I have one input String like this:
"I am Duc/N Ta/N Van/N"
String "/N" present it is the Name of one person.
The expected output is:
Name: Duc Ta Van
How can I do it by using regular expression?
You can use Pattern and Matcher like this :
String input = "I am Duc/N Ta/N Van/N";
Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile("([^\\s]+)/N");
Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(input);
String result = "";
while (matcher.find()) {
result+= matcher.group(1) + " ";
}
System.out.println("Name: " + result.trim());
Output
Name: Duc Ta Van
Another Solution using Java 9+
From Java9+ you can use Matcher::results like this :
String input = "I am Duc/N Ta/N Van/N";
String regex = "([^\\s]+)/N";
Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile(regex);
Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(input);
String result = matcher.results().map(s -> s.group(1)).collect(Collectors.joining(" "));
System.out.println("Name: " + result); // Name: Duc Ta Van
Here is the regex to use to capture every "name" preceded by a /N
(\w+)\/N
Validate with Regex101
Now, you just need to loop on every match in that String and concatenate the to get the result :
String pattern = "(\\w+)\\/N";
String test = "I am Duc/N Ta/N Van/N";
Matcher m = Pattern.compile(pattern).matcher(test);
StringBuilder sbNames = new StringBuilder();
while(m.find()){
sbNames.append(m.group(1)).append(" ");
}
System.out.println(sbNames.toString());
Duc Ta Van
It is giving you the hardest part. I let you adapt this to match your need.
Note :
In java, it is not required to escape a forward slash, but to use the same regex in the entire answer, I will keep "(\\w+)\\/N", but "(\\w+)/N" will work as well.
I've used "[/N]+" as the regular expression.
Regex101
[] = Matches characters inside the set
\/ = Matches the character / literally (case sensitive)
+ = Matches between one and unlimited times, as many times as possible, giving back as needed (greedy)
I need to extract the values after :70: in the following text file using RegEx. Value may contain line breaks as well.
My current solution is to extract the string between :70: and : but this always returns only one match, the whole text between the first :70: and last :.
:32B:xxx,
:59:yyy
something
:70:ACK1
ACK2
:21:something
:71A:something
:23E:something
value
:70:ACK2
ACK3
:71A:something
How can I achive this using Java? Ideally I want to iterate through all values, i.e.
ACK1\nACK2,
ACK2\nACK3
Thanks :)
Edit: What I'm doing right now,
Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile("(?<=:70:)(.*)(?=\n)", Pattern.DOTALL);
Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(data);
while (matcher.find()) {
System.out.println(matcher.group())
}
Try this.
String data = ""
+ ":32B:xxx,\n"
+ ":59:yyy\n"
+ "something\n"
+ ":70:ACK1\n"
+ "ACK2\n"
+ ":21:something\n"
+ ":71A:something\n"
+ ":23E:something\n"
+ "value\n"
+ ":70:ACK2\n"
+ "ACK3\n"
+ ":71A:something\n";
Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile(":70:(.*?)\\s*:", Pattern.DOTALL);
Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(data);
while (matcher.find())
System.out.println("found="+ matcher.group(1));
result:
found=ACK1
ACK2
found=ACK2
ACK3
You need a loop to do this.
Pattern p = Pattern.compile(regexPattern);
List<String> list = new ArrayList<String>();
Matcher m = p.matches(input);
while (m.find()) {
list.add(m.group());
}
As seen here Create array of regex matches
I have a long string let's say
I like this #computer and I want to buy it from #XXXMall.
I know the regular expression pattern is
Pattern tagMatcher = Pattern.compile("[#]+[A-Za-z0-9-_]+\\b");
Now i want to get all the hashtags in an array. How can i use this expression to get array of all hash tags from string something like
ArrayList hashtags = getArray(pattern, str)
You can write like?
private static List<String> getArray(Pattern tagMatcher, String str) {
Matcher m = tagMatcher.matcher(str);
List<String> l = new ArrayList<String>();
while(m.find()) {
String s = m.group(); //will give you "#computer"
s = s.substring(1); // will give you just "computer"
l.add(s);
}
return l;
}
Also you can use \\w- instead of A-Za-z0-9-_ making the regex [#]+[\\w]+\\b
This link would surely be helpful for achieving what you want.
It says:
The find() method searches for occurrences of the regular expressions
in the text passed to the Pattern.matcher(text) method, when the
Matcher was created. If multiple matches can be found in the text, the
find() method will find the first, and then for each subsequent call
to find() it will move to the next match.
The methods start() and end() will give the indexes into the text
where the found match starts and ends.
Example:
String text =
"This is the text which is to be searched " +
"for occurrences of the word 'is'.";
String patternString = "is";
Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile(patternString);
Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(text);
int count = 0;
while(matcher.find()) {
count++;
System.out.println("found: " + count + " : "
+ matcher.start() + " - " + matcher.end());
}
You got the hint now.
Here is one way, using Matcher
Pattern tagMatcher = Pattern.compile("#+[-\\w]+\\b");
Matcher m = tagMatcher.matcher(stringToMatch);
ArrayList<String> hashtags = new ArrayList<>();
while (m.find()) {
hashtags.add(m.group());
}
I took the liberty of simplifying your regex. # does not need to be in a character class. [A-Za-z0-9_] is the same as \w, so [A-Za-z0-9-_] is the same as [-\w]
You can use :
String val="I like this #computer and I want to buy it from #XXXMall.";
String REGEX = "(?<=#)[A-Za-z0-9-_]+";
List<String> list = new ArrayList<String>();
Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile(REGEX);
Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(val);
while(matcher.find()){
list.add(matcher.group());
}
(?<=#) Positive Lookbehind - Assert that the character # literally be matched.
you can use the following code for getting the names
String saa = "#{akka}nikhil#{kumar}aaaaa";
Pattern regex = Pattern.compile("#\\{(.*?)\\}");
Matcher m = regex.matcher(saa);
while(m.find()) {
String s = m.group(1);
System.out.println(s);
}
It will print
akka
kumar
I want to parse a line from a CSV(comma separated) file, something like this:
Bosh,Mark,mark#gmail.com,"3, Institute","83, 1, 2",1,21
I have to parse the file, and instead of the commas between the apostrophes I wanna have ';', like this:
Bosh,Mark,mark#gmail.com,"3; Institute","83; 1; 2",1,21
I use the following Java code but it doesn't parse it well:
Pattern regex = Pattern.compile("(\"[^\\]]*\")");
Matcher matcher = regex.matcher(line);
if (matcher.find()) {
String replacedMatch = matcher.group();
String gr1 = matcher.group(1);
gr1.trim();
replacedMatch = replacedMatch.replace(",", ";");
line = line.replace(matcher.group(), replacedMatch);
}
the output is:
Bosh,Mark,mark#gmail.com,"3; Institute";"83; 1; 2",1,21
anyone have any idea how to fix this?
This is my solution to replace , inside quote to ;. It assumes that if " were to appear in a quoted string, then it is escaped by another ". This property ensures that counting from start to the current character, if the number of quotes " is odd, then that character is inside a quoted string.
// Test string, with the tricky case """", which resolves to
// a length 1 string of single quote "
String line = "Bosh,\"\"\"\",mark#gmail.com,\"3, Institute\",\"83, 1, 2\",1,21";
Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile("\"[^\"]*\"");
Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(line);
int start = 0;
StringBuilder output = new StringBuilder();
while (matcher.find()) {
// System.out.println(m.group() + "\n " + m.start() + " " + m.end());
output
.append(line.substring(start, matcher.start())) // Append unrelated contents
.append(matcher.group().replaceAll(",", ";")); // Append replaced string
start = matcher.end();
}
output.append(line.substring(start)); // Append the rest of unrelated contents
// System.out.println(output);
Although I cannot find any case that will fail the method of replace the matched group like you did in line = line.replace(matcher.group(), replacedMatch);, I feel safer to rebuild the string from scratch.
Here's a way:
import java.util.regex.*;
class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
String in = "Bosh,Mark,mark#gmail.com,\"3, \"\" Institute\",\"83, 1, 2\",1,21";
String regex = "[^,\"\r\n]+|\"(\"\"|[^\"])*\"";
Matcher matcher = Pattern.compile(regex).matcher(in);
StringBuilder out = new StringBuilder();
while(matcher.find()) {
out.append(matcher.group().replace(',', ';')).append(',');
}
out.deleteCharAt(out.length() - 1);
System.out.println(in + "\n" + out);
}
}
which will print:
Bosh,Mark,mark#gmail.com,"3, "" Institute","83, 1, 2",1,21
Bosh,Mark,mark#gmail.com,"3; "" Institute","83; 1; 2",1,21
Tested on Ideone: http://ideone.com/fCgh7
Here is the what you need
String line = "Bosh,Mark,mark#gmail.com,\"3, Institute\",\"83, 1, 2\",1,21";
Pattern regex = Pattern.compile("(\"[^\"]*\")");
Matcher matcher = regex.matcher(line);
while(matcher.find()){
String replacedMatch = matcher.group();
String gr1 = matcher.group(1);
gr1.trim();
replacedMatch = replacedMatch.replace(",", ";");
line = line.replace(matcher.group(), replacedMatch);
}
line will have value you needed.
Have you tried to make the RegExp lazy?
Another idea: inside the [] you should use a " too. If you do that, you should have the expected output with global flag set.
Your regex is faulty. Why would you want to make sure there are no ] within the "..." expression? You'd rather make the regex reluctant (default is eager, which means it catches as much as it can).
"(\"[^\\]]*\")"
should be
"(\"[^\"]*\")"
But nhadtdh is right, you should use a proper CSV library to parse it and replace , to ; in the values the parser returns.
I'm sure you'll find a parser when googling "Java CSV parser".
Shouldn't your regex be ("[^"]*") instead? In other words, your first line should be:
Pattern regex = Pattern.compile("(\"[^\"]*\")");
Of course, this is assuming you can't have quotes in the quoted values of your input line.
I am trying to match pattern like '#(a-zA-Z0-9)+ " but not like 'abc#test'.
So this is what I tried:
Pattern MY_PATTERN
= Pattern.compile("\\s#(\\w)+\\s?");
String data = "abc#gere.com #gogasig #jytaz #tibuage";
Matcher m = MY_PATTERN.matcher(data);
StringBuffer sb = new StringBuffer();
boolean result = m.find();
while(result) {
System.out.println (" group " + m.group());
result = m.find();
}
But I can only see '#jytaz', but not #tibuage.
How can I fix my problem? Thank you.
This pattern should work: \B(#\w+)
The \B scans for non-word boundary in the front. The \w+ already excludes the trailing space. Further I've also shifted the parentheses so that the # and + comes in the correct group. You should preferably use m.group(1) to get it.
Here's the rewrite:
Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile("\\B(#\\w+)");
String data = "abc#gere.com #gogasig #jytaz #tibuage";
Matcher m = pattern.matcher(data);
while (m.find()) {
System.out.println(" group " + m.group(1));
}