string.match(regexp) → null/object
Match a string against a regular expression. If there is a match, returns an object with the fields:
str
: The matched stringstart
: The matched string’s startend
: The matched string’s endgroups
: The capture groups defined with parenthesesIf no match is found, returns null
.
Accepts RE2 syntax. You can enable case-insensitive matching by prefixing the regular expression with (?i)
. See the linked RE2 documentation for more flags.
The match
command does not support backreferences.
Example: Get all users whose name starts with “A”. Because null
evaluates to false
in filter, you can use the result of match
for the predicate.
r.table("users").filter(doc -> doc.g("name").match("^A")).run(conn);
Example: Get all users whose name ends with “n.”
r.table("users").filter(doc -> doc.g("name").match("n$")).run(conn);
Example: Get all users whose name contains “li.”
r.table("users").filter(doc -> doc.g("name").match("li")).run(conn);
Example: Get all users whose name is “John,” performing a case-insensitive search.
r.table("users").filter(doc -> doc.g("name").match("(?i)^john$")).run(conn);
Example: Retrieve the domain of a basic email.
r.expr("[email protected]").match(".*@(.*)").run(conn);
Result:
{ "start": 0, "end": 20, "str": "[email protected]", "groups": [ { "end": 17, "start": 7, "str": "domain.com" } ] }
You can then retrieve only the domain with g() and nth.
r.expr("[email protected]").match(".*@(.*)").g("groups").nth(0) .g("str").run(conn);
Returns domain.com
.
Example: A failure to parse out the domain name will return null
.
r.expr("name[at]domain.com").match(".*@(.*)").run(conn);
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https://rethinkdb.com/api/java/match/