en.javascript.info/10-regular-expressions-javascript/035-regexp-escaping/article.md
Ilya Kantor e2443e8de6 ok
2017-03-19 16:59:53 +03:00

1.5 KiB

Special characters

As we've seen, a backslash "\" is used to denote character classes. So it's a special character.

There are other special characters as well, that have special meaning in a regexp. They are used to do more powerful searches.

Here's a full list of them: pattern:[ \ ^ $ . | ? * + ( ).

Don't try to remember it -- when we deal with each of them separately, you'll know it by heart automatically.

Escaping

To use a special character as a regular one, prepend it with a backslash.

That's also called "escaping a character".

For instance, we need to find a dot pattern:'.'. In a regular expression a dot means "any character except a newline", so if we really mean "a dot", let's put a backslash before it: pattern:\..

alert( "Chapter 5.1".match(/\d\.\d/) ); // 5.1

Brackets are also special characters, so if we want them, we should use pattern:\(. The example below looks for a string "g()":

alert( "function g()".match(/g\(\)/) ); // "g()"

If we're looking for a backslash \, then we should double it:

alert( "1\2".match(/\\/) ); // '\'

A slash

The slash symbol '/' is not a special character, but in Javascript it is used to open and close the regexp: pattern:/...pattern.../, so we should escape it too.

Here's what a search for a slash '/' looks like:

alert( "/".match(/\//) ); // '/'

From the other hand, the alternative new RegExp syntaxes does not require escaping it:

alert( "/".match(new RegExp()/\//) ); // '/'