ThePattern
API contains a number of useful predefined character classes, which offer convenient shorthands for commonly used regular expressions:In the table above, each construct in the left-hand column is shorthand for the character class in the right-hand column. For example,
Predefined Character Classes .
Any character (may or may not match line terminators) \d
A digit: [0-9]
\D
A non-digit: [^0-9]
\s
A whitespace character: [ \t\n\x0B\f\r]
\S
A non-whitespace character: [^\s]
\w
A word character: [a-zA-Z_0-9]
\W
A non-word character: [^\w]
\d
means a range of digits (0-9), and\w
means a word character (any lowercase letter, any uppercase letter, the underscore character, or any digit). Use the predefined classes whenever possible. They make your code easier to read and eliminate errors introduced by malformed character classes.Constructs beginning with a backslash are called escaped constructs; we previewed escaped constructs in the String Literals section where we mentioned the use of backslash and
\Q
and\E
for quotation. If you are using an escaped construct within a string literal, you must preceed the backslash with another backslash for the string to compile. For example:In this exampleprivate final String REGEX = "\\d"; // a single digit\d
is the regular expression; the extra backslash is required for the code to compile. The test harness reads the expressions directly from theConsole
, however, so the extra backslash is unnecessary.The following examples demonstrate the use of predefined character classes.
In the first three examples, the regular expression is simplyEnter your regex: . Enter input string to search: @ I found the text "@" starting at index 0 and ending at index 1. Enter your regex: . Enter input string to search: 1 I found the text "1" starting at index 0 and ending at index 1. Enter your regex: . Enter input string to search: a I found the text "a" starting at index 0 and ending at index 1. Enter your regex: \d Enter input string to search: 1 I found the text "1" starting at index 0 and ending at index 1. Enter your regex: \d Enter input string to search: a No match found. Enter your regex: \D Enter input string to search: 1 No match found. Enter your regex: \D Enter input string to search: a I found the text "a" starting at index 0 and ending at index 1. Enter your regex: \s Enter input string to search: I found the text " " starting at index 0 and ending at index 1. Enter your regex: \s Enter input string to search: a No match found. Enter your regex: \S Enter input string to search: No match found. Enter your regex: \S Enter input string to search: a I found the text "a" starting at index 0 and ending at index 1. Enter your regex: \w Enter input string to search: a I found the text "a" starting at index 0 and ending at index 1. Enter your regex: \w Enter input string to search: ! No match found. Enter your regex: \W Enter input string to search: a No match found. Enter your regex: \W Enter input string to search: ! I found the text "!" starting at index 0 and ending at index 1..
(the "dot" metacharacter) that indicates "any character." Therefore, the match is successful in all three cases (a randomly selected@
character, a digit, and a letter). The remaining examples each use a single regular expression construct from the Predefined Character Classes table. You can refer to this table to figure out the logic behind each match:Alternatively, a capital letter means the opposite:
\d
matches all digits\s
matches spaces\w
matches word characters
\D
matches non-digits\S
matches non-spaces\W
matches non-word characters