299

With regex in Java, I want to write a regex that will match if and only if the pattern is not preceded by certain characters. For example:

String s = "foobar barbar beachbar crowbar bar ";

I want to match if bar is not preceded by foo. So the output would be:

barbar
beachbar
crowbar
bar
0

3 Answers 3

489

You want to use negative lookbehind like this:

\w*(?<!foo)bar

Where (?<!x) means "only if it doesn't have "x" before this point".

See Regular Expressions - Lookaround for more information.

Edit: added the \w* to capture the characters before (e.g. "beach").

8
  • 3
    what modifications need to be made to not match foo_arbitrary_bar? ie foo not immediately preceding bar
    – Brad Kent
    Jun 28, 2018 at 1:43
  • 2
    @BradKent (?<!foo).*bar would match something like that, I believe.
    – emyller
    Jul 17, 2018 at 21:20
  • @emyller nope. that will match foobazbar (foo doesn't come before foobazbar, so it matches)
    – Brad Kent
    Jul 18, 2018 at 21:53
  • 3
    @BradKent I didn't read your "not" in "not match", that why I said it would match. You case looks like a \b(?!foo)\w*bar\b to me then.
    – emyller
    Jul 19, 2018 at 16:08
  • 4
    @BradKent Then you can either ask a new question, elaborating what you're trying to achieve in detail, or continue playing with regular expressions until you find it yourself. :)
    – emyller
    Jul 19, 2018 at 18:30
5

Another option is to first match optional word characters followed by bar, and when that has matched check what is directly to the left is not foobar.

The lookbehind assertion will run after matching bar first.

\w*bar(?<!foobar)
  • \w* Match 0+ word characters
  • bar Match literally
  • (?<!foobar) Negative lookbehind, assert from the current position foobar is not directly to the left.

Regex demo

0

In some cases, it could be easier to optionally include the preceding part, then skip those matches in a second step. For instance, to find numbers that don't start with a "+":

if (preg_match_all('/(\+?[0-9][0-9\s\-].*[0-9])/s',$text,$matches)) {
    foreach($matches[1] as $match) {
        if(substr($match,0,1) == '+'){
            continue;
        }
        // continue processing
    }
}

The negative look behind did not work since it would still match 2+ digits, but it would not include the first digit in the match. For instance +1234 would be returned as 234.

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