0

I want to use Scala's collect function with a regular expression. Ideally I'd like to collect only those terms that match the regular expression. I've so far implemented the following which works fine

val regex = "(^([^:]+):([^:]+):([^:]+):([+]?[0-9]*\\.?[0-9]+([eE][-+]?[0-9]+)?)$".r
<other_code>.collect{case x: String if regex.pattern.matcher(x).matches =>
    x match {
      case regex(feature, hash, value, weight) => (feature.split("\\^"), weight.toDouble)
    }
  }

This seems to have an extra step though. I'm first checking if the regex matches in the case statement for collect and then I'm checking if it matches again to extract the groups of the match. Is there a way that I can do this with only checking the regex match once?

2 Answers 2

4

You don't need the first match:

<other_code>.collect {
    case regex(feature, hash, value, weight) => (feature.split("\\^"), weight.toDouble)
}
2
  • Thanks, this is perfect. One more question, why do I need both () and {}?
    – Jon
    Jan 20, 2015 at 17:41
  • This seems to be deprecated as of Scala 2.11. Is there a more concise way to do it?
    – thekidder
    Apr 7, 2015 at 3:29
1

Checking to see if the regex matches is unnecessary, because the pattern matching will do that for you. Let me illustrate with a slightly simpler example.

val regex = "(\\d+),([A-z]+)".r
val input = List("1,a", "23,zZ", "1", "1ab", "")

scala> input collect { case regex(a, b) => (a, b) }
res2: List[(String, String)] = List((1,a), (23,zZ))

Using x match { ... } could result in a match error.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.