I have a Java String which is actually an SQL script.

CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE Proc
   AS
        b NUMBER:=3;
        c VARCHAR2(2000);
    begin
        c := 'BEGIN ' || ' :1 := :1 + :2; ' || 'END;';
   end Proc;

I want to split the script on semi-colon except those that appear inside a string. The desired output is four different strings as mentioned below

1- CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE Proc AS b NUMBER:=3
2- c VARCHAR2(2000)
3- begin c := 'BEGIN ' || ' :1 := :1 + :2; ' || 'END;';
4- end Proc

Java Split() method will split above string into tokens as well. I want to keep this string as it is as the semi-colons are inside quotes.

c := 'BEGIN ' || ' :1 := :1 + :2; ' || 'END;';

Java Split() method output

1- c := 'BEGIN ' || ' :1 := :1 + :2
2- ' || 'END
3- '

Please suggest a RegEx that could split the string on semi-colons except those that come inside string.

===================== CASE-2 ========================

Above Section has been answered and its working

Here is another more complex case

======================================================

I have an SQL Script and I want to tokenize each SQL query. Each SQL query is separated by either semi-colon(;) or forward slash(/).

1- I want to escape semi colon or / sign if they appear inside a string like

...WHERE col1 = 'some ; name/' ..

2- Expression must also escape any multiline comment syntax which is /*

Here is the input

/*Query 1*/
SELECT
*
FROM  tab t
WHERE (t.col1 in (1, 3)
            and t.col2 IN (1,5,8,9,10,11,20,21,
                                     22,23,24,/*Reaffirmed*/
                                     25,26,27,28,29,30,
                                     35,/*carnival*/
                                     75,76,77,78,79,
                                     80,81,82, /*Damark accounts*/
                                     84,85,87,88,90))
;
/*Query 2*/    
select * from table
/
/*Query 3*/
select col form tab2
;
/*Query 4*/
select col2 from tab3 /*this is a multi line comment*/
/

Desired Result

[1]: /*Query 1*/
    SELECT
    *
    FROM  tab t
    WHERE (t.col1 in (1, 3)
                and t.col2 IN (1,5,8,9,10,11,20,21,
                                         22,23,24,/*Reaffirmed*/
                                         25,26,27,28,29,30,
                                         35,/*carnival*/
                                         75,76,77,78,79,
                                         80,81,82, /*Damark accounts*/
                                         84,85,87,88,90))

[2]:/*Query 2*/    
    select * from table

[3]: /*Query 3*/
    select col form tab2

[4]:/*Query 4*/
    select col2 from tab3 /*this is a multi line comment*/

Half of it can already be achieved by what was suggested to me in the previous post( link a start) but when comments syntax(/*) is introduced into the queries and each query can also be separated by forward slash(/), expression doesn't work.

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65% accept rate
1  
What are the rules for escaping quotes that appear inside string literals? – aix Sep 15 '11 at 11:45
The whole script is read from a file and stored in a string. – Ali Sep 15 '11 at 12:20
2  
What's interesting is that there's a related question (#2) that actually is almost exactly the same as yours... See there: stackoverflow.com/questions/328387/… – Romain Sep 15 '11 at 12:21
Can someone look into this scenario as well tokenize string on ; and / and escaping them if it they appear in a string or a single or block comment (/* or --). Example: codesel * from tab;sfasdf – Ali Sep 26 '11 at 10:52
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2 Answers

up vote 3 down vote accepted

The regular expression pattern ((?:(?:'[^']*')|[^;])*); should give you what you need. Use a while loop and Matcher.find() to extract all the SQL statements. Something like:

Pattern p = Pattern.compile("((?:(?:'[^']*')|[^;])*);";);
Matcher m = p.matcher(s);
int cnt = 0;
while (m.find()) {
    System.out.println(++cnt + ": " + m.group(1));
}

Using the sample SQL you provided, will output:

1: CREATE OR REPLACE PROCEDURE Proc
   AS
        b NUMBER:=3
2: 
        c VARCHAR2(2000)
3: 
    begin
        c := 'BEGIN ' || ' :1 := :1 + :2; ' || 'END;'
4: 
   end Proc

If you want to get the terminating ;, use m.group(0) instead of m.group(1).

For more information on regular expressions, see the Pattern JavaDoc and this great reference. Here's a synopsis of the pattern:

(              Start capturing group
  (?:          Start non-capturing group
    (?:        Start non-capturing group
      '        Match the literal character '
      [^']     Match a single character that is not '
      *        Greedily match the previous atom zero or more times
      '        Match the literal character '
    )          End non-capturing group
    |          Match either the previous or the next atom
    [^;]       Match a single character that is not ;
  )            End non-capturing group
  *            Greedily match the previous atom zero or more times
)              End capturing group
;              Match the literal character ;
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Can you please explain the pattern a little, cuz I am having difficulty understanding it. – Ali Sep 15 '11 at 19:41
1  
(?:'[^']*') = non capturing group matches start quote to end quote – John B Sep 15 '11 at 20:56
1  
[^;] = single character that is not a semi-colon – John B Sep 15 '11 at 20:57
1  
(?: (?: '[^']*') | [^;])* = non capturing group that matches everything up to the first semicolon that is not contained in quotes – John B Sep 15 '11 at 20:58
1  
((?:(?:'[^']*')|[^;])*); = captures everything up to and including the first semi-colon not in quotes – John B Sep 15 '11 at 20:59
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What you might try is just splitting on ";". Then for each string, if it has an odd number of 's, concatenate it with the following string until it has an even number of 's adding the ";"s back in.

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That's what I have already done, but I was trying to find something simple . Thanks for the suggestion – Ali Sep 15 '11 at 19:00
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