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This is the sample code

String m_testPattern = "AB.*?";
String m_testMatcherString = "ABCDCDCDCD";
final Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile(m_testPattern);
final Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(m_testMatcherString);   
if (matcher.matches()) {
    // This means the regex matches
    System.out.println("Successful comparison");

} else {
    // match failed
    System.out.println("Comparison failed !!!");
}

Ideally the match operation should result in a failure and give me output as "Comparison failed !!!"

But this code snippet gives me "Successful comparison" as output

I checked online regex tools with the same input and the result was different

I did the trial in this site http://regexr.com/v1/

Here when I put AB.*? in the regex and ABCDCDCDCD as the string to be compared, then the search stops at AB. This means the comparison performed is a Lazy Comparison and not a greedy one

Can anyone please explain why the same use case fails in case of Java Pattern.match function ?

My test case is something like
1. regex AB\wCD should match with ABZCD plus fail at AB2CD
2. AB\w{2}CD would match ABZZCD
3. AB\d{1,3}CD should match AB555CD or AB6CD or AB77CD plus fail at ABCD or AB9999CD etc
4. AB.* should match AB(followed by anything)
5. AB.*? should fail if input like ABCDCDCD is given for comparison

All the 4 steps is passed successfully  while using matcher.matches() function <br/>
Only the fifth one gives a wrong answer. (5th scenario also gives a success message eventhough it should fail)

Thanks in advance

10
  • 2
    matches() asserts that the whole input matches the regex (the regex is implicitly anchored), which it does, since * allows . to repeat without limit. Regex testers usually only do something equivalent to Matcher.find(), which doesn't anchors the regex, so .*? exhibits its laziness and matches an empty string.
    – nhahtdh
    Nov 27, 2015 at 4:38
  • Thanks for the quick reply If I use the Matcher.find() method, this use case works as expected., but other simple inputs like normal AB.* fails to match ABCDCDCD
    – Mparame
    Nov 27, 2015 at 5:01
  • It's unclear what you want to do here. Do you want to validate, or extract content from some text?
    – nhahtdh
    Nov 27, 2015 at 5:32
  • 2
    Can you explain what are the rules for the input to pass the validation?
    – Mariano
    Nov 27, 2015 at 6:34
  • 1
    @Mparame: Then why do you expect the test case to fail. As Mariano said, what are the validation criteria?
    – nhahtdh
    Nov 27, 2015 at 6:37

1 Answer 1

-1
matches()

return true if the whole string matches the given pattern.

find()

tries to find a substring that matches the pattern.

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