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Alternation (OR) |
Alternation is the term in regular expression that is actually a simple "OR".
In a regular expression it is denoted with a vertical line character pattern:|.
For instance, we need to find programming languages: HTML, PHP, Java or JavaScript.
The corresponding regexp: pattern:html|php|java(script)?.
A usage example:
let reg = /html|php|css|java(script)?/gi;
let str = "First HTML appeared, then CSS, then JavaScript";
alert( str.match(reg) ); // 'HTML', 'CSS', 'JavaScript'
We already know a similar thing -- square brackets. They allow to choose between multiple character, for instance pattern:gr[ae]y matches match:gray or match:grey.
Square brackets allow only characters or character sets. Alternation allows any expressions. A regexp pattern:A|B|C means one of expressions A, B or C.
For instance:
pattern:gr(a|e)ymeans exactly the same aspattern:gr[ae]y.pattern:gra|eymeansmatch:graormatch:ey.
To separate a part of the pattern for alternation we usually enclose it in parentheses, like this: pattern:before(XXX|YYY)after.
Regexp for time
In previous chapters there was a task to build a regexp for searching time in the form hh:mm, for instance 12:00. But a simple pattern:\d\d:\d\d is too vague. It accepts 25:99 as the time (as 99 seconds match the pattern).
How can we make a better one?
We can apply more careful matching. First, the hours:
- If the first digit is
0or1, then the next digit can by anything. - Or, if the first digit is
2, then the next must bepattern:[0-3].
As a regexp: pattern:[01]\d|2[0-3].
Next, the minutes must be from 0 to 59. In the regexp language that means pattern:[0-5]\d: the first digit 0-5, and then any digit.
Let's glue them together into the pattern: pattern:[01]\d|2[0-3]:[0-5]\d.
We're almost done, but there's a problem. The alternation pattern:| now happens to be between pattern:[01]\d and pattern:2[0-3]:[0-5]\d.
That's wrong, as it should be applied only to hours [01]\d OR 2[0-3]. That's a common mistake when starting to work with regular expressions.
The correct variant:
let reg = /([01]\d|2[0-3]):[0-5]\d/g;
alert("00:00 10:10 23:59 25:99 1:2".match(reg)); // 00:00,10:10,23:59