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Home/ Questions/Q 846389
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T06:36:20+00:00 2026-05-15T06:36:20+00:00

Let’s say I have this code: val string = one493two483three val pattern = two(\d+)three.r

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Let’s say I have this code:

val string = "one493two483three"
val pattern = """two(\d+)three""".r
pattern.findAllIn(string).foreach(println)

I expected findAllIn to only return 483, but instead, it returned two483three. I know I could use unapply to extract only that part, but I’d have to have a pattern for the entire string, something like:

 val pattern = """one.*two(\d+)three""".r
 val pattern(aMatch) = string
 println(aMatch) // prints 483

Is there another way of achieving this, without using the classes from java.util directly, and without using unapply?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T06:36:21+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 6:36 am

    Here’s an example of how you can access group(1) of each match:

    val string = "one493two483three"
    val pattern = """two(\d+)three""".r
    pattern.findAllIn(string).matchData foreach {
       m => println(m.group(1))
    }
    

    This prints "483" (as seen on ideone.com).


    The lookaround option

    Depending on the complexity of the pattern, you can also use lookarounds to only match the portion you want. It’ll look something like this:

    val string = "one493two483three"
    val pattern = """(?<=two)\d+(?=three)""".r
    pattern.findAllIn(string).foreach(println)
    

    The above also prints "483" (as seen on ideone.com).

    References

    • regular-expressions.info/Lookarounds
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