regex in node js code example

Example 1: javascript regex

// \d	Any digit character
// \w	An alphanumeric character (“word character”)
// \s	Any whitespace character (space, tab, newline, and similar)
// \D	A character that is not a digit
// \W	A nonalphanumeric character
// \S	A nonwhitespace character
// .	Any character except for newline
// /abc/	A sequence of characters
// /[abc]/	Any character from a set of characters
// /[^abc]/	Any character not in a set of characters
// /[0-9]/	Any character in a range of characters
// /x+/	One or more occurrences of the pattern x
// /x+?/	One or more occurrences, nongreedy
// /x*/	Zero or more occurrences
// /x?/	Zero or one occurrence
// /x{2,4}/	Two to four occurrences
// /(abc)/	A group
// /a|b|c/	Any one of several patterns
// /\d/	Any digit character
// /\w/	An alphanumeric character (“word character”)
// /\s/	Any whitespace character
// /./	Any character except newlines
// /\b/	A word boundary
// /^/	Start of input
// /$/	End of input

Example 2: javascript regex reference

// Javascript Regex Reference
//  /abc/	A sequence of characters
//  /[abc]/	Any character from a set of characters
//  /[^abc]/	Any character not in a set of characters
//  /[0-9]/	Any character in a range of characters
//  /x+/	One or more occurrences of the pattern x
//  /x+?/	One or more occurrences, nongreedy
//  /x*/	Zero or more occurrences
//  /x?/	Zero or one occurrence
//  /x{2,4}/	Two to four occurrences
//  /(abc)/	A group
//  /a|b|c/	Any one of several patterns
//  /\d/	Any digit character
// /\w/	An alphanumeric character (“word character”)
//  /\s/	Any whitespace character
//  /./	Any character except newlines
//  /\b/	A word boundary
//  /^/	Start of input
//  /$/	End of input

Example 3: js string to regex

const regex = new RegExp('https:\\/\\/\\w*\\.\\w*.*', 'g');

Example 4: js match any number string

const match = 'some/path/123'.match(/\/(\d+)/)
const id = match[1] // '123'

Example 5: using regex in javascript

//Adding '/' around regex
var regex = /\s/g;
//or using RegExp
var regex = new RegExp("\s", "g");

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