scala.util.matching

Type members

Classlikes

@SerialVersionUID(-2094783597747625537L)
class Regex extends Serializable

A regular expression is used to determine whether a string matches a pattern and, if it does, to extract or transform the parts that match.

A regular expression is used to determine whether a string matches a pattern and, if it does, to extract or transform the parts that match.

Usage

This class delegates to the java.util.regex package of the Java Platform. See the documentation for java.util.regex.Pattern for details about the regular expression syntax for pattern strings.

An instance of Regex represents a compiled regular expression pattern. Since compilation is expensive, frequently used Regexes should be constructed once, outside of loops and perhaps in a companion object.

The canonical way to create a Regex is by using the method r, provided implicitly for strings:

val date = raw"(\d{4})-(\d{2})-(\d{2})".r

Since escapes are not processed in multi-line string literals, using triple quotes avoids having to escape the backslash character, so that "\\d" can be written """\d""". The same result is achieved with certain interpolators, such as raw"\d".r or a custom interpolator r"\d" that also compiles the Regex.

Extraction

To extract the capturing groups when a Regex is matched, use it as an extractor in a pattern match:

"2004-01-20" match {
  case date(year, month, day) => s"$year was a good year for PLs."
}

To check only whether the Regex matches, ignoring any groups, use a sequence wildcard:

"2004-01-20" match {
  case date(_*) => "It's a date!"
}

That works because a Regex extractor produces a sequence of strings. Extracting only the year from a date could also be expressed with a sequence wildcard:

"2004-01-20" match {
  case date(year, _*) => s"$year was a good year for PLs."
}

In a pattern match, Regex normally matches the entire input. However, an unanchored Regex finds the pattern anywhere in the input.

val embeddedDate = date.unanchored
"Date: 2004-01-20 17:25:18 GMT (10 years, 28 weeks, 5 days, 17 hours and 51 minutes ago)" match {
  case embeddedDate("2004", "01", "20") => "A Scala is born."
}

Find Matches

To find or replace matches of the pattern, use the various find and replace methods. For each method, there is a version for working with matched strings and another for working with Match objects.

For example, pattern matching with an unanchored Regex, as in the previous example, can also be accomplished using findFirstMatchIn. The findFirst methods return an Option which is non-empty if a match is found, or None for no match:

val dates = "Important dates in history: 2004-01-20, 1958-09-05, 2010-10-06, 2011-07-15"
val firstDate = date.findFirstIn(dates).getOrElse("No date found.")
val firstYear = for (m <- date.findFirstMatchIn(dates)) yield m.group(1)

To find all matches:

val allYears = for (m <- date.findAllMatchIn(dates)) yield m.group(1)

To check whether input is matched by the regex:

date.matches("2018-03-01")                     // true
date.matches("Today is 2018-03-01")            // false
date.unanchored.matches("Today is 2018-03-01") // true

To iterate over the matched strings, use findAllIn, which returns a special iterator that can be queried for the MatchData of the last match:

val mi = date.findAllIn(dates)
while (mi.hasNext) {
  val d = mi.next
  if (mi.group(1).toInt < 1960) println(s"$d: An oldie but goodie.")
}

Although the MatchIterator returned by findAllIn is used like any Iterator, with alternating calls to hasNext and next, hasNext has the additional side effect of advancing the underlying matcher to the next unconsumed match. This effect is visible in the MatchData representing the "current match".

val r = "(ab+c)".r
val s = "xxxabcyyyabbczzz"
r.findAllIn(s).start    // 3
val mi = r.findAllIn(s)
mi.hasNext              // true
mi.start                // 3
mi.next()               // "abc"
mi.start                // 3
mi.hasNext              // true
mi.start                // 9
mi.next()               // "abbc"

The example shows that methods on MatchData such as start will advance to the first match, if necessary. It also shows that hasNext will advance to the next unconsumed match, if next has already returned the current match.

The current MatchData can be captured using the matchData method. Alternatively, findAllMatchIn returns an Iterator[Match], where there is no interaction between the iterator and Match objects it has already produced.

Note that findAllIn finds matches that don't overlap. (See findAllIn for more examples.)

val num = raw"(\d+)".r
val all = num.findAllIn("123").toList  // List("123"), not List("123", "23", "3")

Replace Text

Text replacement can be performed unconditionally or as a function of the current match:

val redacted    = date.replaceAllIn(dates, "XXXX-XX-XX")
val yearsOnly   = date.replaceAllIn(dates, m => m.group(1))
val months      = (0 to 11).map { i => val c = Calendar.getInstance; c.set(2014, i, 1); f"$c%tb" }
val reformatted = date.replaceAllIn(dates, _ match { case date(y,m,d) => f"${months(m.toInt - 1)} $d, $y" })

Pattern matching the Match against the Regex that created it does not reapply the Regex. In the expression for reformatted, each date match is computed once. But it is possible to apply a Regex to a Match resulting from a different pattern:

val docSpree = """2011(?:-\d{2}){2}""".r
val docView  = date.replaceAllIn(dates, _ match {
  case docSpree() => "Historic doc spree!"
  case _          => "Something else happened"
})
Value parameters:
groupNames

A mapping from names to indices in capture groups

pattern

The compiled pattern

See also:
Companion:
object
Source:
Regex.scala
object Regex

This object defines inner classes that describe regex matches and helper objects.

This object defines inner classes that describe regex matches and helper objects.

Companion:
class
Source:
Regex.scala
trait UnanchoredRegex extends Regex

A Regex that finds the first match when used in a pattern match.

A Regex that finds the first match when used in a pattern match.

See also:
Source:
Regex.scala