Possible Duplicate:
Java Regex Replace with Capturing Group
Is there any way to replace a regexp with modified content of capture group?
Example:
Pattern regex = Pattern.compile("(\\d{1,2})");
Matcher regexMatcher = regex.matcher(text);
resultString = regexMatcher.replaceAll("$1"); // *3 ??
And I'd like to replace all occurrence with $1 multiplied by 3.
edit:
Looks like, something's wrong :(
If I use
Pattern regex = Pattern.compile("(\\d{1,2})");
Matcher regexMatcher = regex.matcher("12 54 1 65");
try {
String resultString = regexMatcher.replaceAll(regexMatcher.group(1));
} catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
It throws an IllegalStateException: No match found
But
Pattern regex = Pattern.compile("(\\d{1,2})");
Matcher regexMatcher = regex.matcher("12 54 1 65");
try {
String resultString = regexMatcher.replaceAll("$1");
} catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
works fine, but I can't change the $1 :(
edit2:
Now, it's working :)
The definitive solution to this problem was posted by Elliott Hughes on his blog a couple years ago. Elliott keeps introducing pointless dependencies to other classes in the online version, so I'll post a stand-alone version here (the dependencies are only in the tests in the main() method).
import java.util.regex.*;
/**
* A Rewriter does a global substitution in the strings passed to its
* 'rewrite' method. It uses the pattern supplied to its constructor, and is
* like 'String.replaceAll' except for the fact that its replacement strings
* are generated by invoking a method you write, rather than from another
* string. This class is supposed to be equivalent to Ruby's 'gsub' when
* given a block. This is the nicest syntax I've managed to come up with in
* Java so far. It's not too bad, and might actually be preferable if you
* want to do the same rewriting to a number of strings in the same method
* or class. See the example 'main' for a sample of how to use this class.
*
* @author Elliott Hughes
*/
public abstract class Rewriter
{
private Pattern pattern;
private Matcher matcher;
/**
* Constructs a rewriter using the given regular expression; the syntax is
* the same as for 'Pattern.compile'.
*/
public Rewriter(String regex)
{
this.pattern = Pattern.compile(regex);
}
/**
* Returns the input subsequence captured by the given group during the
* previous match operation.
*/
public String group(int i)
{
return matcher.group(i);
}
/**
* Overridden to compute a replacement for each match. Use the method
* 'group' to access the captured groups.
*/
public abstract String replacement();
/**
* Returns the result of rewriting 'original' by invoking the method
* 'replacement' for each match of the regular expression supplied to the
* constructor.
*/
public String rewrite(CharSequence original)
{
this.matcher = pattern.matcher(original);
StringBuffer result = new StringBuffer(original.length());
while (matcher.find())
{
matcher.appendReplacement(result, "");
result.append(replacement());
}
matcher.appendTail(result);
return result.toString();
}
public static void main(String... args) throws Exception
{
String str = "12 54 1 65";
// anonymous subclass
Rewriter tripler = new Rewriter("(\\d{1,2})")
{
public String replacement()
{
int intValue = Integer.valueOf(group(1));
return String.valueOf(intValue * 3);
}
};
System.out.println(tripler.rewrite(str));
// inline subclass
System.out.println(new Rewriter("(\\d{1,2})")
{
public String replacement()
{
int intValue = Integer.valueOf(group(1));
return String.valueOf(intValue * 3);
}
}.rewrite(str));
}
}
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