Why doesn't this regex work as expected in Java?
trivial regex question (the answer is most probably Java-specific):
"#This is a comment in a file".matches("^#")
This returns false. As far as I can see, ^
means what it always means and #
has no special meaning, so I'd translate ^#
as "A '#' at the beginning of the string". Which should match. And so it does, in Perl:
perl -e "print '#This is a comment'=~/^#/;"
print开发者_开发技巧s "1". So I'm pretty sure the answer is something Java specific. Would somebody please enlighten me?
Thank you.
Matcher.matches()
checks to see if the entire input string is matched by the regex.
Since your regex only matches the very first character, it returns false
.
You'll want to use Matcher.find()
instead.
Granted, it can be a bit tricky to find the concrete specification, but it's there:
String.matches()
is defined as doing the same thing asPattern.matches(regex, str)
.Pattern.matches()
in turn is defined asPattern.compile(regex).matcher(input).matches()
.Pattern.compile()
returns aPattern
.Pattern.matcher()
returns aMatcher
Matcher.matches()
is documented like this (emphasis mine):Attempts to match the entire region against the pattern.
The matches
method matches your regex against the entire string.
So try adding a .*
to match rest of the string.
"#This is a comment in a file".matches("^#.*")
which returns true
. One can even drop all anchors(both start and end) from the regex and the match
method will add it for us. So in the above case we could have also used "#.*"
as the regex.
This should meet your expectations:
"#This is a comment in a file".matches("^#.*$")
Now the input String matches the pattern "First char shall be #
, the rest shall be any char"
Following Joachims comment, the following is equivalent:
"#This is a comment in a file".matches("#.*")
精彩评论