10

I'm trying to remove some words in a string using regex using below program. Its removing properly but its considering only case sensitive. How to make it as case insensitive. I kept (?1) in replaceAll method but it didn't work.

package com.test.java;

public class RemoveWords {

    public static void main(String args[])
    {

        // assign some words to string

        String sample ="what Is the latest news today in Europe? is there any thing special or everything is common.";

            System.out.print(sample.replaceAll("( is | the |in | any )(?i)"," "));
    }
}

OUTPUT:

what Is latest news today  Europe? there thing special or everything common.

3 Answers 3

33

You need to place the (?i) before the part of the pattern that you want to make case insensitive:

System.out.print(sample.replaceAll("(?i)\\b(?:is|the|in|any)\\b"," "));
                                    ^^^^

See it

I've replaced spaces around the keywords to be removed with word boundary (\\b). The problem comes because there may be two keywords one after another separated by just one space.

If you want to delete the keywords only if they are surrounded by space, then you can use positive lookahead and lookbehind as:

(?i)(?<= )(is|the|in|any)(?= )

See it

8
  • "the" exists in the output. it didn't replace with " " and it doesn't remove "IS" see it ideone.com/HMxLr
    – user467871
    Jan 27, 2011 at 7:07
  • Correct. Why it's not replacing "the" with " " . Any problem with the regex
    – JavaGeek
    Jan 27, 2011 at 7:09
  • @codaddict: Note that this leaves multiple spaces in a row, which is possibly not ideal but may be tricky to avoid.
    – Jon Skeet
    Jan 27, 2011 at 7:25
  • @codaddict works but I don't understand anything from this regex. Anyway, I revert my -1
    – user467871
    Jan 27, 2011 at 7:26
  • @Jon: You are right. But adding a .replaceAll(" +"," ") will solve that. Doing all this in a single regex will be tricky.
    – codaddict
    Jan 27, 2011 at 7:31
4

I don't think you can specify case insensitive with the quick replace. Try a pattern instead. i.e:

package com.test.java;

public class RemoveWords {

public static void main(String args[]) {
  // assaign some words to string
  String sample ="what Is the latest news today in Europe? is there any thing special or everything is common.";
  String regex = "( is | the |in | any )"
  System.out.print
  (
    Pattern.compile(regex, Pattern.CASE_INSENSITIVE).matcher(sample).replaceAll("")
  );
 }
}
2
  • 1
    Sorry for the downvote, but as @codaddicts answer shows, you can use those flags in String.replaceAll(). Jan 27, 2011 at 7:42
  • @Joachim: No worries. I upvoted @Codaddicts answer since I got to know how to use flags in String.replaceAll
    – Chandu
    Jan 27, 2011 at 7:45
1

change is to [iI][sS]

sample.replaceAll("( [iI][sS] ...
1
  • It works but lengthy process where we need to put every character. Is there any better way
    – JavaGeek
    Jan 27, 2011 at 6:55

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