files/en-us/web/javascript/reference/global_objects/regexp/index.md
The RegExp object is used for matching text with a pattern.
For an introduction to regular expressions, read the Regular expressions chapter in the JavaScript guide. For detailed information of regular expression syntax, read the regular expression reference.
There are two ways to create a RegExp object: a literal notation and a constructor.
RegExp object as its first parameter and a string of optional flags as its second parameter.The following three expressions create the same regular expression object:
const re = /ab+c/i; // literal notation
// OR
const re = new RegExp("ab+c", "i"); // constructor with string pattern as first argument
// OR
const re = new RegExp(/ab+c/, "i"); // constructor with regular expression literal as first argument
Before regular expressions can be used, they have to be compiled. This process allows them to perform matches more efficiently. More about the process can be found in dotnet docs.
The literal notation results in compilation of the regular expression when the expression is evaluated. On the other hand, the constructor of the RegExp object, new RegExp('ab+c'), results in runtime compilation of the regular expression.
Use a string as the first argument to the RegExp() constructor when you want to build the regular expression from dynamic input.
The expression new RegExp(/ab+c/, flags) will create a new RegExp using the source of the first parameter and the flags provided by the second.
When using the constructor function, the normal string escape rules (preceding special characters with \ when included in a string) are necessary.
For example, the following are equivalent:
const re = /\w+/;
// OR
const re = new RegExp("\\w+");
[!NOTE] Whether something is a "regex" can be duck-typed. It doesn't have to be a
RegExp!
Some built-in methods would treat regexes specially. They decide whether x is a regex through multiple steps:
x must be an object (not a primitive).x[Symbol.match] is not undefined, check if it's truthy.x[Symbol.match] is undefined, check if x had been created with the RegExp constructor. (This step should rarely happen, since if x is a RegExp object that have not been tampered with, it should have a Symbol.match property.)Note that in most cases, it would go through the Symbol.match check, which means:
RegExp object whose Symbol.match property's value is falsy but not undefined (even with everything else intact, like exec and [Symbol.replace]()) can be used as if it's not a regex.RegExp object with a Symbol.match property will be treated as if it's a regex.This choice was made because [Symbol.match]() is the most indicative property that something is intended to be used for matching. (exec could also be used, but because it's not a symbol property, there would be too many false positives.) The places that treat regexes specially include:
String.prototype.endsWith(), startsWith(), and includes() throw a {{jsxref("TypeError")}} if the first argument is a regex.String.prototype.matchAll() and replaceAll() check whether the global flag is set if the first argument is a regex before invoking its [Symbol.matchAll]() or [Symbol.replace]() method.RegExp() constructor directly returns the pattern argument only if pattern is a regex (among a few other conditions). If pattern is a regex, it would also interrogate pattern's source and flags properties instead of coercing pattern to a string.For example, String.prototype.endsWith() would coerce all inputs to strings, but it would throw if the argument is a regex, because it's only designed to match strings, and using a regex is likely a developer mistake.
"foobar".endsWith({ toString: () => "bar" }); // true
"foobar".endsWith(/bar/); // TypeError: First argument to String.prototype.endsWith must not be a regular expression
You can get around the check by setting [Symbol.match] to a falsy value that's not undefined. This would mean that the regex cannot be used for String.prototype.match() (since without [Symbol.match], match() would construct a new RegExp object with the two enclosing slashes added by re.toString()), but it can be used for virtually everything else.
const re = /bar/g;
re[Symbol.match] = false;
"/bar/g".endsWith(re); // true
re.exec("bar"); // [ 'bar', index: 0, input: 'bar', groups: undefined ]
"bar & bar".replace(re, "foo"); // 'foo & foo'
Note that several of the RegExp properties have both long and short (Perl-like) names. Both names always refer to the same value. (Perl is the programming language from which JavaScript modeled its regular expressions.) See also deprecated RegExp properties.
RegExp object.RegExp.$1, …, RegExp.$9 {{deprecated_inline}}
RegExp.input ($_) {{deprecated_inline}}
RegExp.lastMatch ($&) {{deprecated_inline}}
RegExp.lastParen ($+) {{deprecated_inline}}
RegExp.leftContext ($`) {{deprecated_inline}}
RegExp.rightContext ($') {{deprecated_inline}}
RegExp[Symbol.species]
These properties are defined on RegExp.prototype and shared by all RegExp instances.
RegExp instances, the initial value is the {{jsxref("RegExp/RegExp", "RegExp")}} constructor.. matches newlines or not.RegExp object.v flag, an upgrade to the u mode, is enabled.These properties are own properties of each RegExp instance.
RegExp.prototype[Symbol.match]()
RegExp.prototype[Symbol.matchAll]()
RegExp.prototype[Symbol.replace]()
RegExp.prototype[Symbol.search]()
RegExp.prototype[Symbol.split]()
The following script uses the {{jsxref("String.prototype.replace()")}} method to match a name in the format first last and output it in the format last, first.
In the replacement text, the script uses $1 and $2 to indicate the results of the corresponding matching parentheses in the regular expression pattern.
const re = /(\w+)\s(\w+)/;
const str = "Maria Cruz";
const newStr = str.replace(re, "$2, $1");
console.log(newStr);
This displays "Cruz, Maria".
The default line ending varies depending on the platform (Unix, Windows, etc.). The line splitting provided in this example works on all platforms.
const text = "Some text\nAnd some more\r\nAnd yet\nThis is the end";
const lines = text.split(/\r?\n/);
console.log(lines); // [ 'Some text', 'And some more', 'And yet', 'This is the end' ]
Note that the order of the patterns in the regular expression matters.
By default, the . character does not match newlines. To make it match newlines, use the s flag (dotAll mode).
const s = "Please yes\nmake my day!";
s.match(/yes.*day/);
// Returns null
s.match(/yes.*day/s);
// Returns ["yes\nmake my day"]
The {{jsxref("RegExp/sticky", "sticky")}} flag indicates that the regular expression performs sticky matching in the target string by attempting to match starting at {{jsxref("RegExp.prototype.lastIndex")}}.
const str = "#foo#";
const regex = /foo/y;
regex.lastIndex = 1;
regex.test(str); // true
regex.lastIndex = 5;
regex.test(str); // false (lastIndex is taken into account with sticky flag)
regex.lastIndex; // 0 (reset after match failure)
With the sticky flag y, the next match has to happen at the lastIndex position, while with the global flag g, the match can happen at the lastIndex position or later:
const re = /\d/y;
let r;
while ((r = re.exec("123 456"))) {
console.log(r, "AND re.lastIndex", re.lastIndex);
}
// [ '1', index: 0, input: '123 456', groups: undefined ] AND re.lastIndex 1
// [ '2', index: 1, input: '123 456', groups: undefined ] AND re.lastIndex 2
// [ '3', index: 2, input: '123 456', groups: undefined ] AND re.lastIndex 3
// … and no more match.
With the global flag g, all 6 digits would be matched, not just 3.
\w and \W only matches ASCII based characters; for example, a to z, A to Z, 0 to 9, and _.
To match characters from other languages such as Cyrillic or Hebrew, use \uHHHH, where HHHH is the character's Unicode value in hexadecimal.
This example demonstrates how one can separate out Unicode characters from a word.
const text = "Образец text на русском языке";
const regex = /[\u0400-\u04ff]+/g;
const match = regex.exec(text);
console.log(match[0]); // 'Образец'
console.log(regex.lastIndex); // 7
const match2 = regex.exec(text);
console.log(match2[0]); // 'на' (did not log 'text')
console.log(regex.lastIndex); // 15
// and so on
The Unicode property escapes feature provides a simpler way to target particular Unicode ranges, by allowing for statements like \p{scx=Cyrl} (to match any Cyrillic letter), or \p{L}/u (to match a letter from any language).
const url = "http://xxx.example.com";
console.log(/^https?:\/\/(.+?)\./.exec(url)[1]); // 'xxx'
[!NOTE] Instead of using regular expressions for parsing URLs, it is usually better to use the browsers built-in URL parser by using the URL API.
const breakfasts = ["bacon", "eggs", "oatmeal", "toast", "cereal"];
const order = "Let me get some bacon and eggs, please";
order.match(new RegExp(`\\b(${breakfasts.join("|")})\\b`, "g"));
// Returns ['bacon', 'eggs']
{{Specifications}}
{{Compat}}
Starting with Firefox 34, in the case of a capturing group with quantifiers preventing its exercise, the matched text for a capturing group is now undefined instead of an empty string:
// Firefox 33 or older
"x".replace(/x(.)?/g, (m, group) => {
console.log(`group: ${JSON.stringify(group)}`);
});
// group: ""
// Firefox 34 or newer
"x".replace(/x(.)?/g, (m, group) => {
console.log(`group: ${group}`);
});
// group: undefined
Note that due to web compatibility, RegExp.$N will still return an empty string instead of undefined (bug 1053944).
RegExp features (dotAll, sticky flags, named capture groups, etc.) in core-js