A regular expression is a sequence of characters that forms a search pattern.
The search pattern can be used for text search and text replace operations.
A regular expression is a sequence of characters that forms a search pattern.
When you search for data in a text, you can use this search pattern to describe what you are searching for.
A regular expression can be a single character, or a more complicated pattern.
Regular expressions can be used to perform all types of text search and text replace operations.
Syntax
See this example:
Example explained:
/indexsolutions/i is a regular expression.
indexsolutions is a pattern (to be used in a search).
i is a modifier (modifies the search to be case-insensitive).
In JavaScript, regular expressions are often used with the two string methods: search() and replace().
The search() method uses an expression to search for a match, and returns the position of the match.
The replace() method returns a modified string where the pattern is replaced.
Use a regular expression to do a case-insensitive search for "indexsolutions" in a string:
See this example:
Output:
The search method will also accept a string as search argument. The string argument will be converted to a regular expression:
Use a string to do a search for "indexsolutions" in a string:
See this example:
Use a case insensitive regular expression to replace Microsoft with indexsolutions in a string:
See this example:
Output:
The replace() method will also accept a string as search argument:
Modifiers can be used to perform case-insensitive more global searches:
Modifier | Description |
---|---|
i | Perform case-insensitive matching |
g | Perform a global match (find all matches rather than stopping after the first match) |
m | Perform multiline matching |
Brackets are used to find a range of characters:
Expression | Description |
---|---|
[abc] | Find any of the characters between the brackets |
[0-9] | Find any of the digits between the brackets |
(x|y) | Find any of the alternatives separated with | |
Metacharacters are characters with a special meaning:
Metacharacter | Description |
---|---|
\d | Find a digit |
\s | Find a whitespace character |
\b | Find a match at the beginning or at the end of a word |
\uxxxx | Find the Unicode character specified by the hexadecimal number xxxx |
Quantifiers define quantities:
Quantifier | Description |
---|---|
n+ | Matches any string that contains at least one n |
n* | Matches any string that contains zero or more occurrences of n |
n? | Matches any string that contains zero or one occurrences of n |
In JavaScript, the RegExp object is a regular expression object with predefined properties and methods.
The test() method is a RegExp expression method.
It searches a string for a pattern, and returns true or false, depending on the result.
The following example searches a string for the character "e":
See this example:
Since there is an "e" in the string, the output of the code above will be:
You don't have to put the regular expression in a variable first. The two lines above can be shortened to one:
The exec() method is a RegExp expression method.
It searches a string for a specified pattern, and returns the found text.
If no match is found, it returns null.
The following example searches a string for the character "e":
See this example:
Since there is an "e" in the string, the output of the code above will be: