A compiled representation of a regular expression.
A regular expression, specified as a string, must first be compiled into
an instance of this class. The resulting pattern can then be used to create
a Matcher
object that can match arbitrary {@linkplain java.lang.CharSequence character sequences} against the regular
expression. All of the state involved in performing a match resides in the
matcher, so many matchers can share the same pattern.
A typical invocation sequence is thus
Pattern p = Pattern.compile
("a*b"); Matcher m = p.matcher
("aaaaab"); boolean b = m.matches
();
A matches
method is defined by this class as a
convenience for when a regular expression is used just once. This method
compiles an expression and matches an input sequence against it in a single
invocation. The statement
is equivalent to the three statements above, though for repeated matches it is less efficient since it does not allow the compiled pattern to be reused. boolean b = Pattern.matches("a*b", "aaaaab");
Instances of this class are immutable and are safe for use by multiple
concurrent threads. Instances of the Matcher
class are not safe for
such use.
Summary of regular-expression constructs
Construct | Matches |
---|---|
Characters | |
x | The character x |
\\ | The backslash character |
\0n | The character with octal value 0n (0 <= n <= 7) |
\0nn | The character with octal value 0nn (0 <= n <= 7) |
\0mnn | The character with octal value 0mnn (0 <= m <= 3, 0 <= n <= 7) |
\xhh | The character with hexadecimal value 0xhh |
\uhhhh | The character with hexadecimal value 0xhhhh |
\x{h...h} | The character with hexadecimal value 0xh...h
(Character.MIN_CODE_POINT
<= 0xh...h <=
Character.MAX_CODE_POINT ) |
\t | The tab character ('\u0009') |
\n | The newline (line feed) character ('\u000A') |
\r | The carriage-return character ('\u000D') |
\f | The form-feed character ('\u000C') |
\a | The alert (bell) character ('\u0007') |
\e | The escape character ('\u001B') |
\cx | The control character corresponding to x |
Character classes | |
[abc] |
a , b , or c (simple class) |
[^abc] |
Any character except a , b , or c (negation) |
[a-zA-Z] |
a through z
or A through Z , inclusive (range) |
[a-d[m-p]] |
a through d ,
or m through p : [a-dm-p] (union) |
[a-z&&[def]] |
d , e , or f (intersection) |
[a-z&&[^bc]] |
a through z ,
except for b and c : [ad-z] (subtraction) |
[a-z&&[^m-p]] |
a through z ,
and not m through p : [a-lq-z] (subtraction) |
Predefined character classes | |
. | Any character (may or may not match line terminators) |
\d | A digit: [0-9] |
\D | A non-digit: [^0-9] |
\h | A horizontal whitespace character: [ \t\xA0\u1680\u180e\u2000-\u200a\u202f\u205f\u3000] |
\H | A non-horizontal whitespace character: [^\h] |
\s | A whitespace character: [ \t\n\x0B\f\r] |
\S | A non-whitespace character: [^\s] |
\v | A vertical whitespace character: [\n\x0B\f\r\x85\u2028\u2029] |
\V | A non-vertical whitespace character: [^\v] |
\w | A word character: [a-zA-Z_0-9] |
\W | A non-word character: [^\w] |
POSIX character classes (US-ASCII only) | |
\p{Lower} |
A lower-case alphabetic character: [a-z] |
\p{Upper} |
An upper-case alphabetic character:[A-Z] |
\p{ASCII} |
All ASCII:[\x00-\x7F] |
\p{Alpha} |
An alphabetic character:[\p{Lower}\p{Upper}] |
\p{Digit} |
A decimal digit: [0-9] |
\p{Alnum} |
An alphanumeric character:[\p{Alpha}\p{Digit}] |
\p{Punct} |
Punctuation: One of !"#$%&'()*+,-./:;<=>?@[\]^_`{|}~ |
\p{Graph} |
A visible character: [\p{Alnum}\p{Punct}] |
\p{Print} |
A printable character: [\p{Graph}\x20] |
\p{Blank} |
A space or a tab: [ \t] |
\p{Cntrl} |
A control character: [\x00-\x1F\x7F] |
\p{XDigit} |
A hexadecimal digit: [0-9a-fA-F] |
\p{Space} |
A whitespace character: [ \t\n\x0B\f\r] |
java.lang.Character classes (simple java character type) | |
\p{javaLowerCase} | Equivalent to java.lang.Character.isLowerCase() |
\p{javaUpperCase} | Equivalent to java.lang.Character.isUpperCase() |
\p{javaWhitespace} | Equivalent to java.lang.Character.isWhitespace() |
\p{javaMirrored} | Equivalent to java.lang.Character.isMirrored() |
Classes for Unicode scripts, blocks, categories and binary properties | |
\p{IsLatin} |
A Latin script character (script) |
\p{InGreek} |
A character in the Greek block (block) |
\p{Lu} |
An uppercase letter (category) |
\p{IsAlphabetic} |
An alphabetic character (binary property) |
\p{Sc} |
A currency symbol |
\P{InGreek} |
Any character except one in the Greek block (negation) |
[\p{L}&&[^\p{Lu}]] |
Any letter except an uppercase letter (subtraction) |
Boundary matchers | |
^ | The beginning of a line |
$ | The end of a line |
\b | A word boundary |
\B | A non-word boundary |
\A | The beginning of the input |
\G | The end of the previous match |
\Z | The end of the input but for the final terminator, if any |
\z | The end of the input |
Linebreak matcher | |
\R | Any Unicode linebreak sequence, is equivalent to \u000D\u000A|[\u000A\u000B\u000C\u000D\u0085\u2028\u2029] |
Greedy quantifiers | |
X? | X, once or not at all |
X* | X, zero or more times |
X+ | X, one or more times |
X{n} | X, exactly n times |
X{n,} | X, at least n times |
X{n,m} | X, at least n but not more than m times |
Reluctant quantifiers | |
X?? | X, once or not at all |
X*? | X, zero or more times |
X+? | X, one or more times |
X{n}? | X, exactly n times |
X{n,}? | X, at least n times |
X{n,m}? | X, at least n but not more than m times |
Possessive quantifiers | |
X?+ | X, once or not at all |
X*+ | X, zero or more times |
X++ | X, one or more times |
X{n}+ | X, exactly n times |
X{n,}+ | X, at least n times |
X{n,m}+ | X, at least n but not more than m times |
Logical operators | |
XY | X followed by Y |
X|Y | Either X or Y |
(X) | X, as a capturing group |
Back references | |
\n | Whatever the nth capturing group matched |
\k<name> | Whatever the named-capturing group "name" matched. Only available for API 26 or above |
Quotation | |
\ | Nothing, but quotes the following character |
\Q | Nothing, but quotes all characters until \E |
\E | Nothing, but ends quoting started by \Q |
Special constructs (named-capturing and non-capturing) | |
(?<name>X) | X, as a named-capturing group. Only available for API 26 or above. |
(?:X) | X, as a non-capturing group |
(?idmsuxU-idmsuxU) | Nothing, but turns match flags i d m s u x U on - off |
(?idmsux-idmsux:X) | X, as a non-capturing group with the given flags i d m s u x on - off |
(?=X) | X, via zero-width positive lookahead |
(?!X) | X, via zero-width negative lookahead |
(?<=X) | X, via zero-width positive lookbehind |
(?<!X) | X, via zero-width negative lookbehind |
(?>X) | X, as an independent, non-capturing group |
Backslashes, escapes, and quoting
The backslash character ('\') serves to introduce escaped constructs, as defined in the table above, as well as to quote characters that otherwise would be interpreted as unescaped constructs. Thus the expression \\ matches a single backslash and \{ matches a left brace.
It is an error to use a backslash prior to any alphabetic character that does not denote an escaped construct; these are reserved for future extensions to the regular-expression language. A backslash may be used prior to a non-alphabetic character regardless of whether that character is part of an unescaped construct.
Backslashes within string literals in Java source code are interpreted as required by The Java™ Language Specification as either Unicode escapes (section 3.3) or other character escapes (section 3.10.6) It is therefore necessary to double backslashes in string literals that represent regular expressions to protect them from interpretation by the Java bytecode compiler. The string literal "\b", for example, matches a single backspace character when interpreted as a regular expression, while "\\b" matches a word boundary. The string literal "\(hello\)" is illegal and leads to a compile-time error; in order to match the string (hello) the string literal "\\(hello\\)" must be used.
Character Classes
Character classes may appear within other character classes, and may be composed by the union operator (implicit) and the intersection operator (&&). The union operator denotes a class that contains every character that is in at least one of its operand classes. The intersection operator denotes a class that contains every character that is in both of its operand classes.
The precedence of character-class operators is as follows, from highest to lowest:
1 Literal escape \x 2 Grouping [...] 3 Range a-z 4 Union [a-e][i-u] 5 Intersection [a-z&&[aeiou]]
Note that a different set of metacharacters are in effect inside a character class than outside a character class. For instance, the regular expression . loses its special meaning inside a character class, while the expression - becomes a range forming metacharacter.
Line terminators
A line terminator is a one- or two-character sequence that marks the end of a line of the input character sequence. The following are recognized as line terminators:
- A newline (line feed) character ('\n'),
- A carriage-return character followed immediately by a newline character ("\r\n"),
- A standalone carriage-return character ('\r'),
- A next-line character ('\u0085'),
- A line-separator character ('\u2028'), or
- A paragraph-separator character ('\u2029).
If UNIX_LINES
mode is activated, then the only line terminators
recognized are newline characters.
The regular expression . matches any character except a line
terminator unless the DOTALL
flag is specified.
By default, the regular expressions ^ and $ ignore
line terminators and only match at the beginning and the end, respectively,
of the entire input sequence. If MULTILINE
mode is activated then
^ matches at the beginning of input and after any line terminator
except at the end of input. When in MULTILINE
mode $
matches just before a line terminator or the end of the input sequence.
Groups and capturing
Group number
Capturing groups are numbered by counting their opening parentheses from left to right. In the expression ((A)(B(C))), for example, there are four such groups:
1 ((A)(B(C))) 2 (A) 3 (B(C)) 4 (C)
Group zero always stands for the entire expression.
Capturing groups are so named because, during a match, each subsequence of the input sequence that matches such a group is saved. The captured subsequence may be used later in the expression, via a back reference, and may also be retrieved from the matcher once the match operation is complete.
Group name
The constructs and APIs are available since API level 26. A capturing group can also be assigned a "name", a named-capturing group, and then be back-referenced later by the "name". Group names are composed of the following characters. The first character must be a letter.
- The uppercase letters 'A' through 'Z' ('\u0041' through '\u005a'),
- The lowercase letters 'a' through 'z' ('\u0061' through '\u007a'),
- The digits '0' through '9' ('\u0030' through '\u0039'),
A named-capturing group is still numbered as described in Group number.
The captured input associated with a group is always the subsequence that the group most recently matched. If a group is evaluated a second time because of quantification then its previously-captured value, if any, will be retained if the second evaluation fails. Matching the string "aba" against the expression (a(b)?)+, for example, leaves group two set to "b". All captured input is discarded at the beginning of each match.
Groups beginning with (? are either pure, non-capturing groups that do not capture text and do not count towards the group total, or named-capturing group.
Unicode support
This class is in conformance with Level 1 of Unicode Technical Standard #18: Unicode Regular Expression, plus RL2.1 Canonical Equivalents.
Unicode escape sequences such as \u2014 in Java source code are processed as described in section 3.3 of The Java™ Language Specification. Such escape sequences are also implemented directly by the regular-expression parser so that Unicode escapes can be used in expressions that are read from files or from the keyboard. Thus the strings "\u2014" and "\\u2014", while not equal, compile into the same pattern, which matches the character with hexadecimal value 0x2014.
A Unicode character can also be represented in a regular-expression by using its Hex notation(hexadecimal code point value) directly as described in construct \x{...}, for example a supplementary character U+2011F can be specified as \x{2011F}, instead of two consecutive Unicode escape sequences of the surrogate pair \uD840\uDD1F.
Unicode scripts, blocks, categories and binary properties are written with the \p and \P constructs as in Perl. \p{prop} matches if the input has the property prop, while \P{prop} does not match if the input has that property.
Scripts, blocks, categories and binary properties can be used both inside and outside of a character class.
Scripts are specified either with the prefix Is
, as in
IsHiragana
, or by using the script
keyword (or its short
form sc
)as in script=Hiragana
or sc=Hiragana
.
The script names supported by Pattern
are the valid script names
accepted and defined by
UnicodeScript.forName
.
Blocks are specified with the prefix In
, as in
InMongolian
, or by using the keyword block
(or its short
form blk
) as in block=Mongolian
or blk=Mongolian
.
The block names supported by Pattern
are the valid block names
accepted and defined by
UnicodeBlock.forName
.
Categories may be specified with the optional prefix Is
:
Both \p{L}
and \p{IsL}
denote the category of Unicode
letters. Same as scripts and blocks, categories can also be specified
by using the keyword general_category
(or its short form
gc
) as in general_category=Lu
or gc=Lu
.
The supported categories are those of
The Unicode Standard in the version specified by the
Character
class. The category names are those
defined in the Standard, both normative and informative.
Binary properties are specified with the prefix Is
, as in
IsAlphabetic
. The supported binary properties by Pattern
are
- Alphabetic
- Ideographic
- Letter
- Lowercase
- Uppercase
- Titlecase
- Punctuation
- Control
- White_Space
- Digit
- Hex_Digit
- Join_Control
- Noncharacter_Code_Point
- Assigned
The following Predefined Character classes and POSIX character classes are in conformance with the recommendation of Annex C: Compatibility Properties of Unicode Regular Expression .
Classes | Matches |
---|---|
\p{Lower} | A lowercase character:\p{IsLowercase} |
\p{Upper} | An uppercase character:\p{IsUppercase} |
\p{ASCII} | All ASCII:[\x00-\x7F] |
\p{Alpha} | An alphabetic character:\p{IsAlphabetic} |
\p{Digit} | A decimal digit character:p{IsDigit} |
\p{Alnum} | An alphanumeric character:[\p{IsAlphabetic}\p{IsDigit}] |
\p{Punct} | A punctuation character:p{IsPunctuation} |
\p{Graph} | A visible character: [^\p{IsWhite_Space}\p{gc=Cc}\p{gc=Cs}\p{gc=Cn}] |
\p{Print} | A printable character: [\p{Graph}\p{Blank}&&[^\p{Cntrl}]] |
\p{Blank} | A space or a tab: [\p{IsWhite_Space}&&[^\p{gc=Zl}\p{gc=Zp}\x0a\x0b\x0c\x0d\x85]] |
\p{Cntrl} | A control character: \p{gc=Cc} |
\p{XDigit} | A hexadecimal digit: [\p{gc=Nd}\p{IsHex_Digit}] |
\p{Space} | A whitespace character:\p{IsWhite_Space} |
\d | A digit: \p{IsDigit} |
\D | A non-digit: [^\d] |
\s | A whitespace character: \p{IsWhite_Space} |
\S | A non-whitespace character: [^\s] |
\w | A word character: [\p{Alpha}\p{gc=Mn}\p{gc=Me}\p{gc=Mc}\p{Digit}\p{gc=Pc}\p{IsJoin_Control}] |
\W | A non-word character: [^\w] |
Comparison to Perl 5
The Pattern
engine performs traditional NFA-based matching
with ordered alternation as occurs in Perl 5.
Perl constructs not supported by this class:
Predefined character classes (Unicode character)
\X Match Unicode extended grapheme cluster
The backreference constructs, \g{n} for the nthcapturing group and \g{name} for named-capturing group.
The named character construct, \N{name} for a Unicode character by its name.
The conditional constructs (?(condition)X) and (?(condition)X|Y),
The embedded code constructs (?{code}) and (??{code}),
The embedded comment syntax (?#comment), and
The preprocessing operations \l \u, \L, and \U.
Constructs supported by this class but not by Perl:
Character-class union and intersection as described above.
Notable differences from Perl:
In Perl, \1 through \9 are always interpreted as back references; a backslash-escaped number greater than 9 is treated as a back reference if at least that many subexpressions exist, otherwise it is interpreted, if possible, as an octal escape. In this class octal escapes must always begin with a zero. In this class, \1 through \9 are always interpreted as back references, and a larger number is accepted as a back reference if at least that many subexpressions exist at that point in the regular expression, otherwise the parser will drop digits until the number is smaller or equal to the existing number of groups or it is one digit.
Perl uses the g flag to request a match that resumes where the last match left off. This functionality is provided implicitly by the
Matcher
class: Repeated invocations of thefind
method will resume where the last match left off, unless the matcher is reset.In Perl, embedded flags at the top level of an expression affect the whole expression. In this class, embedded flags always take effect at the point at which they appear, whether they are at the top level or within a group; in the latter case, flags are restored at the end of the group just as in Perl.
For a more precise description of the behavior of regular expression constructs, please see Mastering Regular Expressions, 3nd Edition, Jeffrey E. F. Friedl, O'Reilly and Associates, 2006.
Constant Summary
int | CANON_EQ | Enables canonical equivalence. |
int | CASE_INSENSITIVE | Enables case-insensitive matching. |
int | COMMENTS | Permits whitespace and comments in pattern. |
int | DOTALL | Enables dotall mode. |
int | LITERAL | Enables literal parsing of the pattern. |
int | MULTILINE | Enables multiline mode. |
int | UNICODE_CASE | Enables Unicode-aware case folding. |
int | UNICODE_CHARACTER_CLASS | Enables the Unicode version of Predefined character classes and POSIX character classes as defined by Unicode Technical Standard #18: Unicode Regular Expression Annex C: Compatibility Properties. |
int | UNIX_LINES | Enables Unix lines mode. |
Public Method Summary
Predicate<String> |
asPredicate()
Creates a predicate which can be used to match a string.
|
static Pattern | |
static Pattern | |
int |
flags()
Returns this pattern's match flags.
|
Matcher | |
static boolean |
matches(String regex, CharSequence input)
Compiles the given regular expression and attempts to match the given
input against it.
|
String |
pattern()
Returns the regular expression from which this pattern was compiled.
|
static String | |
String[] |
split(CharSequence input, int limit)
Splits the given input sequence around matches of this pattern.
|
String[] | |
Stream<String> |
splitAsStream(CharSequence input)
Creates a stream from the given input sequence around matches of this
pattern.
|
String |
toString()
Returns the string representation of this pattern. |
Protected Method Summary
void |
finalize()
Invoked when the garbage collector has detected that this instance is no longer reachable.
|
Inherited Method Summary
Constants
public static final int CANON_EQ
Enables canonical equivalence.
When this flag is specified then two characters will be considered to match if, and only if, their full canonical decompositions match. The expression "a\u030A", for example, will match the string "\u00E5" when this flag is specified. By default, matching does not take canonical equivalence into account.
There is no embedded flag character for enabling canonical equivalence.
Specifying this flag may impose a performance penalty.
public static final int CASE_INSENSITIVE
Enables case-insensitive matching.
By default, case-insensitive matching assumes that only characters
in the US-ASCII charset are being matched. Unicode-aware
case-insensitive matching can be enabled by specifying the UNICODE_CASE
flag in conjunction with this flag.
Case-insensitive matching can also be enabled via the embedded flag expression (?i).
Specifying this flag may impose a slight performance penalty.
public static final int COMMENTS
Permits whitespace and comments in pattern.
In this mode, whitespace is ignored, and embedded comments starting with # are ignored until the end of a line.
Comments mode can also be enabled via the embedded flag expression (?x).
public static final int DOTALL
Enables dotall mode.
In dotall mode, the expression . matches any character, including a line terminator. By default this expression does not match line terminators.
Dotall mode can also be enabled via the embedded flag expression (?s). (The s is a mnemonic for "single-line" mode, which is what this is called in Perl.)
public static final int LITERAL
Enables literal parsing of the pattern.
When this flag is specified then the input string that specifies the pattern is treated as a sequence of literal characters. Metacharacters or escape sequences in the input sequence will be given no special meaning.
The flags CASE_INSENSITIVE and UNICODE_CASE retain their impact on matching when used in conjunction with this flag. The other flags become superfluous.
There is no embedded flag character for enabling literal parsing.
public static final int MULTILINE
Enables multiline mode.
In multiline mode the expressions ^ and $ match just after or just before, respectively, a line terminator or the end of the input sequence. By default these expressions only match at the beginning and the end of the entire input sequence.
Multiline mode can also be enabled via the embedded flag expression (?m).
public static final int UNICODE_CASE
Enables Unicode-aware case folding.
When this flag is specified then case-insensitive matching, when
enabled by the CASE_INSENSITIVE
flag, is done in a manner
consistent with the Unicode Standard. By default, case-insensitive
matching assumes that only characters in the US-ASCII charset are being
matched.
Unicode-aware case folding can also be enabled via the embedded flag expression (?u).
Specifying this flag may impose a performance penalty.
public static final int UNICODE_CHARACTER_CLASS
Enables the Unicode version of Predefined character classes and POSIX character classes as defined by Unicode Technical Standard #18: Unicode Regular Expression Annex C: Compatibility Properties.
This flag has no effect on Android, unicode character classes are always used.
public static final int UNIX_LINES
Enables Unix lines mode.
In this mode, only the '\n' line terminator is recognized in the behavior of ., ^, and $.
Unix lines mode can also be enabled via the embedded flag expression (?d).
Public Methods
public Predicate<String> asPredicate ()
Creates a predicate which can be used to match a string.
Returns
- The predicate which can be used for matching on a string
public static Pattern compile (String regex)
Compiles the given regular expression into a pattern.
Parameters
regex | The expression to be compiled |
---|
Returns
- the given regular expression compiled into a pattern
Throws
PatternSyntaxException | If the expression's syntax is invalid |
---|
public static Pattern compile (String regex, int flags)
Compiles the given regular expression into a pattern with the given flags.
Parameters
regex | The expression to be compiled |
---|---|
flags | Match flags, a bit mask that may include
CASE_INSENSITIVE , MULTILINE , DOTALL ,
UNICODE_CASE , CANON_EQ , UNIX_LINES ,
LITERAL , UNICODE_CHARACTER_CLASS
and COMMENTS |
Returns
- the given regular expression compiled into a pattern with the given flags
Throws
IllegalArgumentException | If bit values other than those corresponding to the defined match flags are set in flags |
---|---|
PatternSyntaxException | If the expression's syntax is invalid |
public int flags ()
Returns this pattern's match flags.
Returns
- The match flags specified when this pattern was compiled
public Matcher matcher (CharSequence input)
Creates a matcher that will match the given input against this pattern.
Parameters
input | The character sequence to be matched |
---|
Returns
- A new matcher for this pattern
public static boolean matches (String regex, CharSequence input)
Compiles the given regular expression and attempts to match the given input against it.
An invocation of this convenience method of the form
behaves in exactly the same way as the expression Pattern.matches(regex, input);
Pattern.compile(regex).matcher(input).matches()
If a pattern is to be used multiple times, compiling it once and reusing it will be more efficient than invoking this method each time.
Parameters
regex | The expression to be compiled |
---|---|
input | The character sequence to be matched |
Returns
- whether or not the regular expression matches on the input
Throws
PatternSyntaxException | If the expression's syntax is invalid |
---|
public String pattern ()
Returns the regular expression from which this pattern was compiled.
Returns
- The source of this pattern
public static String quote (String s)
Returns a literal pattern String
for the specified
String
.
This method produces a String
that can be used to
create a Pattern
that would match the string
s
as if it were a literal pattern.
Parameters
s | The string to be literalized |
---|
Returns
- A literal string replacement
public String[] split (CharSequence input, int limit)
Splits the given input sequence around matches of this pattern.
The array returned by this method contains each substring of the input sequence that is terminated by another subsequence that matches this pattern or is terminated by the end of the input sequence. The substrings in the array are in the order in which they occur in the input. If this pattern does not match any subsequence of the input then the resulting array has just one element, namely the input sequence in string form.
When there is a positive-width match at the beginning of the input sequence then an empty leading substring is included at the beginning of the resulting array. A zero-width match at the beginning however can only produce such an empty leading substring for apps running on or targeting API versions <= 28.
The limit parameter controls the number of times the pattern is applied and therefore affects the length of the resulting array. If the limit n is greater than zero then the pattern will be applied at most n - 1 times, the array's length will be no greater than n, and the array's last entry will contain all input beyond the last matched delimiter. If n is non-positive then the pattern will be applied as many times as possible and the array can have any length. If n is zero then the pattern will be applied as many times as possible, the array can have any length, and trailing empty strings will be discarded.
The input "boo:and:foo", for example, yields the following results with these parameters:
Regex Limit Result : 2 { "boo", "and:foo" } : 5 { "boo", "and", "foo" } : -2 { "boo", "and", "foo" } o 5 { "b", "", ":and:f", "", "" } o -2 { "b", "", ":and:f", "", "" } o 0 { "b", "", ":and:f" }
Parameters
input | The character sequence to be split |
---|---|
limit | The result threshold, as described above |
Returns
- The array of strings computed by splitting the input around matches of this pattern
public String[] split (CharSequence input)
Splits the given input sequence around matches of this pattern.
This method works as if by invoking the two-argument split
method with the given input
sequence and a limit argument of zero. Trailing empty strings are
therefore not included in the resulting array.
The input "boo:and:foo", for example, yields the following results with these expressions:
Regex Result : { "boo", "and", "foo" } o { "b", "", ":and:f" }
Parameters
input | The character sequence to be split |
---|
Returns
- The array of strings computed by splitting the input around matches of this pattern
public Stream<String> splitAsStream (CharSequence input)
Creates a stream from the given input sequence around matches of this pattern.
The stream returned by this method contains each substring of the input sequence that is terminated by another subsequence that matches this pattern or is terminated by the end of the input sequence. The substrings in the stream are in the order in which they occur in the input. Trailing empty strings will be discarded and not encountered in the stream.
If this pattern does not match any subsequence of the input then the resulting stream has just one element, namely the input sequence in string form.
When there is a positive-width match at the beginning of the input sequence then an empty leading substring is included at the beginning of the stream. A zero-width match at the beginning however never produces such empty leading substring.
If the input sequence is mutable, it must remain constant during the execution of the terminal stream operation. Otherwise, the result of the terminal stream operation is undefined.
Parameters
input | The character sequence to be split |
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Returns
- The stream of strings computed by splitting the input around matches of this pattern
See Also
public String toString ()
Returns the string representation of this pattern. This is the regular expression from which this pattern was compiled.
Returns
- The string representation of this pattern
Protected Methods
protected void finalize ()
Invoked when the garbage collector has detected that this instance is no longer reachable. The default implementation does nothing, but this method can be overridden to free resources.
Note that objects that override finalize
are significantly more expensive than
objects that don't. Finalizers may be run a long time after the object is no longer
reachable, depending on memory pressure, so it's a bad idea to rely on them for cleanup.
Note also that finalizers are run on a single VM-wide finalizer thread,
so doing blocking work in a finalizer is a bad idea. A finalizer is usually only necessary
for a class that has a native peer and needs to call a native method to destroy that peer.
Even then, it's better to provide an explicit close
method (and implement
Closeable
), and insist that callers manually dispose of instances. This
works well for something like files, but less well for something like a BigInteger
where typical calling code would have to deal with lots of temporaries. Unfortunately,
code that creates lots of temporaries is the worst kind of code from the point of view of
the single finalizer thread.
If you must use finalizers, consider at least providing your own
ReferenceQueue
and having your own thread process that queue.
Unlike constructors, finalizers are not automatically chained. You are responsible for
calling super.finalize()
yourself.
Uncaught exceptions thrown by finalizers are ignored and do not terminate the finalizer thread. See Effective Java Item 7, "Avoid finalizers" for more.
Throws
Throwable |
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