Gumbo was right using a look-behind assertion, but in case your string contains the escaped escape character (e.g. \\
) right in front of a comma, the split might break. See this example:
test1\,test1,test2\\,test3\\\,test3\\\\,test4
If you do a simple look-behind split for (?<!\\),
as Gumbo suggested, the string gets split into two parts only test1\,test1
and test2\\,test3\\\,test3\\\\,test4
. This is because the look-behind just checks one character back for the escape character. What would actually be correct, if the string is split on commas and commas preceded by an even number of escape characters.
To achieve this a slightly more complex (double) look-behind expression is needed:
(?<!(?<![^\\]\\(?:\\{2}){0,10})\\),
Using this more complex regular expression in Java, again requires to escape all \
by \\
. So this should be a more sophisticated answer to your question:
"any comma separated string".split("(?<!(?<![^\\\\]\\\\(?:\\\\{2}){0,10})\\\\),");
Note: Java does not support infinite repetitions inside of lookbehinds. Therefore only up to 10 repeating double escape characters are checked by using the expression {0,10}
. If needed, you can increase this value by adjusting the latter number.
abc:"def:ghi":jkl
?[ghi:klm]
.'\'
was meant to escape the:
, not to be part of the output.