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Trail: Bonus
Lesson: Regular Expressions

Capturing Groups

In the previous section (in the Bonus trail), we saw how quantifiers attach to one character, character class, or capturing group at a time. But until now, we have not discussed the notion of capturing groups in any detail.

Capturing groups are a way to treat multiple characters as a single unit. They are created by placing the characters to be grouped inside a set of parentheses. For example, the regular expression (dog) creates a single group containing the letters "d" "o" and "g". The portion of the input string that matches the capturing group will be saved in memory for later recall via backreferences (as discussed below in the section, Backreferences).

Numbering

As described in the Pattern (in the API reference documentation) API, capturing groups are numbered by counting their opening parentheses from left to right. In the expression ((A)(B(C))), for example, there are four such groups:
  1. ((A)(B(C)))
  2. (A)
  3. (B(C))
  4. (C)
To find out how many groups are present in the expression, call the groupCount method on a matcher object. The groupCount method returns an int showing the number of capturing groups present in the matcher's pattern. In this example, groupCount would return the number 4, showing that the pattern contains 4 capturing groups.

There is also a special group, group 0, which always represents the entire expression. This group is not included in the total reported by groupCount. Also note that groups beginning with (? are pure, non-capturing groups that do not capture text and do not count towards the group total. (You'll see examples of non-capturing groups later in the section Methods of the Pattern Class (in the Bonus trail).)

It's important to understand how groups are numbered because some Matcher methods accept an int specifying a particular group number as a parameter:

Backreferences

The section of the input string matching the capturing group(s) is saved in memory for later recall via a backreference. A backreference is specified in the regular expression as a backslash (\) followed by a digit indicating the number of the group to be recalled. For example, the expression (\d\d) defines one capturing group matching two digits in a row, which can be recalled later in the expression via the backreference \1.

To match any 2 digits, followed by the exact same two digits, you would use (\d\d)\1 as the regular expression:

 
Current REGEX is: (\d\d)\1
Current INPUT is: 1212
I found the text "1212" starting at index 0 and ending at index 4.
If you change the last two digits and the match will fail:
 
Current REGEX is: (\d\d)\1
Current INPUT is: 1234
No match found.
For nested capturing groups, backreferencing works in exactly the same way: Specify a backslash followed by the number of the group to be recalled.


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