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I have a java code to check whether the input string is matching with Regular Expression like this.

     String regexpr="(?<day>\d{1,2})\/(?<month>\d{1,2})\/(?<year>\d{4})";
     String test="04/07/2016";
     p = Pattern.compile (regexpr);
     Matcher m = p.matcher (test);
         while(m.find ())
                 {
                      System.out.println("Matched String"+ m.group());
                      System.out.println("Group1:"+ m.start(1) + "-" + m.end(1) + "\t " + group(1));
                      System.out.println("Group2:"+ m.start(2) + "-" + m.end(2) + "\t " + group(2));
                      System.out.println("Group3:"+ m.start(3) + "-" + m.end(3) + "\t " + group(3));
                 }

It gives the the output as

     Matched String   04/07/2016
     Group:1    0-2   04
     Group:2   3-5    07
     Group:3   6-10   2016

In addition to this i also want to print the matched group names i.e

     Group1:  day    0-2      04
     Group2:  month  3-5      07
     Group3:  year   6-10     2016

Is there any method to do this in regex in java?

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  • System.out.println("Group1: day "+ m.start(1) + "to" + m.end(1) + "\t " + group(1)); You know which group you are printing why do you need dynamically get the name? And AFAIK there isn't any method to get a group name. Jul 4, 2016 at 13:40
  • @Jorge Campos i'm just giving an example, if in case we need to take all the input dynamically then what is the solution? Jul 4, 2016 at 13:42
  • A regex pattern is static, as so you name your groups accordingly you will know either way where they are and when to use it. If you define your regex in a dynamic way your code to find the groups would also be equivalent to your dynamic code. Add a real example where you would need such feature. When a major language such as Java doesn't implements such feature you sure must ask why you need it. Jul 4, 2016 at 13:50
  • It depends on how your dynamic input looks. Are you building the regexp from dynamic input, or are you taking the entire regexp as input? Etc. One idea is you find the group names in the regexp. If you are building the regexp yourself, it may be easier to take the group names from whatever building blocks you’re using than from the final regexp string, I cannot tell.
    – Anonymous
    Jul 4, 2016 at 14:31

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