Regex in String.replaceall()

I wanted to remove ewg text from following lines completely.
ewg#First line
ewg#Second line
ewgThird line
For this i have used String class replace all method as follows:
StringBuffer sb = new StringBuffer(returnString.replaceAll("(?i)\\bentfw\\b",""));The problem is this code is replacing only first two lines not the third line. Please help me

returnString.replaceFirst("(?i)^ewg","")i tried this but its not removing ewg at allSeems to work just fine for me:
String[] lines = new String[]{"ewg#First line",
"ewg#Second line", "ewgThird line", "a line not
starting with ewg"};
String regex = "(?i)^ewg";
for (String line : lines) {
     System.out.println(line.replaceFirst(regex, ""));
sorry for long delay reply.
i still couldnt solve this problem.
i am not using any string array but a single string that separates these three lines with \n

Similar Messages

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    hi,
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    public class StringTest {
         public static void main(String [] arg) throws Exception {
              String input = "oooIoooIooo";
              input=input.replaceAll("I","\\");
              System.out.println(input);
    }So the only option seems to be to manually process the user input string into a form that can be accepted by String.replaceAll?
    The only thing I can find from looking through the API is that you'd need to convert each backslash to a double-backslash?
    is this the right thing to be doing?
    thanks,
    asjf

    just to clarify, at the moment I think the solution is to do this
    public class StringTest {
         public static void main(String [] arg) throws Exception {
              String input = "oooIoooIooo";
              String raw = "\\";
              input=input.replaceAll("I",raw.replaceAll("\\\\","\\\\\\\\"));
              System.out.println(input);
    }

  • Using a local variable in regex portion of replaceAll(regex, replacement)

    While this works..
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    The extension of this would be so I can store this stuff in a db as a list and avoid compilation on change, but please don't let this muddy the waters... :)
    Any pointers are much appreciated. Links to specific reading material, etc. I've scoured Friedl's Mastering Regular Expressions to no avail. This approach is supported by some other regex engines I've used (perl, php, ORO?) but I'm new to Java.
    TIA,
    Mark

    I've scoured Friedl's Mastering Regular Expressions to no avail.Did you look on page 209? In the book, that code sample is labelled "Building Up a Regex Through Variables in Java". That should have been a clue. ^_^
    But seriously, you're probably thinking of the interpolated strings you find in scripting languages like Perl, PHP, Ruby, etc.. But that's a feature of the language itself, not the regex engine, and Java doesn't work that way. (The $1, $2, etc., in the replacement string are processed by the Matcher class, in a very limited imitation of Perl's variable interpolation).
    However, you can fake it pretty well with String's format() method:   String regex = String.format("(%s)(.*)(</\\1)", theAlternation);
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  • Problem in String.replaceAll please help

    String ash = "XXX";
    String ch = ash.replaceAll("X","$");
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    java.lang.StringIndexOutOfBoundsException: String index out of range: 1
         at java.lang.String.charAt(Unknown Source)
         at java.util.regex.Matcher.appendReplacement(Unknown Source)
         at java.util.regex.Matcher.replaceAll(Unknown Source)
         at java.lang.String.replaceAll(Unknown Source)
    please help me
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    Cross-post
    http://forum.java.sun.com/thread.jspa?threadID=607145

  • Regular Expression Fails String replaceAll

    I am trying to use regular expressions to replace double backslashes in a string with a single backslash character. I am using version 1.4.2 SDK. Upon invoking the replaceAll method I get a stack trace. Does this look like a bug to anyone?
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         at java.lang.String.charAt(String.java:444)
         at java.util.regex.Matcher.appendReplacement(Matcher.java:551)
         at java.util.regex.Matcher.replaceAll(Matcher.java:661)
         at java.lang.String.replaceAll(String.java:1663)
         at com.msdw.fid.fitradelinx.am.client.CommandReader.read(CommandReader.java:55)
         at com.msdw.fid.fitradelinx.am.client.CommandReader.main(CommandReader.java:81)
    Exception in thread "main"

    Skinning the cat -
    public class Fred12
        public static void main(String[] args)
                String s = "text\\\\";  //this results in a string value of 'text\\'
                String regex = "[\\\\]{2}";  //this will match 2 backslash characters
                String backslash = "\\\\";
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                String s = "text\\\\";  //this results in a string value of 'text\\'
                String regex = "(\\\\){2}";  //this will match 2 backslash characters
                String backslash = "\\\\";
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                String s = "text\\\\";  //this results in a string value of 'text\\'
                String regex = "(?:\\\\){2}";  //this will match 2 backslash characters
                String backslash = "\\\\";
                System.out.println(s.replaceAll(regex,backslash));
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                String regex = "(?:\\\\)+";  //this will match 2 or more backslash characters
                String backslash = "\\\\";
                System.out.println(s.replaceAll(regex,backslash));
                String s = "text\\\\";  //this results in a string value of 'text\\'
                String regex = "\\\\\\\\";  //this will match 2 backslash characters
                String backslash = "\\\\";
                System.out.println(s.replaceAll(regex,backslash));
    }

  • String.replaceAll() don't works!!!

    Hi all,
    I want to use replaceAll(string,string), but it don't works.
    Here is an example:
    String str = "This is the 'repl' I want replace and a second 'repl'";
    String regex = "repl";
    String replace = "new string";
    str.replaceAll(regex,replace);
    //Result should be: str => "This is the 'new string' I want replace and a second 'new string'"
    The Result is the same string I had before, absolutely no changes!!!
    Can someone tell me whats wrong????
    Thanx for your help.
    cya JayR

    str.replaceAll(regex,replace);
    //Result should be: str => "This is the 'new string' I want replace and a second 'new string'"As the others said, the value of str itself will not change. That's not Strings work. They're immutable (meaning they will never change value once instantiated). If you want str to have the new value, you'll need to do:str = str.replaceAll(regex,replace); And by the way... "This is the 'repl' I want replace and a second 'repl'" will not end up being "This is the 'new string' I want replace and a second 'new string'", actually, it will be "This is the 'new string' I want new stringace and a second 'new string'". The "repl" in the word "replace" will be replaced by "new string" as well.

  • String.replaceAll doesn't work

    Hi,
    I hope this is the correct forum to post about this problem. It's not a compiler error, it rather seems to be an interpreter or a logical error.
    Please consider this test program I wrote to clarify the problem.
    public class Test {
        public static void main( String args[]) {
         String someString = "Hello $place!";
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    Also see http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.4.2/docs/api/java/lang/String.html#replaceAll(java.lang.String, java.lang.String)
    So, one should think my test program would have the following output:
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    Hello $world!
    Hello $place!The String.replaceAll method doesn't seem to replace occurences if they are preceeded of "$". Or am I just missing something?

    The String.replaceAll method doesn't seem to replace
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  • PatternSyntaxException when calling String.replaceAll in multithreaded app

    Dear,
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    ^\p{Digit}
    ^
    at java.util.regex.Pattern.error(Unknown Source)
    at java.util.regex.Pattern.familyError(Unknown Source)
    at java.util.regex.Pattern.retrieveCategoryNode(Unknown Source)
    at java.util.regex.Pattern.family(Unknown Source)
    at java.util.regex.Pattern.sequence(Unknown Source)
    at java.util.regex.Pattern.expr(Unknown Source)
    at java.util.regex.Pattern.compile(Unknown Source)
    at java.util.regex.Pattern.<init>(Unknown Source)
    at java.util.regex.Pattern.compile(Unknown Source)
    at java.lang.String.replaceAll(Unknown Source)
    The 1.4.2 source code seems to use a static HashMap (java.util.regex.Pattern#retrieveCategoryNode) to store some read only data, but it looks like the initialization of that HashMap in an multi threaded environment is not 'locked'. Could that be the/an issue? Anybody any thoughts?
    Thanks,
    Peter

    I ran peter's program on a hyperthreaded Intel P4 box and XP Pro. XP reports that there are 2 processors.
    I used 1.4.2_06 and 1.5.0_01, with both -client and -server options.
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    Java version     cli/svr          Pgm Parms   # Failures      
    1.5.0_01     -client          10, 0          0
                        10, 1          0
              -server          10, 0          0
                        10, 1          0
    1.4.2_06     -client          10, 0          10
                        10, 1          0
              -server          10, 0          0
                        10, 1          0
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    The triple-error report is below:
    "C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.4.2_06\bin\java.exe" -client PatternProblem 10 0
    Thread-7:Unknown character category {Digit} near index 9
    ^\p{Digit}
             ^
    Thread-5:Unknown character category {Digit} near index 9
    ^\p{Digit}
             ^
    Thread-3:Unknown character category {Digit} near index 9
    ^\p{Digit}
             ^
    Note that this wording is not the same as peter encountered. The thread number varied,
    apparently randomly, from 0 to 8

  • String.replaceAll bottleneck

    Hi All,
    I have written a method to make a string "safe" for xml, by encoding characters that need to be replaced.
    It works just fine using String.replaceAll as below, but when i profile the app i see that it is a performance bottleneck.
    I can see that it is creating a lot of Strings so this is part of the problem.
    From reading through the forum I can see regexs used frequently for this type of problem, but it seems that they will not be more efficient than my existing approach.
    I see that StringBuffer has a replace method but i'm not sure that it is a good fit for my problem?
    Can anybody suggest a more efficient solution?
    Your help is much appreciated!
    emhart
    Here's my existing method:
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    result = result .replaceAll("<", "<");
    result = result .replaceAll("'", "&apos;");
    result = result .replaceAll("\"", """);
    return result ;
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    That method doesn't make any sense to me:
    replacing strings with the same exact string?
    also the last one isn't correct, maybe missing a \ ?
    Also, you do realize that the replaceAll method uses the first argument as a regex to match patterns in the string?
    My apologies if I'm missing something.
    But if this really is what you want, then maybe this is faster (I haven't measured any times though):public static String makeSafeForXML2(String str)
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                case '>':
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                    break;
                case '<':
                    sb.replace(i, i + 1, "<");
                    break;
                case '\'':
                    sb.replace(i, i + 1, "'");
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                case '"':
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  • Bug in String.replaceAll()

    Hi folks,
    Have anybody try to do the following with String.replaceAll()?
    String path = "/ssss/ssss/sssss/";
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    Billy Ng

    I'm not sure that's a bug, it's just the behavior of the underlying regex processor.
    Regardless, to get the effect you want, try:
    String path = "/ssss/ssss/sssss/";
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  • Matcher vs. String.replaceAll

    I have been experiencing a problem attempting to use an expression such as:
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    to replace certain regular expressions in a document. When using the Matcher to replace Strings as follows there is no problem, but using the same pattern with String.replaceAll doesn't seem to perform the replacement.
    Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile("PATTERN",Pattern.DOTALL);
    Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(s);
    s = matcher.replaceAll("REPLACEMENT");
    The only thing I can think of is that the Pattern.DOTALL options allows the match to take succeed, where it wouldn't otherwise. Therefore I was wondering if there an equivalent for the String.replaceAll method perhaps? Any ideas?
    Thanks very much,
    Ross Butler

    I'm having trouble believing that PATTERN and REPLACEMENT are the real string you're using, but it's probably not important, since it sounds like you probably diagnosed the problem yourself.
    According to the Javadocs, replaceAll gives the same result as Pattern.compile(regex).matcher(str).replaceAll(repl), but obviously that wouldn't necessarily be true if you add extra parameters somewhere in there, so I would say that replaceAll is more of a convenience method that you use when you don't need any extra parameters.
    However, if you need to use DOTALL or something else similar, you'll need the longer way using Matcher.
    That shouldn't stop you from writing your own convenience method, though. :)

  • String.replaceAll problem

    I need to replace a single quote ( ' ) in a string with two single quotes. I am trying to use String.replaceAll method but it does not work. I guess my regular expression is not correct. I have tried several combinations already.
    text.replaceAll(".'.","''");
    text.replaceAll("'","''");
    text.replaceAll("\\'","''"); None of them have worked. It does not change the text as I'd like it to.

    It's been at least a week since I've posted this:
    Since regex patterns are involved, you can use the simpler replace method:
    str = str.replace("'", "''");By the way, I hope you not doing this to insert text into a database!

  • Trouble with String.replaceAll( )

    Hi,
    I have a string which contains instances of the backslash character followed by the double quote character and I'd like to replace those two characters with just a double quote. Or to put it slightly differently, I'd like to remove all backslash characters which precede double quotes. It seems like this should be straight-forward, but for some reason, I'm not getting the results I expect.
    Here is my code:
              String s1 = "Foo\\\"Bar";
              System.out.println("s1 = " + s1);
              int len = s1.length( );
              System.out.println("s1.length( ) = " + len);
              String s2 = s1.replaceAll("\\\"", "\"");
              System.out.println("s2 = " + s2);
              len = s2.length( );
              System.out.println("s2.length( ) = " + len);
    And here is the corresponding output:
    s1 = Foo\"Bar
    s1.length( ) = 8
    s2 = Foo\"Bar
    s2.length( ) = 8
    So, the string isn't being changed at all. What am I doing wrong? Thanks in advance for any replies.
    -ts1971

    Melanie_Green wrote:
    string.replaceAll()Takes two arguments, the first is a regular expression, the second is a String. Regular expressions have their own syntax compared to Strings, to match a single black slash in a regular expression you must write "\\\\".
    MelJust a little nit-pick: the second parameter is not a plain String but a "regex replacement String". In it, the following characters have a special meaning and therefore need to be escaped if you'd like to use them as literals:
    $    // used for match-group interpolation
    \    // used to escape '$' and '\' itself

  • String.replaceAll(String,"\\")

    Hello, i tried this here but strangely it does not work.
    The machine gives an ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException...
    Seems the method does not run with the "\" character. What did i do wrong?
    public class Zeichen {
         public static void main(String[] args) {
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         public Zeichen() {
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    The method header for the String.replaceAll() that you are trying to use is as follows
    public String replaceAll(String regex,
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    The string "i" that you are entering is not a regular expression, which are listed at http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.4/docs/api/java/util/regex/Pattern.html#sum

  • String.replaceAll strange behavior...

    I have found strange behavior of String.replaceAll method:
    "aaaabaaaa".replaceAll("b","a"); // working fine
    "aaaabaaaa".replaceAll("b","a${"); // throws an exceptionThat could be probably a bug?
    p.s. using jdk_1.6.0_12-b04

    Welcome to the Sun forums.
    >
    "aaaabaaaa".replaceAll("b","a${"); // throws an exception
    Please always copy/paste the [exact error message|http://pscode.org/javafaq.html#exact]. We do not have crystal ball, and cannot see the output on your PC.
    >
    That could be probably a bug? >(chuckle) It has more to do with special characters in Strings, that need to be escaped. I am not up on the fine details, but try this code.
    import javax.swing.*;
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