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I have some complex regular expressions which I need to comment for readability and maintenance. The Java spec is rather terse and I struggled for a long time getting this working. I finally caught my bug and will post it as an answer but I'd be grateful for any other advice on maintaining regexes

As an example I want to comment the subcomponents (of patternS) in a simple name parser:

    String testTarget = "Waldorf T. Flywheel";
    String patternS = "([A-Za-z]+)\\s+([A-Z]\\.)?\\s+([A-Za-z]+)";
    Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile(patternS, Pattern.COMMENTS);
    Assert.assertTrue(pattern.matcher(testTarget).matches());

EDIT: I would be grateful for examples of the (?x) format as well.

EDIT: @geowa4 has a good suggestion which avoids embedded comments. Sinnce java and others have provided for embedded comments what are the cases where they are useful? (I think I have a case but I'd be interested to see others).

EDIT: As noted below @mikej the regex does not support the optional initial well and would be better as:

        String patternS = "([A-Za-z]+)\\s+([A-Z]\\.\\s+)?([A-Za-z]+)";

but that would end up extracting space in the initial

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3 Answers 3

21

See the post by Martin Fowler on ComposedRegex for some more ideas on improving regexp readability. In summary, he advocates breaking down a complex regexp into smaller parts which can be given meaningful variable names. e.g.

String mandatoryName = "([A-Za-z]+)";
String mandatoryWhiteSpace = "\\s+";
String optionalInitial = "([A-Z]\\.)?";
String pattern = mandatoryName + mandatoryWhiteSpace + optionalInitial +
    mandatoryWhiteSpace + mandatoryName;
4
  • Thanks - this is a useful approach. It also pointed to another idea of using Domain Specific Languages to generate regexes (flimflan.com/blog/ReadableRegularExpressions.aspx). (This is actually what I do in my application which has complicated combinations of compsed regexes for scientific data but that is outside the scope of this question). Sep 4, 2009 at 11:56
  • 1
    This is a very clean and neat solution. Although optionalWhiteSpace should probably be mandatoryWhiteSpace? :)
    – crunchdog
    Sep 4, 2009 at 12:08
  • Thanks crunchdog. I think what caught me out is there is actually a limitation in the pattern in the OP in that if we have a name without the middle initial such as Fred Bloggs then we need 2 spaces between the firstname and surname in order to match the two \\s+ in the pattern. I was trying to address this but for now I have edited the answer to make the pattern equivalent to the one in the OP.
    – mikej
    Sep 4, 2009 at 12:32
  • @mikej Thanks - I have added a request to edit the original for anyone who can make it prettier Sep 4, 2009 at 13:36
16

Why don't you just do this:

String pattern2S = 
    "([A-Za-z]+)" + //    mandatory firstName
    "\\s+" +        //    mandatory whitespace
    ...;

CONTINUATION:

If you want to keep the comments with the pattern and you need to read it in from a properties file, use this:

pattern=\
#comment1\\n\
(A-z)\
#comment2\\n\
(0-9)
1
  • Good suggestion. This would work in many simple cases but I want the regular expressions to be independent of the code in which they are used (e.g. in external data files). The inline comments will still be visible. Sep 4, 2009 at 11:26
14

I found the following worked:

        String pattern2S = 
            "([A-Za-z]+)      # mandatory firstName\n" +
            "\\s+             # mandatory whitespace\n " +
            "([A-Z]\\.)?      # optional initial\n" +
            "\\s+             # whitespace\n " +
            "([A-Za-z]+)      # mandatory lastName\n"; 

The key thing was to include the newline character \n explicitly in the string

2
  • How did this work? I just tested it and it doesn't work.
    – Coder-Man
    Jul 23, 2018 at 5:30
  • 2
    Oh, Pattern.COMMENTS is the key.
    – Coder-Man
    Jul 23, 2018 at 5:32

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