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# Patterns and flags
Regular expressions is a powerful way of searching and replacing inside a string.
In Javascript regular expressions are implemented using objects of a built-in `RegExp` class and integrated with strings.
Please note that regular expressions vary between programming languages. In this tutorial we concentrate on Javascript. Of course there's a lot in common, but they are a somewhat different in Perl, Ruby, PHP etc.
[cut]
## Regular expressions
A regular expression (also "regexp", or just "reg") consists of a *pattern* and optional *flags*.
There are two syntaxes to create a regular expression object.
The long syntax:
```js
regexp = new RegExp("pattern", "flags");
```
...And the short one, using slashes `"/"`:
```js
regexp = /pattern/; // no flags флагов
regexp = /pattern/gmi; // with flags g,m and i (to be covered soon)
```
Slashes `"/"` tell Javascript that we are creating a regular expression. They play the same role as quotes for strings.
## Usage
To search inside a string, we can use method [search](mdn:js/String/search).
Here's an example:
```js run
let str = "I love Javascript!"; // will search here
let regexp = /love/;
alert( str.search(regexp) ); // 2
```
The `str.search` method looks for the pattern `pattern:/love/` and returns the position inside the string. As we might guess, `pattern:/love/` is the simplest possible pattern. What it does is a simple substring search.
The code above is the same as:
```js run
let str = "I love Javascript!"; // will search here
let substr = 'love';
alert( str.search(substr) ); // 2
```
So searching for `pattern:/love/` is the same as searching for `"love"`.
But that's only for now. Soon we'll create more complex regular expressions with much searching more power.
```smart header="Colors"
From here on the color scheme is:
- regexp -- `pattern:red`
- string (where we search) -- `subject:blue`
- result -- `match:green`
```
````smart header="When to use `new RegExp`?"
Normally we use the short syntax `/.../`. But it does not allow any variables insertions, so we must know the exact regexp at the time of writing the code.
From the other hand, `new RegExp` allows to construct a pattern dynamically from a string.
So we can figure out what we need to search and create `new RegExp` from it:
```js run
let search = prompt("What you want to search?", "love");
let regexp = new RegExp(search);
// find whatever the user wants
alert( "I love Javascript".search(regexp));
```
````
## Flags
Regular expressions may have flags that affect the search.
There are only 5 of them in Javascript:
`i`
: With this flag the search is case-insensitive: no difference between `А` and `а` (see the example below).
`g`
: With this flag the search looks for all matches, without it -- only the first one (we'll see uses in the next chapter).
`m`
: Multiline mode (will cover in [todo]).
`u`
: Enables full unicode support. The flag enables correct processing of surrogate pairs. More about that in the chapter <info:regexp-unicode>.
`y`
: Sticky mode (covered in [todo])
## The "i" flag
The simplest flag is `i`.
An example with it:
```js run
let str = "I love Javascript!";
alert( str.search(/LOVE/) ); // -1 (not found)
alert( str.search(/LOVE/i) ); // 2
```
1. The first search returns `-1` (not found), because the search is case-sensitive by default.
2. With the flag `pattern:/LOVE/i` the search found `match:love` at position 2.
So the `i` flag already makes regular expressions more powerful than a simple substring search. But there's so much more. We'll cover other flags and features in the next chapters.
## Summary
- A regular expression consists of a pattern and optional flags: `g`, `i`, `m`, `u`, `y`.
- Without flags and special symbols that we'll study later, the search by a regexp is the same as a substring search.
- The method `str.search(regexp)` returns the index where the match is found or `-1` if there's no match.