How to escape text for regular expression in Java

前端 未结 8 1828
我在风中等你
我在风中等你 2020-11-22 03:30

Does Java have a built-in way to escape arbitrary text so that it can be included in a regular expression? For example, if my users enter \"$5\", I\'d like to match that exa

相关标签:
8条回答
  • 2020-11-22 03:40

    It may be too late to respond, but you can also use Pattern.LITERAL, which would ignore all special characters while formatting:

    Pattern.compile(textToFormat, Pattern.LITERAL);
    
    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-11-22 03:42

    First off, if

    • you use replaceAll()
    • you DON'T use Matcher.quoteReplacement()
    • the text to be substituted in includes a $1

    it won't put a 1 at the end. It will look at the search regex for the first matching group and sub THAT in. That's what $1, $2 or $3 means in the replacement text: matching groups from the search pattern.

    I frequently plug long strings of text into .properties files, then generate email subjects and bodies from those. Indeed, this appears to be the default way to do i18n in Spring Framework. I put XML tags, as placeholders, into the strings and I use replaceAll() to replace the XML tags with the values at runtime.

    I ran into an issue where a user input a dollars-and-cents figure, with a dollar sign. replaceAll() choked on it, with the following showing up in a stracktrace:

    java.lang.IndexOutOfBoundsException: No group 3
    at java.util.regex.Matcher.start(Matcher.java:374)
    at java.util.regex.Matcher.appendReplacement(Matcher.java:748)
    at java.util.regex.Matcher.replaceAll(Matcher.java:823)
    at java.lang.String.replaceAll(String.java:2201)
    

    In this case, the user had entered "$3" somewhere in their input and replaceAll() went looking in the search regex for the third matching group, didn't find one, and puked.

    Given:

    // "msg" is a string from a .properties file, containing "<userInput />" among other tags
    // "userInput" is a String containing the user's input
    

    replacing

    msg = msg.replaceAll("<userInput \\/>", userInput);
    

    with

    msg = msg.replaceAll("<userInput \\/>", Matcher.quoteReplacement(userInput));
    

    solved the problem. The user could put in any kind of characters, including dollar signs, without issue. It behaved exactly the way you would expect.

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-11-22 03:43

    To have protected pattern you may replace all symbols with "\\\\", except digits and letters. And after that you can put in that protected pattern your special symbols to make this pattern working not like stupid quoted text, but really like a patten, but your own. Without user special symbols.

    public class Test {
        public static void main(String[] args) {
            String str = "y z (111)";
            String p1 = "x x (111)";
            String p2 = ".* .* \\(111\\)";
    
            p1 = escapeRE(p1);
    
            p1 = p1.replace("x", ".*");
    
            System.out.println( p1 + "-->" + str.matches(p1) ); 
                //.*\ .*\ \(111\)-->true
            System.out.println( p2 + "-->" + str.matches(p2) ); 
                //.* .* \(111\)-->true
        }
    
        public static String escapeRE(String str) {
            //Pattern escaper = Pattern.compile("([^a-zA-z0-9])");
            //return escaper.matcher(str).replaceAll("\\\\$1");
            return str.replaceAll("([^a-zA-Z0-9])", "\\\\$1");
        }
    }
    
    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-11-22 03:44

    I think what you're after is \Q$5\E. Also see Pattern.quote(s) introduced in Java5.

    See Pattern javadoc for details.

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-11-22 03:48

    ^(Negation) symbol is used to match something that is not in the character group.

    This is the link to Regular Expressions

    Here is the image info about negation:

    Info about negation

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-11-22 03:53

    Since Java 1.5, yes:

    Pattern.quote("$5");
    
    0 讨论(0)
提交回复
热议问题