Why is String.matches returning false in Java?

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太阳男子
太阳男子 2020-12-11 17:56
if(\"test%$@*)$(%\".matches(\"[^a-zA-Z\\\\.]\"))
    System.exit(0);

if(\"te/st.txt\".matches(\"[^a-zA-Z\\\\.]\"))
    System.exit(0);

The program

3条回答
  •  悲&欢浪女
    2020-12-11 18:56

    matches returns true only if regex matches entire string. In your case your regex represents only one character that is not a-z, A-Z or ..

    I suspect that you want to check if string contains one of these special characters which you described in regex. In that case surround your regex with .* to let regex match entire string. Oh, and you don't have to escape . inside character class [.].

    if ("test%$@*)$(%".matches(".*[^a-zA-Z.].*")) {
        //string contains character that is not in rage a-z, A-Z, or '.'
    

    BUT if you care about performance you can use Matcher#find() method which

    1. can return true the moment it will find substring containing match for regex. This way application will not need to check rest of the text, which saves us more time the longer remaining text is.

    2. Will not force us to constantly build Pattern object each time String#matches(regex) is called, because we can create Pattern once and reuse it with different data.

    Demo:

    Pattern p = Pattern.compile("[^a-zA-Z\\.]");
    
    Matcher m = p.matcher("test%$@*)$(%");
    if(m.find())
        System.exit(0);
    
    //OR with Matcher inlined since we don't really need that variable
    if (p.matcher("test%$@*)$(%").find())
        System.exit(0);
    

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