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Quantifiers +, *, ? and {n}
Let's say we have a string like +7(903)-123-45-67 and want to find all numbers in it. But unlike before, we are interested not in single digits, but full numbers: 7, 903, 123, 45, 67.
A number is a sequence of 1 or more digits \d. To mark how many we need, we need to append a quantifier.
Quantity {n}
The simplest quantifier is a number in curly braces: pattern:{n}.
A quantifier is appended to a character (or a character class, or a [...] set etc) and specifies how many we need.
It has a few advanced forms, let's see examples:
- The exact count:
{5} pattern:\d{5}denotes exactly 5 digits, the same aspattern:\d\d\d\d\d.The example below looks for a 5-digit number:
alert( "I'm 12345 years old".match(/\d{5}/) ); // "12345"We can add
\bto exclude longer numbers:pattern:\b\d{5}\b.- The range:
{3,5}, match 3-5 times - To find numbers from 3 to 5 digits we can put the limits into curly braces:
pattern:\d{3,5}alert( "I'm not 12, but 1234 years old".match(/\d{3,5}/) ); // "1234"We can omit the upper limit.
Then a regexp
pattern:\d{3,}looks for sequences of digits of length3or more:alert( "I'm not 12, but 345678 years old".match(/\d{3,}/) ); // "345678"
Let's return to the string +7(903)-123-45-67.
A number is a sequence of one or more digits in a row. So the regexp is pattern:\d{1,}:
let str = "+7(903)-123-45-67";
let numbers = str.match(/\d{1,}/g);
alert(numbers); // 7,903,123,45,67
Shorthands
There are shorthands for most used quantifiers:
+- Means "one or more", the same as
{1,}.For instance,
pattern:\d+looks for numbers:let str = "+7(903)-123-45-67"; alert( str.match(/\d+/g) ); // 7,903,123,45,67 ?- Means "zero or one", the same as
{0,1}. In other words, it makes the symbol optional.For instance, the pattern
pattern:ou?rlooks formatch:ofollowed by zero or onematch:u, and thenmatch:r.So,
pattern:colou?rfinds bothmatch:colorandmatch:colour:let str = "Should I write color or colour?"; alert( str.match(/colou?r/g) ); // color, colour *- Means "zero or more", the same as
{0,}. That is, the character may repeat any times or be absent.For example,
pattern:\d0*looks for a digit followed by any number of zeroes:alert( "100 10 1".match(/\d0*/g) ); // 100, 10, 1Compare it with
'+'(one or more):alert( "100 10 1".match(/\d0+/g) ); // 100, 10 // 1 not matched, as 0+ requires at least one zero
More examples
Quantifiers are used very often. They serve as the main "building block" of complex regular expressions, so let's see more examples.
- Regexp "decimal fraction" (a number with a floating point):
pattern:\d+\.\d+ - In action:
alert( "0 1 12.345 7890".match(/\d+\.\d+/g) ); // 12.345 - Regexp "open HTML-tag without attributes", like
<span>or<p>:pattern:/<[a-z]+>/i - In action:
alert( "<body> ... </body>".match(/<[a-z]+>/gi) ); // <body>We look for character
pattern:'<'followed by one or more English letters, and thenpattern:'>'. - Regexp "open HTML-tag without attributes" (improved):
pattern:/<[a-z][a-z0-9]*>/i - Better regexp: according to the standard, HTML tag name may have a digit at any position except the first one, like
<h1>.alert( "<h1>Hi!</h1>".match(/<[a-z][a-z0-9]*>/gi) ); // <h1> - Regexp "opening or closing HTML-tag without attributes":
pattern:/<\/?[a-z][a-z0-9]*>/i - We added an optional slash
pattern:/?before the tag. Had to escape it with a backslash, otherwise JavaScript would think it is the pattern end.alert( "<h1>Hi!</h1>".match(/<\/?[a-z][a-z0-9]*>/gi) ); // <h1>, </h1>
We can see one common rule in these examples: the more precise is the regular expression -- the longer and more complex it is.
For instance, for HTML tags we could use a simpler regexp: `pattern:<\w+>`.
...But because `pattern:\w` means any English letter or a digit or `'_'`, the regexp also matches non-tags, for instance `match:<_>`. So it's much simpler than `pattern:<[a-z][a-z0-9]*>`, but less reliable.
Are we ok with `pattern:<\w+>` or we need `pattern:<[a-z][a-z0-9]*>`?
In real life both variants are acceptable. Depends on how tolerant we can be to "extra" matches and whether it's difficult or not to filter them out by other means.