I'd not use split but Pattern & Matcher instead.
A demo:
import java.util.regex.Matcher;
import java.util.regex.Pattern;
public class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
String text = "start. \"in quotes!\"; foo? \"more \\\" words\"; bar";
String simpleToken = "[^.;?!\\s\"]+";
String quotedToken =
"(?x) # enable inline comments and ignore white spaces in the regex \n" +
"\" # match a double quote \n" +
"( # open group 1 \n" +
" \\\\. # match a backslash followed by any char (other than line breaks) \n" +
" | # OR \n" +
" [^\\\\\r\n\"] # any character other than a backslash, line breaks or double quote \n" +
") # close group 1 \n" +
"* # repeat group 1 zero or more times \n" +
"\" # match a double quote \n";
String regex = quotedToken + "|" + simpleToken;
Matcher m = Pattern.compile(regex).matcher(text);
while(m.find()) {
System.out.println("> " + m.group());
}
}
}
which produces:
> start
> "in quotes!"
> foo
> "more \" words"
> bar
As you can see, it can also handle escaped quotes inside quoted tokens.