Can you use zero-width matching regex in String split?

此生再无相见时 提交于 2019-11-27 05:31:06

You need to take a look at zero width matching constructs:

(?=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

You can use \b (word boundary) as what to look for as it is zero-width and use that as the anchor for looking for < and >.

String s = "abc<def>ghi";
String[] bits = s.split("(?<=>)\\b|\\b(?=<)");
for (String bit : bits) {
  System.out.println(bit);
}

Output:

abc
<def>
ghi

Now that isn't a general solution. You will probably need to write a custom split method for that.

Your second example suggests it's not really split() you're after but a regex matching loop. For example:

String s = "Hello! Oh my!! Good bye!!";
Pattern p = Pattern.compile("(.*?!+)\\s*");
Matcher m = p.matcher(s);
while (m.find()) {
  System.out.println("[" + m.group(1) + "]");
}

Output:

[Hello!]
[Oh my!!]
[Good bye!!]

Thanks to information from Cine, I think these are the answers I'm looking for:

System.out.println(
    Arrays.deepToString(
        "abc<def>ghi<x><x>".split("(?=<)|(?<=>)")
    )
); // [abc, <def>, ghi, <x>, <x>]


System.out.println(
    Arrays.deepToString(
        "Hello! Oh my!! Good bye!! IT WORKS!!!".split("(?<=!++)")
    )
); // [Hello!,  Oh my!!,  Good bye!!,  IT WORKS!!!]

Now, the second one was honestly discovered by experimenting with all the different quantifiers. Neither greedy nor reluctant work, but possessive does.

I'm still not sure why.

易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!