APatternSyntaxException
is an unchecked exception that indicates a syntax error in a regular expression pattern. ThePatternSyntaxException
class provides the following methods to help you determine what went wrong:The following source code,
public String getDescription()
: Retrieves the description of the error.public int getIndex()
: Retrieves the error index.public String getPattern()
: Retrieves the erroneous regular expression pattern.public String getMessage()
: Returns a multi-line string containing the description of the syntax error and its index, the erroneous regular-expression pattern, and a visual indication of the error index within the pattern.RegexTestHarness2.java
, updates our test harness to check for malformed regular expressions:To run this test, enterimport java.io.Console; import java.util.regex.Pattern; import java.util.regex.Matcher; import java.util.regex.PatternSyntaxException; public class RegexTestHarness2 { public static void main(String[] args){ Pattern pattern = null; Matcher matcher = null; Console console = System.console(); if (console == null) { System.err.println("No console."); System.exit(1); } while (true) { try{ pattern = Pattern.compile(console.readLine("%nEnter your regex: ")); matcher = pattern.matcher(console.readLine("Enter input string to search: ")); } catch(PatternSyntaxException pse){ console.format("There is a problem with the regular expression!%n"); console.format("The pattern in question is: %s%n",pse.getPattern()); console.format("The description is: %s%n",pse.getDescription()); console.format("The message is: %s%n",pse.getMessage()); console.format("The index is: %s%n",pse.getIndex()); System.exit(0); } boolean found = false; while (matcher.find()) { console.format("I found the text \"%s\" starting at " + "index %d and ending at index %d.%n", matcher.group(), matcher.start(), matcher.end()); found = true; } if(!found){ console.format("No match found.%n"); } } } }?i)foo
as the regular expression. This mistake is a common scenario in which the programmer has forgotten the opening parenthesis in the embedded flag expression(?i)
. Doing so will produce the following results:From this output, we can see that the syntax error is a dangling metacharacter (the question mark) at index 0. A missing opening parenthesis is the culprit.Enter your regex: ?i) There is a problem with the regular expression! The pattern in question is: ?i) The description is: Dangling meta character '?' The message is: Dangling meta character '?' near index 0 ?i) ^ The index is: 0