String.prototype.match() - JavaScript 编辑

The match() method retrieves the result of matching a string against a regular expression.

The source for this interactive example is stored in a GitHub repository. If you'd like to contribute to the interactive examples project, please clone https://github.com/mdn/interactive-examples and send us a pull request.

Syntax

str.match(regexp)

Parameters

regexp
A regular expression object.
If regexp is a non-RegExp object, it is implicitly converted to a RegExp by using new RegExp(regexp).
If you don't give any parameter and use the match() method directly, you will get an Array with an empty string: [""].

Return value

An Array whose contents depend on the presence or absence of the global (g) flag, or null if no matches are found.

  • If the g flag is used, all results matching the complete regular expression will be returned, but capturing groups will not.
  • if the g flag is not used, only the first complete match and its related capturing groups are returned. In this case, the returned item will have additional properties as described below.

Additional properties

As explained above, some results contain additional properties as described below.

groups
An object of named capturing groups whose keys are the names and values are the capturing groups or undefined if no named capturing groups were defined. See Groups and Ranges for more information.
index
The index of the search at which the result was found.
input
A copy of the search string.

Description

If the regular expression does not include the g flag, str.match() will return the same result as RegExp.exec().

Other methods

Examples

Using match()

In the following example, match() is used to find 'Chapter' followed by 1 or more numeric characters followed by a decimal point and numeric character 0 or more times.

The regular expression includes the i flag so that upper/lower case differences will be ignored.

const str = 'For more information, see Chapter 3.4.5.1';
const re = /see (chapter \d+(\.\d)*)/i;
const found = str.match(re);

console.log(found);

// logs [ 'see Chapter 3.4.5.1',
//        'Chapter 3.4.5.1',
//        '.1',
//        index: 22,
//        input: 'For more information, see Chapter 3.4.5.1' ]

// 'see Chapter 3.4.5.1' is the whole match.
// 'Chapter 3.4.5.1' was captured by '(chapter \d+(\.\d)*)'.
// '.1' was the last value captured by '(\.\d)'.
// The 'index' property (22) is the zero-based index of the whole match.
// The 'input' property is the original string that was parsed.

Using global and ignore case flags with match()

The following example demonstrates the use of the global and ignore case flags with match(). All letters A through E and a through e are returned, each its own element in the array.

const str = 'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz';
const regexp = /[A-E]/gi;
const matches_array = str.match(regexp);

console.log(matches_array);
// ['A', 'B', 'C', 'D', 'E', 'a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e']

Note: See also String.prototype.matchAll() and Advanced searching with flags.

Using named capturing groups

In browsers which support named capturing groups, the following code captures "fox" or "cat" into a group named "animal":

const paragraph = 'The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. It barked.';

const capturingRegex = /(?<animal>fox|cat) jumps over/;
const found = paragraph.match(capturingRegex);
console.log(found.groups); // {animal: "fox"}

Using match() with no parameter

const str = "Nothing will come of nothing.";

str.match();   // returns [""]

A non-RegExp object as the parameter

When the regexp parameter is a string or a number, it is implicitly converted to a RegExp by using new RegExp(regexp).

If it is a positive number with a positive sign, RegExp() will ignore the positive sign.

const str1 = "NaN means not a number. Infinity contains -Infinity and +Infinity in JavaScript.",
    str2 = "My grandfather is 65 years old and My grandmother is 63 years old.",
    str3 = "The contract was declared null and void.";
str1.match("number");   // "number" is a string. returns ["number"]
str1.match(NaN);        // the type of NaN is the number. returns ["NaN"]
str1.match(Infinity);   // the type of Infinity is the number. returns ["Infinity"]
str1.match(+Infinity);  // returns ["Infinity"]
str1.match(-Infinity);  // returns ["-Infinity"]
str2.match(65);         // returns ["65"]
str2.match(+65);        // A number with a positive sign. returns ["65"]
str3.match(null);       // returns ["null"]

Specifications

Specification
ECMAScript (ECMA-262)
The definition of 'String.prototype.match' in that specification.

Browser compatibility

BCD tables only load in the browser

See also

如果你对这篇内容有疑问,欢迎到本站社区发帖提问 参与讨论,获取更多帮助,或者扫码二维码加入 Web 技术交流群。

扫码二维码加入Web技术交流群

发布评论

需要 登录 才能够评论, 你可以免费 注册 一个本站的账号。
列表为空,暂无数据

词条统计

浏览:88 次

字数:10901

最后编辑:7年前

编辑次数:0 次

    我们使用 Cookies 和其他技术来定制您的体验包括您的登录状态等。通过阅读我们的 隐私政策 了解更多相关信息。 单击 接受 或继续使用网站,即表示您同意使用 Cookies 和您的相关数据。
    原文