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public static void main(String[] args) {
    // TODO Auto-generated method stub
    System.out.println(Pattern.matches("[^A-Za-z0-9]","@#%abc"));
}

This is very very simple code about regex in Java.

As far as I know, [^A-Za-z0-9] should return true when it matches with any special characters because [^ means the negation and A-Za-z0-9 means all characters including numbers. I don't know why above code keeps returning false, instead of true.

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    How could the code return true when you clearly have abc in there? matches means "the whole input sequence matches the pattern". And yes, it's missing a + (due to @Sean below). Jul 9, 2012 at 9:48

2 Answers 2

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Add a +:

System.out.println(Pattern.matches("[^A-Za-z0-9]+.*","@#%abc"));
// no, this will only match the first few characters,
// added wildcard to catch the rest

Pattern.matches() implies a full match, i.e. the entire pattern matches the text from beginning to end. In your case you are doing a find(), i.e. there are multiple matches of the Pattern in the text, but not a single full match, as your pattern matches only one character.

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Your match is attempting to match one character alone.

You should instead reconfgiure the match to indicate the first character and the rest you don't care about e.g.

Pattern.matches("[^A-Za-z0-9].*","@#%abc")

Note the .* after your match on the first character.

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  • yeah, but the + alone won't work, because abc are non-matching characters, so your original aproach is better Jul 9, 2012 at 9:50

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