I'm new to regular expressions and would appreciate your help. I'm trying to put together an expression that will split the example string using all spaces that are not surrounded by single or double quotes. My last attempt looks like this: (?!") and isn't quite working. It's splitting on the space before the quote.
Example input:
This is a string that "will be" highlighted when your 'regular expression' matches something.
Desired output:
This
is
a
string
that
will be
highlighted
when
your
regular expression
matches
something.
Note that "will be" and 'regular expression' retain the space between the words.
I don't understand why all the others are proposing such complex regular expressions or such long code. Essentially, you want to grab two kinds of things from your string: sequences of characters that aren't spaces or quotes, and sequences of characters that begin and end with a quote, with no quotes in between, for two kinds of quotes. You can easily match those things with this regular expression:
[^\s"']+|"([^"]*)"|'([^']*)'
I added the capturing groups because you don't want the quotes in the list.
This Java code builds the list, adding the capturing group if it matched to exclude the quotes, and adding the overall regex match if the capturing group didn't match (an unquoted word was matched).
List<String> matchList = new ArrayList<String>();
Pattern regex = Pattern.compile("[^\\s\"']+|\"([^\"]*)\"|'([^']*)'");
Matcher regexMatcher = regex.matcher(subjectString);
while (regexMatcher.find()) {
if (regexMatcher.group(1) != null) {
// Add double-quoted string without the quotes
matchList.add(regexMatcher.group(1));
} else if (regexMatcher.group(2) != null) {
// Add single-quoted string without the quotes
matchList.add(regexMatcher.group(2));
} else {
// Add unquoted word
matchList.add(regexMatcher.group());
}
}
If you don't mind having the quotes in the returned list, you can use much simpler code:
List<String> matchList = new ArrayList<String>();
Pattern regex = Pattern.compile("[^\\s\"']+|\"[^\"]*\"|'[^']*'");
Matcher regexMatcher = regex.matcher(subjectString);
while (regexMatcher.find()) {
matchList.add(regexMatcher.group());
}
There are several questions on StackOverflow that cover this same question in various contexts using regular expressions. For instance:
parsings strings: extracting words and phrases
Best way to parse Space Separated Text
UPDATE: Sample regex to handle single and double quoted strings. Ref: How can I split on a string except when inside quotes?
m/('.*?'|".*?"|\S+)/g
Tested this with a quick Perl snippet and the output was as reproduced below. Also works for empty strings or whitespace-only strings if they are between quotes (not sure if that's desired or not).
This
is
a
string
that
"will be"
highlighted
when
your
'regular expression'
matches
something.
Note that this does include the quote characters themselves in the matched values, though you can remove that with a string replace, or modify the regex to not include them. I'll leave that as an exercise for the reader or another poster for now, as 2am is way too late to be messing with regular expressions anymore ;)
If you want to allow escaped quotes inside the string, you can use something like this:
(?:(['"])(.*?)(?<!\\)(?>\\\\)*\1|([^\s]+))
Quoted strings will be group 2, single unquoted words will be group 3.
You can try it on various strings here: http://www.fileformat.info/tool/regex.htm or http://gskinner.com/RegExr/
The regex from Jan Goyvaerts is the best solution I found so far, but creates also empty (null) matches, which he excludes in his program. These empty matches also appear from regex testers (e.g. rubular.com).
If you turn the searches arround (first look for the quoted parts and than the space separed words) then you might do it in once with:
("[^"]*"|'[^']*'|[\S]+)+
(?<!\G".{0,99999})\s|(?<=\G".{0,99999}")\s
This will match the spaces not surrounded by double quotes.
I have to use min,max {0,99999} because Java doesn't support * and + in lookbehind.
It'll probably be easier to search the string, grabbing each part, vs. split it.
Reason being, you can have it split at the spaces before and after "will be". But, I can't think of any way to specify ignoring the space between inside a split.
(not actual Java)
string = "This is a string that \"will be\" highlighted when your 'regular expression' matches something.";
regex = "\"(\\\"|(?!\\\").)+\"|[^ ]+"; // search for a quoted or non-spaced group
final = new Array();
while (string.length > 0) {
string = string.trim();
if (Regex(regex).test(string)) {
final.push(Regex(regex).match(string)[0]);
string = string.replace(regex, ""); // progress to next "word"
}
}
Also, capturing single quotes could lead to issues:
"Foo's Bar 'n Grill"
//=>
"Foo"
"s Bar "
"n"
"Grill"
String.split() is not helpful here because there is no way to distinguish between spaces within quotes (don't split) and those outside (split). Matcher.lookingAt() is probably what you need:
String str = "This is a string that \"will be\" highlighted when your 'regular expression' matches something.";
str = str + " "; // add trailing space
int len = str.length();
Matcher m = Pattern.compile("((\"[^\"]+?\")|('[^']+?')|([^\\s]+?))\\s++").matcher(str);
for (int i = 0; i < len; i++)
{
m.region(i, len);
if (m.lookingAt())
{
String s = m.group(1);
if ((s.startsWith("\"") && s.endsWith("\"")) ||
(s.startsWith("'") && s.endsWith("'")))
{
s = s.substring(1, s.length() - 1);
}
System.out.println(i + ": \"" + s + "\"");
i += (m.group(0).length() - 1);
}
}
which produces the following output:
0: "This"
5: "is"
8: "a"
10: "string"
17: "that"
22: "will be"
32: "highlighted"
44: "when"
49: "your"
54: "regular expression"
75: "matches"
83: "something."
I liked Marcus's approach, however, I modified it so that I could allow text near the quotes, and support both " and ' quote characters. For example, I needed a="some value" to not split it into [a=, "some value"].
(?<!\\G\\S{0,99999}[\"'].{0,99999})\\s|(?<=\\G\\S{0,99999}\".{0,99999}\"\\S{0,99999})\\s|(?<=\\G\\S{0,99999}'.{0,99999}'\\S{0,99999})\\s"
Jan's approach is great but here's another one for the record.
If you actually wanted to split as mentioned in the title, keeping the quotes in "will be" and 'regular expression', then you could use this method which is straight out of Match (or replace) a pattern except in situations s1, s2, s3 etc
The regex:
'[^']*'|\"[^\"]*\"|( )
The two left alternations match complete 'quoted strings' and "double-quoted strings". We will ignore these matches. The right side matches and captures spaces to Group 1, and we know they are the right spaces because they were not matched by the expressions on the left. We replace those with SplitHere then split on SplitHere. Again, this is for a true split case where you want "will be", not will be.
Here is a full working implementation (see the results on the online demo).
import java.util.*;
import java.io.*;
import java.util.regex.*;
import java.util.List;
class Program {
public static void main (String[] args) throws java.lang.Exception {
String subject = "This is a string that \"will be\" highlighted when your 'regular expression' matches something.";
Pattern regex = Pattern.compile("\'[^']*'|\"[^\"]*\"|( )");
Matcher m = regex.matcher(subject);
StringBuffer b= new StringBuffer();
while (m.find()) {
if(m.group(1) != null) m.appendReplacement(b, "SplitHere");
else m.appendReplacement(b, m.group(0));
}
m.appendTail(b);
String replaced = b.toString();
String[] splits = replaced.split("SplitHere");
for (String split : splits) System.out.println(split);
} // end main
} // end Program
If you are using c#, you can use
string input= "This is a string that \"will be\" highlighted when your 'regular expression' matches <something random>";
List<string> list1 =
Regex.Matches(input, #"(?<match>\w+)|\""(?<match>[\w\s]*)""|'(?<match>[\w\s]*)'|<(?<match>[\w\s]*)>").Cast<Match>().Select(m => m.Groups["match"].Value).ToList();
foreach(var v in list1)
Console.WriteLine(v);
I have specifically added "|<(?[\w\s]*)>" to highlight that you can specify any char to group phrases. (In this case I am using < > to group.
Output is :
This
is
a
string
that
will be
highlighted
when
your
regular expression
matches
something random
1st one-liner using String.split()
String s = "This is a string that \"will be\" highlighted when your 'regular expression' matches something.";
String[] split = s.split( "(?<!(\"|').{0,255}) | (?!.*\\1.*)" );
[This, is, a, string, that, "will be", highlighted, when, your, 'regular expression', matches, something.]
don't split at the blank, if the blank is surrounded by single or double quotes
split at the blank when the 255 characters to the left and all characters to the right of the blank are neither single nor double quotes
adapted from original post (handles only double quotes)
I'm reasonably certain this is not possible using regular expressions alone. Checking whether something is contained inside some other tag is a parsing operation. This seems like the same problem as trying to parse XML with a regex -- it can't be done correctly. You may be able to get your desired outcome by repeatedly applying a non-greedy, non-global regex that matches the quoted strings, then once you can't find anything else, split it at the spaces... that has a number of problems, including keeping track of the original order of all the substrings. Your best bet is to just write a really simple function that iterates over the string and pulls out the tokens you want.
A couple hopefully helpful tweaks on Jan's accepted answer:
(['"])((?:\\\1|.)+?)\1|([^\s"']+)
Allows escaped quotes within quoted strings
Avoids repeating the pattern for the single and double quote; this also simplifies adding more quoting symbols if needed (at the expense of one more capturing group)
You can also try this:
String str = "This is a string that \"will be\" highlighted when your 'regular expression' matches something";
String ss[] = str.split("\"|\'");
for (int i = 0; i < ss.length; i++) {
if ((i % 2) == 0) {//even
String[] part1 = ss[i].split(" ");
for (String pp1 : part1) {
System.out.println("" + pp1);
}
} else {//odd
System.out.println("" + ss[i]);
}
}
The following returns an array of arguments. Arguments are the variable 'command' split on spaces, unless included in single or double quotes. The matches are then modified to remove the single and double quotes.
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;
var args = Regex.Matches(command, "[^\\s\"']+|\"([^\"]*)\"|'([^']*)'").Cast<Match>
().Select(iMatch => iMatch.Value.Replace("\"", "").Replace("'", "")).ToArray();
When you come across this pattern like this :
String str = "2022-11-10 08:35:00,470 RAV=REQ YIP=02.8.5.1 CMID=caonaustr CMN=\"Some Value Pyt Ltd\"";
//this helped
String[] str1= str.split("\\s(?=(([^\"]*\"){2})*[^\"]*$)\\s*");
System.out.println("Value of split string is "+ Arrays.toString(str1));
This results in :[2022-11-10, 08:35:00,470, PLV=REQ, YIP=02.8.5.1, CMID=caonaustr, CMN="Some Value Pyt Ltd"]
This regex matches spaces ONLY if it is followed by even number of double quotes.
I have these two variations of this string
name='Anything can go here'
name="Anything can go here"
where name= can have spaces like so
name=(text)
name =(text)
name = (text)
I need to extract the text between the quotes, I'm not sure what's the best way to approach this, should I just have mechanism to cut the string off at quotes and do you have an example where I wont have many case handling, or should I use regex.
I'm not sure I understand the question exactly but I'll give it my best shot:
If you want to just assign a variable name2 to the string inside the quotation marks then you can easily do :
String name = 'Anything can go here';
String name2= name.replace("'","");
name2 = name2.replace("\"","");
You're wanting to get Anything can go here whether it's in between single quotes or double quotes. Regex has the capabilities of doing this regardless of the spaces before or after the "=" by using the following pattern:
"[\"'](.+)[\"']"
Breakdown:
[\"'] - Character class consisting of a double or single quote
(.+) - One or more of any character (may or may not match line terminators stored in capture group 1
[\"'] - Character class consisting of a double or single quote
In short, we are trying to capture anything between single or double quotes.
Example:
public static void main(String[] args) {
List<String> data = new ArrayList(Arrays.asList(
"name='Anything can go here'",
"name = \"Really! Anything can go here\""
));
for (String d : data) {
Matcher matcher = Pattern.compile("[\"'](.+)[\"']").matcher(d);
if (matcher.find()) {
System.out.println(matcher.group(1));
}
}
}
Results:
Anything can go here
Really! Anything can go here
I have a string that looks like this
"He said, ""What?"""
In the entire file, there's actually more lines like that, separated by commas. The output of that line should look something like this:
He said, "What?!!"
I'm trying to do that by using this method:
Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile("\\s*(\"[^\"]*\"|[^,]*)\\s*");
Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(line);
while (matcher.find())
{
System.out.println(matcher.group(1));
lines.add(matcher.group(1)); //adds each line to an arraylist
}
However, the output I'm getting is this:
He said,
What?
I'm pretty sure the cause is with my regular expressions since all this does is remove all the double quotes.
Why not just use String#replaceAll
line.replaceAll("\"", "");
It's because your regular expression matches
"He said, "
then
"What?"
then
""
It seems like what you actually want is to remove one level of double-quotes. To do that, you need to use lookaround assertions:
Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile("\\s*\"(?!\")[^\"]*(?<!\")\"\\s*");
The process of forming quoted string is:
Escape (double) the double quotes in the string
Surround the resulting string with double quotes
The code below just reverses this process:
It first removes the outer double quotes, then un-escapes the inner double quotes, and then splits:
public static void main(String[] args) {
String input = "\"He said, \"\"What?\"\"\"";
String[] out = input.replaceAll("^(\")|(\")$", "").replace("\"\"", "\"").split(", ");
for (String o : out) {
System.out.println(o);
}
}
Output:
He said
"What?"
i have a problem to build following regex:
[1,2,3,4]
i found a work-around, but i think its ugly
String stringIds = "[1,2,3,4]";
stringIds = stringIds.replaceAll("\\[", "");
stringIds = stringIds.replaceAll("\\]", "");
String[] ids = stringIds.split("\\,");
Can someone help me please to build one regex, which i can use in the split function
Thanks for help
edit:
i want to get from this string "[1,2,3,4]" to an array with 4 entries. the entries are the 4 numbers in the string, so i need to eliminate "[","]" and ",". the "," isn't the problem.
the first and last number contains [ or ]. so i needed the fix with replaceAll. But i think if i use in split a regex for ",", i also can pass a regex which eliminates "[" "]" too. But i cant figure out, who this regex should look like.
This is almost what you're looking for:
String q = "[1,2,3,4]";
String[] x = q.split("\\[|\\]|,");
The problem is that it produces an extra element at the beginning of the array due to the leading open bracket. You may not be able to do what you want with a single regex sans shenanigans. If you know the string always begins with an open bracket, you can remove it first.
The regex itself means "(split on) any open bracket, OR any closed bracket, OR any comma."
Punctuation characters frequently have additional meanings in regular expressions. The double leading backslashes... ugh, the first backslash tells the Java String parser that the next backslash is not a special character (example: \n is a newline...) so \\ means "I want an honest to God backslash". The next backslash tells the regexp engine that the next character ([ for example) is not a special regexp character. That makes me lol.
Maybe substring [ and ] from beginning and end, then split the rest by ,
String stringIds = "[1,2,3,4]";
String[] ids = stringIds.substring(1,stringIds.length()-1).split(",");
Looks to me like you're trying to make an array (not sure where you got 'regex' from; that means something different). In this case, you want:
String[] ids = {"1","2","3","4"};
If it's specifically an array of integer numbers you want, then instead use:
int[] ids = {1,2,3,4};
Your problem is not amenable to splitting by delimiter. It is much safer and more general to split by matching the integers themselves:
static String[] nums(String in) {
final Matcher m = Pattern.compile("\\d+").matcher(in);
final List<String> l = new ArrayList<String>();
while (m.find()) l.add(m.group());
return l.toArray(new String[l.size()]);
}
public static void main(String args[]) {
System.out.println(Arrays.toString(nums("[1, 2, 3, 4]")));
}
If the first line your code is following:
String stringIds = "[1,2,3,4]";
and you're trying to iterate over all number items, then the follwing code-frag only could work:
try {
Pattern regex = Pattern.compile("\\b(\\d+)\\b", Pattern.MULTILINE);
Matcher regexMatcher = regex.matcher(subjectString);
while (regexMatcher.find()) {
for (int i = 1; i <= regexMatcher.groupCount(); i++) {
// matched text: regexMatcher.group(i)
// match start: regexMatcher.start(i)
// match end: regexMatcher.end(i)
}
}
} catch (PatternSyntaxException ex) {
// Syntax error in the regular expression
}
The String will looks like this:
String temp = "IF (COND_ITION) (ACT_ION)";
// Only has one whitespace in either side of the parentheses
or
String temp = " IF (COND_ITION) (ACT_ION) ";
// Have more irrelevant whitespace in the String
// But no whitespace in condition or action
I hope to get a new String array which contains three elemets, ignore the parentheses:
String[] tempArray;
tempArray[0] = IF;
tempArray[1] = COND_ITION;
tempArray[2] = ACT_ION;
I tried to use String.split(regex) method but I don't know how to implement the regex.
If your input string will always be in the format you described, it is better to parse it based on the whole pattern instead of just the delimiter, as this code does:
Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile("(.*?)[/s]\\((.*?)\\)[/s]\\((.*?)\\)");
Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(inputString);
String tempArray[3];
if(matcher.find()) {
tempArray[0] name = matcher.group(1);
tempArray[1] name = matcher.group(2);
tempArray[2] name = matcher.group(3);
}
Pattern breakdown:
(.*?) IF
[/s] white space
\\((.*?)\\) (COND_ITION)
[/s] white space
\\((.*?)\\) (ACT_ION)
You can use StringTokenizer to split into strings delimited by whitespace. From Java documentation:
The following is one example of the use of the tokenizer. The code:
StringTokenizer st = new StringTokenizer("this is a test");
while (st.hasMoreTokens()) {
System.out.println(st.nextToken());
}
prints the following output:
this
is
a
test
Then write a loop to process the strings to replace the parentheses.
I think you want a regular expression like "\\)? *\\(?", assuming any whitespace inside the parentheses is not to be removed. Note that this doesn't validate that the parentheses match properly. Hope this helps.