It may work but I don't know if this is how you need it.
When you use matches, it fails if the whole sequence doesn't match, but you can still use find to see if the rest of the sequence contained the pattern and thus understand why it failed:
import java.util.regex.*;
import static java.lang.System.out;
class F {
public static void main( String ... args ) {
String input = args[0];
String re = "N{1,3}Y";
Pattern p = Pattern.compile(re);
Matcher m = p.matcher(input);
out.printf("Evaluating: %s on %s%nMatched: %s%n", re, input, m.matches() );
for( int i = 0 ; i < input.length() ; i++ ) {
out.println();
boolean found = m.find(i);
if( !found ) {
continue;
}
int s = m.start();
int e = m.end();
i = s;
out.printf("m.start[%s]%n"
+"m.end[%s]%n"
+"%s[%s]%s%n",s,e,
input.substring(0,s),
input.substring(s,e),
input.substring(e) );
}
}
}
Output:
C:\Users\oreyes\java\re>java F NNNNY
Evaluating: N{1,3}Y on NNNNY
Matched: false
m.start[1]
m.end[5]
N[NNNY]
m.start[2]
m.end[5]
NN[NNY]
m.start[3]
m.end[5]
NNN[NY]
C:\Users\oreyes\java\re>java F XNNY
Evaluating: N{1,3}Y on XNNY
Matched: false
m.start[1]
m.end[4]
X[NNY]
m.start[2]
m.end[4]
XN[NY]
In the first output: N[NNNY] you can tell there where too many N's, in the second: X[NNY] there was an X present.
Here's other output
C:\Users\oreyes\java\re>java F NYXNNXNNNNYX
Evaluating: N{1,3}Y on NYXNNXNNNNYX
Matched: false
m.start[0]
m.end[2]
[NY]XNNXNNNNYX
m.start[7]
m.end[11]
NYXNNXN[NNNY]X
m.start[8]
m.end[11]
NYXNNXNN[NNY]X
m.start[9]
m.end[11]
NYXNNXNNN[NY]X
The pattern is there but the whole expression didn't match.
It's a bit hard to understand how find, matches and lookingAt works from the doc ( at least this happened to me ) but I hope this example help you figure it out.
matches is like /^YOURPATTERNHERE$/
lookingAt is like /^YOURPATTERNHERE/
find is like /YOURPATTERNHERE/
I hope this helps.