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Match.NextMatch Method

Definition

Returns a new Match object with the results for the next match, starting at the position at which the last match ended (at the character after the last matched character).

public:
 System::Text::RegularExpressions::Match ^ NextMatch();
public System.Text.RegularExpressions.Match NextMatch ();
member this.NextMatch : unit -> System.Text.RegularExpressions.Match
Public Function NextMatch () As Match

Returns

The next regular expression match.

Exceptions

A time-out occurred.

Examples

The following example uses the NextMatch method to capture regular expression matches beyond the first match.

#using <System.dll>

using namespace System;
using namespace System::Text::RegularExpressions;
void main()
{
   
   String^ text = "One car red car blue car";
   String^ pat = "(\\w+)\\s+(car)";
   
   // Compile the regular expression.
   Regex^ r = gcnew Regex( pat,RegexOptions::IgnoreCase );
   
   // Match the regular expression pattern against a text string.
   Match^ m = r->Match(text);
   int matchCount = 0;
   while ( m->Success )
   {
      Console::WriteLine( "Match{0}", ++matchCount );
      for ( int i = 1; i <= 2; i++ )
      {
         Group^ g = m->Groups[ i ];
         Console::WriteLine( "Group{0}='{1}'", i, g );
         CaptureCollection^ cc = g->Captures;
         for ( int j = 0; j < cc->Count; j++ )
         {
            Capture^ c = cc[ j ];
            System::Console::WriteLine( "Capture{0}='{1}', Position={2}", j, c, c->Index );
         }
      }
      m = m->NextMatch();
   }
}  
// This example displays the following output:
//       Match1
//       Group1='One'
//       Capture0='One', Position=0
//       Group2='car'
//       Capture0='car', Position=4
//       Match2
//       Group1='red'
//       Capture0='red', Position=8
//       Group2='car'
//       Capture0='car', Position=12
//       Match3
//       Group1='blue'
//       Capture0='blue', Position=16
//       Group2='car'
//       Capture0='car', Position=21
using System;
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;

class Example
{
   static void Main()
   {
      string text = "One car red car blue car";
      string pat = @"(\w+)\s+(car)";

      // Instantiate the regular expression object.
      Regex r = new Regex(pat, RegexOptions.IgnoreCase);

      // Match the regular expression pattern against a text string.
      Match m = r.Match(text);
      int matchCount = 0;
      while (m.Success)
      {
         Console.WriteLine("Match"+ (++matchCount));
         for (int i = 1; i <= 2; i++)
         {
            Group g = m.Groups[i];
            Console.WriteLine("Group"+i+"='" + g + "'");
            CaptureCollection cc = g.Captures;
            for (int j = 0; j < cc.Count; j++)
            {
               Capture c = cc[j];
               System.Console.WriteLine("Capture"+j+"='" + c + "', Position="+c.Index);
            }
         }
         m = m.NextMatch();
      }
   }
}
// This example displays the following output:
//       Match1
//       Group1='One'
//       Capture0='One', Position=0
//       Group2='car'
//       Capture0='car', Position=4
//       Match2
//       Group1='red'
//       Capture0='red', Position=8
//       Group2='car'
//       Capture0='car', Position=12
//       Match3
//       Group1='blue'
//       Capture0='blue', Position=16
//       Group2='car'
//       Capture0='car', Position=21
Imports System.Text.RegularExpressions

Module Example
   Public Sub Main()
      Dim text As String = "One car red car blue car"
      Dim pattern As String = "(\w+)\s+(car)"

      ' Instantiate the regular expression object.
      Dim r As Regex = new Regex(pattern, RegexOptions.IgnoreCase)

      ' Match the regular expression pattern against a text string.
      Dim m As Match = r.Match(text)
      Dim matchcount as Integer = 0
      Do While m.Success
         matchCount += 1
         Console.WriteLine("Match" & (matchCount))
         Dim i As Integer
         For i = 1 to 2
            Dim g as Group = m.Groups(i)
            Console.WriteLine("Group" & i & "='" & g.ToString() & "'")
            Dim cc As CaptureCollection = g.Captures
            Dim j As Integer 
            For j = 0 to cc.Count - 1
              Dim c As Capture = cc(j)
               Console.WriteLine("Capture" & j & "='" & c.ToString() _
                  & "', Position=" & c.Index)
            Next 
         Next 
         m = m.NextMatch()
      Loop
   End Sub
End Module
' This example displays the following output:
'       Match1
'       Group1='One'
'       Capture0='One', Position=0
'       Group2='car'
'       Capture0='car', Position=4
'       Match2
'       Group1='red'
'       Capture0='red', Position=8
'       Group2='car'
'       Capture0='car', Position=12
'       Match3
'       Group1='blue'
'       Capture0='blue', Position=16
'       Group2='car'
'       Capture0='car', Position=21

Remarks

This method is similar to calling Regex.Match(String, Int32) again and passing (Index+Length) as the new starting position.

Note

This method does not modify the current instance. Instead, it returns a new Match object that contains information about the next match.

Attempting to retrieve the next match may throw a RegexMatchTimeoutException if a time-out value for matching operations is in effect and the attempt to find the next match exceeds that time-out interval.

Notes to Callers

When a match attempt is repeated by calling the NextMatch() method, the regular expression engine gives empty matches special treatment. Usually, NextMatch() begins the search for the next match exactly where the previous match left off. However, after an empty match, the NextMatch() method advances by one character before trying the next match. This behavior guarantees that the regular expression engine will progress through the string. Otherwise, because an empty match does not result in any forward movement, the next match would start in exactly the same place as the previous match, and it would match the same empty string repeatedly.

The following example provides an illustration. The regular expression pattern a* searches for zero or more occurrences of the letter "a" in the string "abaabb". As the output from the example shows, the search finds six matches. The first match attempt finds the first "a". The second match starts exactly where the first match ends, before the first b; it finds zero occurrences of "a" and returns an empty string. The third match does not begin exactly where the second match ended, because the second match returned an empty string. Instead, it begins one character later, after the first "b". The third match finds two occurrences of "a" and returns "aa". The fourth match attempt begins where the third match ended, before the second "b", and returns an empty string. The fifth match attempt again advances one character so that it begins before the third "b" and returns an empty string. The sixth match begins after the last "b" and returns an empty string again.

using System;
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;

public class Example
{
   public static void Main()
   {
      string pattern = "a*";
      string input = "abaabb";
      
      Match m = Regex.Match(input, pattern);
      while (m.Success) {
         Console.WriteLine("'{0}' found at index {1}.", 
                           m.Value, m.Index);
         m = m.NextMatch();
      }
   }
}
// The example displays the following output:
//       'a' found at index 0.
//       '' found at index 1.
//       'aa' found at index 2.
//       '' found at index 4.
//       '' found at index 5.
//       '' found at index 6.
Imports System.Text.RegularExpressions

Module Example
   Public Sub Main()
      Dim pattern As String = "a*"
      Dim input As String = "abaabb"
      
      Dim m As Match = Regex.Match(input, pattern)
      Do While m.Success
         Console.WriteLine("'{0}' found at index {1}.", 
                           m.Value, m.Index)
         m = m.NextMatch()
      Loop         
   End Sub
End Module
' The example displays the following output:
'       'a' found at index 0.
'       '' found at index 1.
'       'aa' found at index 2.
'       '' found at index 4.
'       '' found at index 5.
'       '' found at index 6.

Applies to