The replaceAll()
method replaces each substring that matches the regex of the string with the specified text.
Example
class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
String str1 = "Java123is456fun";
// regex for sequence of digits
String regex = "\\d+";
// replace all occurrences of numeric
// digits by a space
System.out.println(str1.replaceAll(regex, " "));
}
}
// Output: Java is fun
Syntax of replaceAll()
The syntax of the replaceAll()
method is:
string.replaceAll(String regex, String replacement)
Here, string is an object of the String
class.
replaceAll() Parameters
The replaceAll()
method takes two parameters.
- regex - a regex (can be a typical string) that is to be replaced
- replacement - matching substrings are replaced with this string
replaceAll() Return Value
The replaceAll()
method
- returns a new string where each occurrence of the matching substring is replaced with the replacement string.
Example 1: Java String replaceAll()
class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
String str1 = "aabbaaac";
String str2 = "Learn223Java55@";
// regex for sequence of digits
String regex = "\\d+";
// all occurrences of "aa" is replaceAll with "zz"
System.out.println(str1.replaceAll("aa", "zz")); // zzbbzzac
// replace a digit or sequence of digits with a whitespace
System.out.println(str2.replaceAll(regex, " ")); // Learn Java @
}
}
In the above example, "\\d+"
is a regular expression that matches one or more digits.
Escaping Characters in replaceAll()
The replaceAll()
method can take a regex or a typical string as the first argument. It is because a typical string in itself is a regex.
In regex, there are characters that have special meaning. These metacharacters are:
\ ^ $ . | ? * + {} [] ()
If you need to match substring containing these metacharacters, you can either escape these characters using \
or use the replace()
method.
// Program to replace the + character
class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
String str1 = "+a-+b";
// replace "+" with "#" using replaceAll()
// need to escape "+"
System.out.println(str1.replaceAll("\\+", "#")); // #a-#b
// replace "+" with "#" using replace()
System.out.println(str1.replace("+", "#")); // #a-#b
}
}
As you can see, when we use the replace()
method, we do not need to escape metacharacters. To learn more, visit: Java String replace().
If you need to replace only the first occurrence of the matching substring, use the Java String replaceFirst() method.