82

I'm using Pattern/Matcher to get the response code in an HTTP response. groupCount returns 1, but I get an exception when trying to get it! Any idea why?

Here's the code:

//get response code
String firstHeader = reader.readLine();
Pattern responseCodePattern = Pattern.compile("^HTTP/1\\.1 (\\d+) OK$");
System.out.println(firstHeader);
System.out.println(responseCodePattern.matcher(firstHeader).matches());
System.out.println(responseCodePattern.matcher(firstHeader).groupCount());
System.out.println(responseCodePattern.matcher(firstHeader).group(0));
System.out.println(responseCodePattern.matcher(firstHeader).group(1));
responseCode = Integer.parseInt(responseCodePattern.matcher(firstHeader).group(1));

And here's the output:

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
true
1
Exception in thread "Thread-0" java.lang.IllegalStateException: No match found
 at java.util.regex.Matcher.group(Unknown Source)
 at cs236369.proxy.Response.<init>(Response.java:27)
 at cs236369.proxy.ProxyServer.start(ProxyServer.java:71)
 at tests.Hw3Tests$1.run(Hw3Tests.java:29)
 at java.lang.Thread.run(Unknown Source)
2
  • 2
    Above is very sub-optimal code. It can be easily be rewritten to use a constant (static final Pattern) so that the pattern has to be compiled only once. Furthermore, it is very easy to rewrite in such a way that only a single Matcher instance is retrieved with a single call to Pattern.matcher(String). The error when calling group() without matches() or find() is not very clear though, it should just throw an IllegalStateException instead. Aug 8, 2013 at 13:44
  • 2
    @MaartenBodewes Why using Regex in java is so verbose?
    – Alex78191
    Feb 20, 2019 at 17:31

4 Answers 4

127

pattern.matcher(input) always creates a new matcher, so you'd need to call matches() again.

Try:

Matcher m = responseCodePattern.matcher(firstHeader);
m.matches();
m.groupCount();
m.group(0); //must call matches() first
...
0
16

You are constantly overwriting the matches you got by using

System.out.println(responseCodePattern.matcher(firstHeader).matches());
System.out.println(responseCodePattern.matcher(firstHeader).groupCount());

Each line creates a new Matcher object.

You should go

Matcher matcher = responseCodePattern.matcher(firstHeader);
System.out.println(matcher.matches());
System.out.println(matcher.groupCount());
1
  • 1
    That's the crux of the problem: matchers have state so the OP is, as you've said, constantly overwriting them. A very easy mistake to miss...and you've explained it very well.
    – Jason D
    Oct 28, 2015 at 14:15
8

I was experiencing the same, but I'm writing this answer because I noticed something else:

As others stated, you have to call either

matcher.matches()

or

matcher.find();

Before you can call

matcher.group(1);

However, if you are using the results() call, you won't explicitly have to call those methods above and the results are immediately available.

pattern
        .matcher(pathname)
        .results()
        .collect(Collectors.toList())
        .get(0)
        .group(1);

I think this is intentionally the case, but I'm just adding it here in addition

No need to call matcher.find() or matcher.matches() when using matcher.results().

1
  • great! thank you
    – SHRI
    Jul 5, 2023 at 6:49
3

Or you can call matcher.find(); before matcher.group(1)

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