What is the responsibility of (.*)
in the third line and how it works?
String Str = new String("Welcome to Tutorialspoint.com");
System.out.print("Return Value :" );
System.out.println(Str.matches("(.*)Tutorials(.*)"));
.matches()
is a call to parse Str
using the regex provided.
Regex, or Regular Expressions, are a way of parsing strings into groups. In the example provided, this matches any string which contains the word "Tutorials". (.*)
simply means "a group of zero or more of any character".
This page is a good regex reference (for very basic syntax and examples).
Your expression matches any word prefixed and suffixed by any character of word Tutorial
. .*
means occurrence of any character any number of times including zero times.
The .
represents regular expression meta-character which means any character.
The *
is a regular expression quantifier, which means 0 or more occurrences of the expression character it was associated with.
matches
takes regular expression string as parameter and (.*)
means capture any character zero or more times greedily
In Regex
:
.
Wildcard: Matches any single character except
\n
for example pattern a.e
matches ave
in nave
and ate
in water
*
Matches the previous element zero or more times
for example pattern \d*\.\d
matches .0
, 19.9
, 219.9
There is no reason to put parentheses around the .*
, nor is there a reason to instantiate a String
if you've already got a literal String
. But worse is the fact that the matches()
method is out of place here.
What it does is greedily matching any character from the start to the end of a String. Then it backtracks until it finds "Tutorials"
, after which it will again match any characters (except newlines).
It's better and more clear to use the find method. The find method simply finds the first "Tutorials"
within the String, and you can remove the "(.*)"
parts from the pattern.
As a one liner for convenience:
System.out.printf("Return value : %b%n", Pattern.compile("Tutorials").matcher("Welcome to Tutorialspoint.com").find());
String
like this.