Richard H
Richard H

Reputation: 39055

Regex starting with a zero length line and continuing across lines in Java

I want to match the following: a zero length line, with the match continuing across lines of non-zero length until a particular string is matched in a line. E.g: the match starts with a zero length line and continues until STOP is reached:

Some random text I don't care about

The match starts at the beginning of this line
The match continues across this line
The match stops here STOP more
text I don't care about

Any suggestions?

Thanks

Upvotes: 1

Views: 748

Answers (3)

Bart Kiers
Bart Kiers

Reputation: 170158

This should do it:

(?ms)^[ \t]*+$\s*+((?:(?!STOP).)*+)

A little demo:

import java.util.regex.Matcher;
import java.util.regex.Pattern;

public class Main { 
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        String text = "Some random text I don't care about"      + "\n" +
                ""                                               + "\n" +
                "The match starts at the beginning of this line" + "\n" +
                "The match continues across this line"           + "\n" +
                "The match stops here STOP more"                 + "\n" +
                "don't care about"                               + "\n" +
                ""                                               + "\n" +
                ""                                               + "\n" +
                ""                                               + "\n" +
                "foo"                                            + "\n" +
                "barSTOP"                                        + "\n" +
                "text I don't care about";
        Matcher m = Pattern.compile("(?ms)^[ \t]*+$\\s*+(?:(?!STOP).)*+").matcher(text);
        while(m.find()) {
            System.out.println("match ->"+m.group()+"<-");
        }
    }
}

which will output:

match ->
The match starts at the beginning of this line
The match continues across this line
The match stops here <-
match ->


foo
bar<-

A small explanation:

(?ms)               # enable mutli-line and dot-all
^[ \t]*+$           # match and empty line
\s*+                # match the line break
(                   # start group 1
  (?:(?!STOP).)     #   if the string 'STOP' cannot be seen, match any character
  *+                #   match the previous zero or more times (possessively)
)                   # stop group 1

Upvotes: 3

highlycaffeinated
highlycaffeinated

Reputation: 19867

(?ms)^$(.+)STOP

Upvotes: 0

rsp
rsp

Reputation: 23373

Making sure you set the "match multi-line" flag, the expression is "\\n(\\n.*STOP)". The first (and only) match group yields your result. On DOS and windows systems use "\\r\\n" in place of "\\n".

Upvotes: 0

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