Difference between matches() and find() in Java Regex
I am trying to understand the difference between matches()
and find()
.
According to the Javadoc, (from what I understand), matches()
will search the entire string even if it finds what it is looking for, and find()
will stop when it finds what it is looking for.
If that assumption is correct, I cannot see whenever you would want to use matches()
instead of find()
, unless you want to count the number of matches it finds.
In my opinion the String class should then have find()
instead of matches()
as an inbuilt method.
So to summarize:
- Is my assumption correct?
- When is it useful to use
matches()
instead offind()
?
matches
tries to match the expression against the entire string and implicitly add a ^
at the start and $
at the end of your pattern, meaning it will not look for a substring. Hence the output of this code:
public static void main(String[] args) throws ParseException {
Pattern p = Pattern.compile("\\d\\d\\d");
Matcher m = p.matcher("a123b");
System.out.println(m.find());
System.out.println(m.matches());
p = Pattern.compile("^\\d\\d\\d$");
m = p.matcher("123");
System.out.println(m.find());
System.out.println(m.matches());
}
/* output:
true
false
true
true
*/
123
is a substring of a123b
so the find()
method outputs true. matches()
only 'sees' a123b
which is not the same as 123
and thus outputs false.
matches
returns true if the whole string matches the given pattern. find
tries to find a substring that matches the pattern.
-
matches()
- will only return true if the full string is matched -
find()
- will try to find the next occurrence within the substring that matches the regex.
Note the emphasis on "the next" in case of find()
. That means, the result of calling find()
multiple times might not be the same. In addition, by using find()
you can call start()
to return the position the substring was matched.
Example
final Matcher subMatcher = Pattern.compile("\\d+").matcher("skrf35kesruytfkwu4ty7sdfs");
System.out.println("Found: " + subMatcher.matches());
System.out.println("Found: " + subMatcher.find() + " - position " + subMatcher.start());
System.out.println("Found: " + subMatcher.find() + " - position " + subMatcher.start());
System.out.println("Found: " + subMatcher.find() + " - position " + subMatcher.start());
System.out.println("Found: " + subMatcher.find());
System.out.println("Found: " + subMatcher.find());
System.out.println("Matched: " + subMatcher.matches());
System.out.println("-----------");
final Matcher fullMatcher = Pattern.compile("^\\w+$").matcher("skrf35kesruytfkwu4ty7sdfs");
System.out.println("Found: " + fullMatcher.find() + " - position " + fullMatcher.start());
System.out.println("Found: " + fullMatcher.find());
System.out.println("Found: " + fullMatcher.find());
System.out.println("Matched: " + fullMatcher.matches());
System.out.println("Matched: " + fullMatcher.matches());
System.out.println("Matched: " + fullMatcher.matches());
System.out.println("Matched: " + fullMatcher.matches());
Output
Found: false
Found: true - position 4
Found: true - position 17
Found: true - position 20
Found: false
Found: false
Matched: false
-----------
Found: true - position 0
Found: false
Found: false
Matched: true
Matched: true
Matched: true
Matched: true
So, be careful when calling find()
multiple times if the Matcher
object was not reset, even when the regex is surrounded with ^
and $
to match the full string.