# Sticky flag "y", searching at position The flag `pattern:y` allows to perform the search at the given position in the source string. To grasp the use case of `pattern:y` flag, and better understand the ways of regexps, let's explore a practical example. One of common tasks for regexps is "lexical analysis": we get a text, e.g. in a programming language, and need to find its structural elements. For instance, HTML has tags and attributes, JavaScript code has functions, variables, and so on. Writing lexical analyzers is a special area, with its own tools and algorithms, so we don't go deep in there, but there's a common task: to read something at the given position. E.g. we have a code string `subject:let varName = "value"`, and we need to read the variable name from it, that starts at position `4`. We'll look for variable name using regexp `pattern:\w+`. Actually, JavaScript variable names need a bit more complex regexp for accurate matching, but here it doesn't matter. - A call to `str.match(/\w+/)` will find only the first word in the line (`var`). That's not it. - We can add the flag `pattern:g`. But then the call `str.match(/\w+/g)` will look for all words in the text, while we need one word at position `4`. Again, not what we need. **So, how to search for a regexp exactly at the given position?** Let's try using method `regexp.exec(str)`. For a `regexp` without flags `pattern:g` and `pattern:y`, this method looks only for the first match, it works exactly like `str.match(regexp)`. ...But if there's flag `pattern:g`, then it performs the search in `str`, starting from position stored in the `regexp.lastIndex` property. And, if it finds a match, then sets `regexp.lastIndex` to the index immediately after the match. In other words, `regexp.lastIndex` serves as a starting point for the search, that each `regexp.exec(str)` call resets to the new value ("after the last match"). That's only if there's `pattern:g` flag, of course. So, successive calls to `regexp.exec(str)` return matches one after another. Here's an example of such calls: ```js run let str = 'let varName'; // Let's find all words in this string let regexp = /\w+/g; alert(regexp.lastIndex); // 0 (initially lastIndex=0) let word1 = regexp.exec(str); alert(word1[0]); // let (1st word) alert(regexp.lastIndex); // 3 (position after the match) let word2 = regexp.exec(str); alert(word2[0]); // varName (2nd word) alert(regexp.lastIndex); // 11 (position after the match) let word3 = regexp.exec(str); alert(word3); // null (no more matches) alert(regexp.lastIndex); // 0 (resets at search end) ``` We can get all matches in the loop: ```js run let str = 'let varName'; let regexp = /\w+/g; let result; while (result = regexp.exec(str)) { alert( `Found ${result[0]} at position ${result.index}` ); // Found let at position 0, then // Found varName at position 4 } ``` Such use of `regexp.exec` is an alternative to method `str.matchAll`, with a bit more control over the process. Let's go back to our task. We can manually set `lastIndex` to `4`, to start the search from the given position! Like this: ```js run let str = 'let varName = "value"'; let regexp = /\w+/g; // without flag "g", property lastIndex is ignored *!* regexp.lastIndex = 4; */!* let word = regexp.exec(str); alert(word); // varName ``` Hooray! Problem solved! We performed a search of `pattern:\w+`, starting from position `regexp.lastIndex = 4`. The result is correct. ...But wait, not so fast. Please note: the `regexp.exec` call start searching at position `lastIndex` and then goes further. If there's no word at position `lastIndex`, but it's somewhere after it, then it will be found: ```js run let str = 'let varName = "value"'; let regexp = /\w+/g; *!* // start the search from position 3 regexp.lastIndex = 3; */!* let word = regexp.exec(str); // found the match at position 4 alert(word[0]); // varName alert(word.index); // 4 ``` For some tasks, including the lexical analysis, that's just wrong. We need to find a match exactly at the given position at the text, not somewhere after it. And that's what the flag `y` is for. **The flag `pattern:y` makes `regexp.exec` to search exactly at position `lastIndex`, not "starting from" it.** Here's the same search with flag `pattern:y`: ```js run let str = 'let varName = "value"'; let regexp = /\w+/y; regexp.lastIndex = 3; alert( regexp.exec(str) ); // null (there's a space at position 3, not a word) regexp.lastIndex = 4; alert( regexp.exec(str) ); // varName (word at position 4) ``` As we can see, regexp `pattern:/\w+/y` doesn't match at position `3` (unlike the flag `pattern:g`), but matches at position `4`. Not only that's what we need, there's an important performance gain when using flag `pattern:y`. Imagine, we have a long text, and there are no matches in it, at all. Then a search with flag `pattern:g` will go till the end of the text and find nothing, and this will take significantly more time than the search with flag `pattern:y`, that checks only the exact position. In tasks like lexical analysis, there are usually many searches at an exact position, to check what we have there. Using flag `pattern:y` is the key for correct implementations and a good performance.