String matches() Method in Java with Examples
Variants of matches() method is used to tell more precisely not test whether the given string matches to a regular expression or not as whenever this method is called in itself as matches() or be it matches() where here we do pass two arguments that are our string and regular expression, the working and output remains same.
There exist multiple variants three variants of the matches() method as listed and described below as follows:
Variant 1: String matches()
This method tells whether or not this string matches the given regular expression. An invocation of this method of the form str.matches(regex) yields exactly the same result as the expression Pattern.matches(regex, str).
Syntax:
public boolean matches(String regex)
Parameters: The regular expression to which this string is to be matched.
Return Type: Boolean value, returning true if and only if strings match the given regular expression else false.
Example:
Java
// Java Program to Demonstrate Working of matches() Method // of String class // Main class public class GFG { // Main driver method public static void main(String args[]) { // Declaring and initializing a string // Input string String Str = new String( "Welcome to geeksforgeeks" ); // Display message for better readability System.out.print( "Does String contains regex (.*)geeks(.*) ? : " ); // Testing if regex is present or not System.out.println(Str.matches( "(.*)geeks(.*)" )); // Display message for better readability System.out.print( "Does String contains regex geeks ? : " ); // Testing if regex is present or not System.out.println(Str.matches( "geeks" )); } } |
Does String contains regex (.*)geeks(.*) ? : true Does String contains regex geeks ? : false
Variant 2: String regionMatches()
This method has two variants that can be used to test if two string regions are equal.
Syntax:
public boolean regionMatches(int str_strt, String other, int other_strt,int len)
Parameters:
- The starting offset of the subregion in this string
- The string argument
- The starting offset of the subregion in the string argument
- The number of characters to compare
Return Type: Boolean value, true if the specified subregion of this string matches the specified subregion of the string argument; false otherwise.
Example:
Java
// Java Program to Demonstrate Working of regionmatches() // method of String class // Main class public class GFG { // Main driver method public static void main(String args[]) { // Declaring and initializing a string String Str1 = new String( "Welcome to geeksforgeeks" ); // Initializing test string String Str2 = new String( "GEEKS" ); // Tests whether GEEKS starts in geeksforgeeks // starting from pos 11 and // compares 5 characters of GEEKS System.out.print( "Checking if GEEKS is in geeksforgeeks( case sensitive ) : " ); System.out.println( Str1.regionMatches( 11 , Str2, 0 , 5 )); } } |
Checking if GEEKS is in geeksforgeeks( case sensitive ) : false
Variant 3: String regionMatches() With ignoreCase
This method has two variants that can be used to test if two string regions are equal.
Syntax:
public boolean regionMatches(boolean ignoreCase, int str_strt, String other, int other_strt,int len)
Parameters:
- The starting offset of the subregion in this string
- The string argument
- The starting offset of the subregion in the string argument
- The number of characters to compare
- ignoreCase: if true, ignore the case when comparing characters
Return Type: It returns true if the specified subregion of this string matches the specified subregion of the string argument; false otherwise. Whether the matching is exact or case insensitive depends on the ignoreCase argument.
Example:
Java
// Java Program to Demonstrate Working of regionmatches() // Main class public class GFG { // Main driver method public static void main(String args[]) { // Declaring and initializing a string String Str1 = new String( "Welcome to geeksforgeeks" ); // Initializing a test string String Str2 = new String( "GEEKS" ); // Tests whether GEEKS starts in geeksforgeeks starting from pos 11 // and from 0 ( i.e starting in GEEKS) and ignores case // and compares 5 characters of GEEKS System.out.print( "Checking if GEEKS is in geeksforgeeks( case insensitive ) : " ); System.out.println(Str1.regionMatches( true , 11 , Str2, 0 , 5 )); } } |
Output:
Checking if GEEKS is in geeksforgeeks( case insensitive ) : true
This article is contributed by Astha Tyagi. If you like GeeksforGeeks and would like to contribute, you can also write an article using write.geeksforgeeks.org or mail your article to review-team@geeksforgeeks.org. See your article appearing on the GeeksforGeeks main page and help other Geeks. Please write comments if you find anything incorrect, or you want to share more information about the topic discussed above.
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