • abc - since * means 0 or more
    • abcdef - for the similar reason as above
  • It won't match -
    • ab211 (doesnt start with abc)
    • abcs (doesnt have a digit after abc)