# Character classes Consider a practical task -- we have a phone number like `"+7(903)-123-45-67"`, and we need to turn it into pure numbers: `79031234567`. To do so, we can find and remove anything that's not a number. Character classes can help with that. A *character class* is a special notation that matches any symbol from a certain set. For the start, let's explore the "digit" class. It's written as `pattern:\d` and corresponds to "any single digit". For instance, let's find the first digit in the phone number: ```js run let str = "+7(903)-123-45-67"; let regexp = /\d/; alert( str.match(regexp) ); // 7 ``` Without the flag `pattern:g`, the regular expression only looks for the first match, that is the first digit `pattern:\d`. Let's add the `pattern:g` flag to find all digits: ```js run let str = "+7(903)-123-45-67"; let regexp = /\d/g; alert( str.match(regexp) ); // array of matches: 7,9,0,3,1,2,3,4,5,6,7 // let's make the digits-only phone number of them: alert( str.match(regexp).join('') ); // 79031234567 ``` That was a character class for digits. There are other character classes as well. Most used are: `pattern:\d` ("d" is from "digit") : A digit: a character from `0` to `9`. `pattern:\s` ("s" is from "space") : A space symbol: includes spaces, tabs `\t`, newlines `\n` and few other rare characters, such as `\v`, `\f` and `\r`. `pattern:\w` ("w" is from "word") : A "wordly" character: either a letter of Latin alphabet or a digit or an underscore `_`. Non-Latin letters (like cyrillic or hindi) do not belong to `pattern:\w`. For instance, `pattern:\d\s\w` means a "digit" followed by a "space character" followed by a "wordly character", such as `match:1 a`. **A regexp may contain both regular symbols and character classes.** For instance, `pattern:CSS\d` matches a string `match:CSS` with a digit after it: ```js run let str = "Is there CSS4?"; let regexp = /CSS\d/ alert( str.match(regexp) ); // CSS4 ``` Also we can use many character classes: ```js run alert( "I love HTML5!".match(/\s\w\w\w\w\d/) ); // ' HTML5' ``` The match (each regexp character class has the corresponding result character): ![](love-html5-classes.svg) ## Inverse classes For every character class there exists an "inverse class", denoted with the same letter, but uppercased. The "inverse" means that it matches all other characters, for instance: `pattern:\D` : Non-digit: any character except `pattern:\d`, for instance a letter. `pattern:\S` : Non-space: any character except `pattern:\s`, for instance a letter. `pattern:\W` : Non-wordly character: anything but `pattern:\w`, e.g a non-latin letter or a space. In the beginning of the chapter we saw how to make a number-only phone number from a string like `subject:+7(903)-123-45-67`: find all digits and join them. ```js run let str = "+7(903)-123-45-67"; alert( str.match(/\d/g).join('') ); // 79031234567 ``` An alternative, shorter way is to find non-digits `pattern:\D` and remove them from the string: ```js run let str = "+7(903)-123-45-67"; alert( str.replace(/\D/g, "") ); // 79031234567 ``` ## A dot is "any character" A dot `pattern:.` is a special character class that matches "any character except a newline". For instance: ```js run alert( "Z".match(/./) ); // Z ``` Or in the middle of a regexp: ```js run let regexp = /CS.4/; alert( "CSS4".match(regexp) ); // CSS4 alert( "CS-4".match(regexp) ); // CS-4 alert( "CS 4".match(regexp) ); // CS 4 (space is also a character) ``` Please note that a dot means "any character", but not the "absence of a character". There must be a character to match it: ```js run alert( "CS4".match(/CS.4/) ); // null, no match because there's no character for the dot ``` ### Dot as literally any character with "s" flag By default, a dot doesn't match the newline character `\n`. For instance, the regexp `pattern:A.B` matches `match:A`, and then `match:B` with any character between them, except a newline `\n`: ```js run alert( "A\nB".match(/A.B/) ); // null (no match) ``` There are many situations when we'd like a dot to mean literally "any character", newline included. That's what flag `pattern:s` does. If a regexp has it, then a dot `pattern:.` matches literally any character: ```js run alert( "A\nB".match(/A.B/s) ); // A\nB (match!) ``` ````warn header="Not supported in IE" The `pattern:s` flag is not supported in IE. Luckily, there's an alternative, that works everywhere. We can use a regexp like `pattern:[\s\S]` to match "any character" (this pattern will be covered in the article ). ```js run alert( "A\nB".match(/A[\s\S]B/) ); // A\nB (match!) ``` The pattern `pattern:[\s\S]` literally says: "a space character OR not a space character". In other words, "anything". We could use another pair of complementary classes, such as `pattern:[\d\D]`, that doesn't matter. Or even the `pattern:[^]` -- as it means match any character except nothing. Also we can use this trick if we want both kind of "dots" in the same pattern: the actual dot `pattern:.` behaving the regular way ("not including a newline"), and also a way to match "any character" with `pattern:[\s\S]` or alike. ```` ````warn header="Pay attention to spaces" Usually we pay little attention to spaces. For us strings `subject:1-5` and `subject:1 - 5` are nearly identical. But if a regexp doesn't take spaces into account, it may fail to work. Let's try to find digits separated by a hyphen: ```js run alert( "1 - 5".match(/\d-\d/) ); // null, no match! ``` Let's fix it adding spaces into the regexp `pattern:\d - \d`: ```js run alert( "1 - 5".match(/\d - \d/) ); // 1 - 5, now it works // or we can use \s class: alert( "1 - 5".match(/\d\s-\s\d/) ); // 1 - 5, also works ``` **A space is a character. Equal in importance with any other character.** We can't add or remove spaces from a regular expression and expect it to work the same. In other words, in a regular expression all characters matter, spaces too. ```` ## Summary There exist following character classes: - `pattern:\d` -- digits. - `pattern:\D` -- non-digits. - `pattern:\s` -- space symbols, tabs, newlines. - `pattern:\S` -- all but `pattern:\s`. - `pattern:\w` -- Latin letters, digits, underscore `'_'`. - `pattern:\W` -- all but `pattern:\w`. - `pattern:.` -- any character if with the regexp `'s'` flag, otherwise any except a newline `\n`. ...But that's not all! Unicode encoding, used by JavaScript for strings, provides many properties for characters, like: which language the letter belongs to (if it's a letter), is it a punctuation sign, etc. We can search by these properties as well. That requires flag `pattern:u`, covered in the next article.