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I want to split a text into sentences. My text contains \n character in between. I want the splitting to be done at \n and .(dot). I cannot use BreakIterator as splitting condition for it is a space followed by a period (In the text I want to split, that isn't necessary).

Example:

i am a java programmer.i like coding in java. pi is 3.14\n regex not working

Should output:

['i am a java programmer', 'i like coding in java', 'pi is 3.14', 'regex not working']

I tried a simple regex which splits on either \n or .:

[\\\\n\\.]

This isn't working although, specifying separately works.

\\\\n
\\.

So can anyone give a regex that will split on either \n or . ?

Another problem is I don't want splitting to be done in case of decimals like 5.6.

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  • What if you have something like "blah blah U.S.". Do you want to consider it as one sentence or two sentences? Aug 16, 2013 at 19:03

3 Answers 3

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This java regex should go it:

"\n|((?<!\\d)\\.(?!\\d))"

Points here:

  • you don't need to escape \n, ever
  • those weird looking things around the dot are negative look arounds, and means "the previous/next character must not be a digit

This regex says: "either a newline, or a literal dot that is not preceded or followed by a digit


FYI, you don't need to escape characters in a character class (between []) except for the brackets themselves.

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  • 2
    @Bohemian what about some text.5 items of something
    – Naveed S
    Feb 18, 2013 at 12:00
  • @naveedS added negative look behind to require non digits both before and after a dot. Note though that regex would struggle to distinguish a decimal as in the question from this unhappy coincidence of two sentences: I have 3.6 shooters are best.
    – Bohemian
    Feb 18, 2013 at 13:20
  • @Bohemian still doesn't split if digit is there on any side of the decimal point. so same problem.
    – Naveed S
    Feb 19, 2013 at 4:51
2

Use string.split("[\n.]") to split at \n or .

Inside character class, . has no special meaning. So there is no need for escaping .

Edit: string.split("\n|[.](?<!\\d)(?!\\d)") avoids splitting of decimal numbers.

Here, for each . a lookbehind and a lookahead is there to check whether there is a digit on both sides. If both are not numbers, split is applied.

\n|\\.(?!\\d)|(?<!\\d)\\. avoids split for . with digits on both sides.

\n|(?<!\\d)[.](?!\\d) avoids split if any side has a digit

So what you require might be

string.split("\n|\\.(?!\\d)|(?<!\\d)\\.")

which splits something.4 but not 3.14

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  • that would also split '5.6'
    – ellak
    Feb 18, 2013 at 11:32
  • @user1523170 did you use the same regex or avoided any escapes?
    – Naveed S
    Feb 18, 2013 at 11:48
  • @user1523170 check the third one
    – Naveed S
    Feb 18, 2013 at 11:54
  • @user1523170 each suits some context. select the one suited for yours.
    – Naveed S
    Feb 18, 2013 at 12:05
  • i want 'something.4' to split. '3.4' to not split. 'something 4.something' to split. the first RE doesn't work for 'something.4' case Feb 18, 2013 at 12:15
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You need not double-escape stuff in a Java regex in the [] block:

[.\n]

should work.

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