The only reliable way to do this is to search for EITHER a complete, quoted sequence OR the search term. You do this with one regex, and after each match you determine which one you matched. If it's the search term, you replace it; otherwise you leave it alone.
That means you can't use replaceAll(). Instead you have to use the appendReplacement() and appendTail() methods like replaceAll() itself does. Here's an example:
String s = "Replace this example. Don't replace \"this example.\" Replace this example.";
System.out.println(s);
Pattern p = Pattern.compile("\"[^\"]*\"|(\\bexample\\b)");
Matcher m = p.matcher(s);
StringBuffer sb = new StringBuffer();
while (m.find())
{
if (m.start(1) != -1)
{
m.appendReplacement(sb, "REPLACE");
}
}
m.appendTail(sb);
System.out.println(sb.toString());
output:
Replace this example. Don't replace "this example." Replace this example.
Replace this REPLACE. Don't replace "this example." Replace this REPLACE.
See demo online
I'm assuming every quotation mark is significant and they can't be escaped--in other words, that you're working with prose, not source code. Escaped quotes can be dealt with, but it greatly complicates the regex.
If you really must use replaceAll(), there is a trick where you use a lookahead to assert that the match is followed by an even number of quotes. But it's really ugly, and for large texts you might find it prohibitively expensive, performance-wise.