How to get last two words written in Regex in Javascript - regex

I am trying to get data after a colon.
This is my code:
function myFunction() {
var withBreaks = "*Cats are:* cool Pets [CATS]"
var sheet = SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSheet()
if (withBreaks) {
var tmp;
tmp = withBreaks.match(/^[\*]Cats are:[\*][\s]([a-z]+[\s]+[A-Za-z].*)$/m); //
var username = (tmp && tmp[1]) ? tmp[1].trim() : 'No username';
sheet.appendRow([username])
}
};
So I'm trying to get information after the
*Cats are:*. This code works, but, sometimes some sentences would have an asterisk and sometimes there wouldn't be an asterisk to different sentences. I would like to make one that is more unifying, if that clarifies my question a bit.
What I would like to do is, without specifying the asterisk, get data after the :. So anything after Cats are:. Do I have to specify the asterisk?

I suggest
/^\**Cats are:\**\s*([\s\S]*)/
Here, any text is captured into Group 1 with ([\s\S]*) and the asterisks are made optional with * quantifier meaning 0 or more repetitions.
See the regex demo
If the asterisks can appear 1 or 0 times, replace * with ?:
/^\*?Cats are:\*?\s*([\s\S]*)/
^ ^
See another regex demo.

Related

RegEx for matching the first {N} chars and last {M} chars

I'm having an issue filtering tags in Grafana with an InfluxDB backend. I'm trying to filter out the first 8 characters and last 2 of the tag but I'm running into a really weird issue.
Here are some of the names...
GYPSKSVLMP2L1HBS135WH
GYPSKSVLMP2L2HBS135WH
RSHLKSVLMP1L1HBS045RD
RSHLKSVLMP35L1HBS135WH
RSHLKSVLMP35L2HBS135WH
only want to return something like this:
MP8L1HBS225
MP24L2HBS045
I first started off using this expression:
[MP].*
But it only returns the following out of 148:
PAYNKSVLMP27L1HBS045RD
PAYNKSVLMP27L1HBS135WH
PAYNKSVLMP27L1HBS225BL
PAYNKSVLMP27L1HBS315BR
The pattern [MP].* Matches either a M or P and then matches any char until the end of the string not taking any char, digit or quantifing number afterwards into account.
If you want to match MP and the value does not end on a digit but the last in the match should be a digit, you could use:
MP[A-Z0-9]+[0-9]
Regex demo
If lookaheads are supported you might also use:
MP[A-Z0-9]+(?=[A-Z0-9]{2}$)
Regex demo
You may not even want to touch MP. You can simply define a left and right boundary, just like your question asks, and swipe everything in between which might be faster, maybe an expression similar to:
(\w{8})(.*)(\w{2})
which you can simply call it using $2. That is the second capturing group, just to be easy to replace.
Graph
This graph shows how the expression would work:
Performance
This JavaScript snippet shows the performance of this expression using a simple 1-million times for loop.
repeat = 1000000;
start = Date.now();
for (var i = repeat; i >= 0; i--) {
var string = "RSHLKSVLMP35L2HBS135WH";
var regex = /^(\w{8})(.*)(\w{2})$/g;
var match = string.replace(regex, "$2");
}
end = Date.now() - start;
console.log("YAAAY! \"" + match + "\" is a match 💚 ");
console.log(end / 1000 + " is the runtime of " + repeat + " times benchmark test. 😳 ");
Try Regex: (?<=\w{8})\w+(?=\w{2})
Demo

Match anything before certain character

I have the following strings
/search?checkin=2018-10-25&checkout=2018-10-27&id=bandung-108001534490276290&page=1&room=1&sort=popularity&type=CITY
/search?checkin=2018-12-09&checkout=2018-12-13&id=singapore-108001534490299035&maxPrice=&minPrice=&room=1&type=REGION
/search?checkin=2018-10-22&checkout=2018-10-23&lat=-6.1176043&long=106.7767146&maxPrice=&minPrice=&room=1&type=COORDINATE
/search?page=1&room=1&type=POI&id=taman-mini-indonesia-indah-110001539700828313&checkin=2018-11-14&checkout=2018-11-16&sort=distance
i want to get all string starts from &id= until the first & so they will return
id=bandung-108001534490276290
id=singapore-108001534490299035
id=taman-mini-indonesia-indah-110001539700828313
When i tried this regex \&id=.*\& it doesn't match my requirement.
Hown do i resolve this?
I'd go with [?&](id=[^&]+).
[?&] - ? or &, because order of GET parameters is usually not guaranteed and you can get the id in the first place – something like /search?id=something-123456&checkin=2018-10-25&…
[^&]+ - at least one character that's not &
() marks a capturing group
Demo in JS:
const strings = [
"/search?checkin=2018-10-25&checkout=2018-10-27&id=bandung-108001534490276290&page=1&room=1&sort=popularity&type=CITY",
"/search?checkin=2018-12-09&checkout=2018-12-13&id=singapore-108001534490299035&maxPrice=&minPrice=&room=1&type=REGION",
"/search?checkin=2018-10-22&checkout=2018-10-23&lat=-6.1176043&long=106.7767146&maxPrice=&minPrice=&room=1&type=COORDINATE",
"/search?page=1&room=1&type=POI&id=taman-mini-indonesia-indah-110001539700828313&checkin=2018-11-14&checkout=2018-11-16&sort=distance]"
]
const regex = /[?&](id=[^&]+)/
strings.forEach(string => {
const match = regex.exec(string)
if (match) {
console.log(match[1])
}
})
Demo and explanation at Regex101: https://regex101.com/r/FBeNDN/1/
Positive Lookahead (?=)
Try a positive lookahead:
/&id=.+?(?=&)|&id=.+?$/gm
This part: (?=&) means: if an & is found, then everything before it is a match.
The alternation:| (it's an OR logic gate) is an update in regards to a comment from Nick concerning that if the parameter ended with an &id=...
It's the same match but instead of looking for a & it will look for the end of the line $. Note that the multi-line flag is used to make $ represent EOL.
Demo
var str = `/search?checkin=2018-10-25&checkout=2018-10-27&id=bandung-108001534490276290&page=1&room=1&sort=popularity&type=CITY
/search?checkin=2018-12-09&checkout=2018-12-13&id=singapore-108001534490299035&maxPrice=&minPrice=&room=1&type=REGION
/search?page=1&room=1&type=POI&id=indo-1999999051158
/search?checkin=2018-10-22&checkout=2018-10-23&lat=-6.1176043&long=106.7767146&maxPrice=&minPrice=&room=1&type=COORDINATE
/search?page=1&room=1&type=POI&id=taman-mini-indonesia-indah-110001539700828313&checkin=2018-11-14&checkout=2018-11-16&sort=distance
/search?page=1&room=1&type=POI&id=indonesia-1100055689`;
var rgx = /&id=.+?(?=&$)|&id=.+?$/gm;
var res = rgx.exec(str);
while (res != null) {
console.log(res[0]);
res = rgx.exec(str);
}

RegEx to find a string before the last semi-colon

I have the following regex /\.(\w+)/g represented here
It's matching against this sample string: function () {__cov_0vpZ06dQffa98X1ZQ0lWVA.f['74']++;__cov_0vpZ06dQffa98X1ZQ0lWVA.s['211']++;return t.propertygroup.subproperty1;}
Right now it's matching "f.s.propertygroup.subproperty1", but I want it to match only "propertyGroup.subproperty1" or if it was just t.subproperty1 it would just match "subproperty1". So it should find all words after the first period, but only before the last occurrence of the semi-colon.
The function string above is dynamic (JavaScript) so it might add additional statements with additional semi-colons at any time, but I still want to match only the last return variable name.
I've been fighting this regex all day and you, a regex guru, could probably solve this in 5 minutes. Can you help?
Use a positive lookahead:
\.(\w+)(?=[^;]*;[^;]*$)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
See the regex demo
The (?=[^;]*;[^;]*$) will only match the . + word chars if they are followed with 0+ chars other than ;, then ; and again 0+ chars other than ; up to the end of string.
JS code:
var regex = /\.(\w+)(?=[^;]*;[^;]*$)/g;
var str = "function () {__cov_0vpZ06dQffa98X1ZQ0lWVA.f['74']++;__cov_0vpZ06dQffa98X1ZQ0lWVA.s['211']++;return t.propertygroup.subproperty1;}";
var res = [], m;
while ((m = regex.exec(str)) !== null) {
res.push(m[1]);
}
console.log(res);
Or another one:
var s = "function () {__cov_0vpZ06dQffa98X1ZQ0lWVA.f['74']++;__cov_0vpZ06dQffa98X1ZQ0lWVA.s['211']++;return t.propertygroup.subproperty1;}";
var res = s.match(/\.(\w+)(?=[^;]*;[^;]*$)/g).map(function(x) {return x.slice(1);});
console.log(res);
perhaps this is the one you need?
#"\.([a-zA-Z0-9_.]+)[^;]*;[^;]*}$"
demo

Regex that will extract the string between two known strings [duplicate]

I want to match a portion of a string using a regular expression and then access that parenthesized substring:
var myString = "something format_abc"; // I want "abc"
var arr = /(?:^|\s)format_(.*?)(?:\s|$)/.exec(myString);
console.log(arr); // Prints: [" format_abc", "abc"] .. so far so good.
console.log(arr[1]); // Prints: undefined (???)
console.log(arr[0]); // Prints: format_undefined (!!!)
What am I doing wrong?
I've discovered that there was nothing wrong with the regular expression code above: the actual string which I was testing against was this:
"date format_%A"
Reporting that "%A" is undefined seems a very strange behaviour, but it is not directly related to this question, so I've opened a new one, Why is a matched substring returning "undefined" in JavaScript?.
The issue was that console.log takes its parameters like a printf statement, and since the string I was logging ("%A") had a special value, it was trying to find the value of the next parameter.
Update: 2019-09-10
The old way to iterate over multiple matches was not very intuitive. This lead to the proposal of the String.prototype.matchAll method. This new method is in the ECMAScript 2020 specification. It gives us a clean API and solves multiple problems. It is in major browsers and JS engines since Chrome 73+ / Node 12+ and Firefox 67+.
The method returns an iterator and is used as follows:
const string = "something format_abc";
const regexp = /(?:^|\s)format_(.*?)(?:\s|$)/g;
const matches = string.matchAll(regexp);
for (const match of matches) {
console.log(match);
console.log(match.index)
}
As it returns an iterator, we can say it's lazy, this is useful when handling particularly large numbers of capturing groups, or very large strings. But if you need, the result can be easily transformed into an Array by using the spread syntax or the Array.from method:
function getFirstGroup(regexp, str) {
const array = [...str.matchAll(regexp)];
return array.map(m => m[1]);
}
// or:
function getFirstGroup(regexp, str) {
return Array.from(str.matchAll(regexp), m => m[1]);
}
In the meantime, while this proposal gets more wide support, you can use the official shim package.
Also, the internal workings of the method are simple. An equivalent implementation using a generator function would be as follows:
function* matchAll(str, regexp) {
const flags = regexp.global ? regexp.flags : regexp.flags + "g";
const re = new RegExp(regexp, flags);
let match;
while (match = re.exec(str)) {
yield match;
}
}
A copy of the original regexp is created; this is to avoid side-effects due to the mutation of the lastIndex property when going through the multple matches.
Also, we need to ensure the regexp has the global flag to avoid an infinite loop.
I'm also happy to see that even this StackOverflow question was referenced in the discussions of the proposal.
original answer
You can access capturing groups like this:
var myString = "something format_abc";
var myRegexp = /(?:^|\s)format_(.*?)(?:\s|$)/g;
var myRegexp = new RegExp("(?:^|\s)format_(.*?)(?:\s|$)", "g");
var matches = myRegexp.exec(myString);
console.log(matches[1]); // abc
And if there are multiple matches you can iterate over them:
var myString = "something format_abc";
var myRegexp = new RegExp("(?:^|\s)format_(.*?)(?:\s|$)", "g");
match = myRegexp.exec(myString);
while (match != null) {
// matched text: match[0]
// match start: match.index
// capturing group n: match[n]
console.log(match[0])
match = myRegexp.exec(myString);
}
Here’s a method you can use to get the n​th capturing group for each match:
function getMatches(string, regex, index) {
index || (index = 1); // default to the first capturing group
var matches = [];
var match;
while (match = regex.exec(string)) {
matches.push(match[index]);
}
return matches;
}
// Example :
var myString = 'something format_abc something format_def something format_ghi';
var myRegEx = /(?:^|\s)format_(.*?)(?:\s|$)/g;
// Get an array containing the first capturing group for every match
var matches = getMatches(myString, myRegEx, 1);
// Log results
document.write(matches.length + ' matches found: ' + JSON.stringify(matches))
console.log(matches);
var myString = "something format_abc";
var arr = myString.match(/\bformat_(.*?)\b/);
console.log(arr[0] + " " + arr[1]);
The \b isn't exactly the same thing. (It works on --format_foo/, but doesn't work on format_a_b) But I wanted to show an alternative to your expression, which is fine. Of course, the match call is the important thing.
Last but not least, I found one line of code that worked fine for me (JS ES6):
let reg = /#([\S]+)/igm; // Get hashtags.
let string = 'mi alegría es total! ✌🙌\n#fiestasdefindeaño #PadreHijo #buenosmomentos #france #paris';
let matches = (string.match(reg) || []).map(e => e.replace(reg, '$1'));
console.log(matches);
This will return:
['fiestasdefindeaño', 'PadreHijo', 'buenosmomentos', 'france', 'paris']
In regards to the multi-match parentheses examples above, I was looking for an answer here after not getting what I wanted from:
var matches = mystring.match(/(?:neededToMatchButNotWantedInResult)(matchWanted)/igm);
After looking at the slightly convoluted function calls with while and .push() above, it dawned on me that the problem can be solved very elegantly with mystring.replace() instead (the replacing is NOT the point, and isn't even done, the CLEAN, built-in recursive function call option for the second parameter is!):
var yourstring = 'something format_abc something format_def something format_ghi';
var matches = [];
yourstring.replace(/format_([^\s]+)/igm, function(m, p1){ matches.push(p1); } );
After this, I don't think I'm ever going to use .match() for hardly anything ever again.
String#matchAll (see the Stage 3 Draft / December 7, 2018 proposal), simplifies acccess to all groups in the match object (mind that Group 0 is the whole match, while further groups correspond to the capturing groups in the pattern):
With matchAll available, you can avoid the while loop and exec with /g... Instead, by using matchAll, you get back an iterator which you can use with the more convenient for...of, array spread, or Array.from() constructs
This method yields a similar output to Regex.Matches in C#, re.finditer in Python, preg_match_all in PHP.
See a JS demo (tested in Google Chrome 73.0.3683.67 (official build), beta (64-bit)):
var myString = "key1:value1, key2-value2!!#key3=value3";
var matches = myString.matchAll(/(\w+)[:=-](\w+)/g);
console.log([...matches]); // All match with capturing group values
The console.log([...matches]) shows
You may also get match value or specific group values using
let matchData = "key1:value1, key2-value2!!#key3=value3".matchAll(/(\w+)[:=-](\w+)/g)
var matches = [...matchData]; // Note matchAll result is not re-iterable
console.log(Array.from(matches, m => m[0])); // All match (Group 0) values
// => [ "key1:value1", "key2-value2", "key3=value3" ]
console.log(Array.from(matches, m => m[1])); // All match (Group 1) values
// => [ "key1", "key2", "key3" ]
NOTE: See the browser compatibility details.
Terminology used in this answer:
Match indicates the result of running your RegEx pattern against your string like so: someString.match(regexPattern).
Matched patterns indicate all matched portions of the input string, which all reside inside the match array. These are all instances of your pattern inside the input string.
Matched groups indicate all groups to catch, defined in the RegEx pattern. (The patterns inside parentheses, like so: /format_(.*?)/g, where (.*?) would be a matched group.) These reside within matched patterns.
Description
To get access to the matched groups, in each of the matched patterns, you need a function or something similar to iterate over the match. There are a number of ways you can do this, as many of the other answers show. Most other answers use a while loop to iterate over all matched patterns, but I think we all know the potential dangers with that approach. It is necessary to match against a new RegExp() instead of just the pattern itself, which only got mentioned in a comment. This is because the .exec() method behaves similar to a generator function – it stops every time there is a match, but keeps its .lastIndex to continue from there on the next .exec() call.
Code examples
Below is an example of a function searchString which returns an Array of all matched patterns, where each match is an Array with all the containing matched groups. Instead of using a while loop, I have provided examples using both the Array.prototype.map() function as well as a more performant way – using a plain for-loop.
Concise versions (less code, more syntactic sugar)
These are less performant since they basically implement a forEach-loop instead of the faster for-loop.
// Concise ES6/ES2015 syntax
const searchString =
(string, pattern) =>
string
.match(new RegExp(pattern.source, pattern.flags))
.map(match =>
new RegExp(pattern.source, pattern.flags)
.exec(match));
// Or if you will, with ES5 syntax
function searchString(string, pattern) {
return string
.match(new RegExp(pattern.source, pattern.flags))
.map(match =>
new RegExp(pattern.source, pattern.flags)
.exec(match));
}
let string = "something format_abc",
pattern = /(?:^|\s)format_(.*?)(?:\s|$)/;
let result = searchString(string, pattern);
// [[" format_abc", "abc"], null]
// The trailing `null` disappears if you add the `global` flag
Performant versions (more code, less syntactic sugar)
// Performant ES6/ES2015 syntax
const searchString = (string, pattern) => {
let result = [];
const matches = string.match(new RegExp(pattern.source, pattern.flags));
for (let i = 0; i < matches.length; i++) {
result.push(new RegExp(pattern.source, pattern.flags).exec(matches[i]));
}
return result;
};
// Same thing, but with ES5 syntax
function searchString(string, pattern) {
var result = [];
var matches = string.match(new RegExp(pattern.source, pattern.flags));
for (var i = 0; i < matches.length; i++) {
result.push(new RegExp(pattern.source, pattern.flags).exec(matches[i]));
}
return result;
}
let string = "something format_abc",
pattern = /(?:^|\s)format_(.*?)(?:\s|$)/;
let result = searchString(string, pattern);
// [[" format_abc", "abc"], null]
// The trailing `null` disappears if you add the `global` flag
I have yet to compare these alternatives to the ones previously mentioned in the other answers, but I doubt this approach is less performant and less fail-safe than the others.
Your syntax probably isn't the best to keep. FF/Gecko defines RegExp as an extension of Function.
(FF2 went as far as typeof(/pattern/) == 'function')
It seems this is specific to FF -- IE, Opera, and Chrome all throw exceptions for it.
Instead, use either method previously mentioned by others: RegExp#exec or String#match.
They offer the same results:
var regex = /(?:^|\s)format_(.*?)(?:\s|$)/;
var input = "something format_abc";
regex(input); //=> [" format_abc", "abc"]
regex.exec(input); //=> [" format_abc", "abc"]
input.match(regex); //=> [" format_abc", "abc"]
There is no need to invoke the exec method! You can use "match" method directly on the string. Just don't forget the parentheses.
var str = "This is cool";
var matches = str.match(/(This is)( cool)$/);
console.log( JSON.stringify(matches) ); // will print ["This is cool","This is"," cool"] or something like that...
Position 0 has a string with all the results. Position 1 has the first match represented by parentheses, and position 2 has the second match isolated in your parentheses. Nested parentheses are tricky, so beware!
With es2018 you can now String.match() with named groups, makes your regex more explicit of what it was trying to do.
const url =
'https://stackoverflow.com/questions/432493/how-do-you-access-the-matched-groups-in-a-javascript-regular-expression?some=parameter';
const regex = /(?<protocol>https?):\/\/(?<hostname>[\w-\.]*)\/(?<pathname>[\w-\./]+)\??(?<querystring>.*?)?$/;
const { groups: segments } = url.match(regex);
console.log(segments);
and you'll get something like
{protocol: "https", hostname: "stackoverflow.com", pathname: "questions/432493/how-do-you-access-the-matched-groups-in-a-javascript-regular-expression", querystring: "some=parameter"}
A one liner that is practical only if you have a single pair of parenthesis:
while ( ( match = myRegex.exec( myStr ) ) && matches.push( match[1] ) ) {};
Using your code:
console.log(arr[1]); // prints: abc
console.log(arr[0]); // prints: format_abc
Edit: Safari 3, if it matters.
function getMatches(string, regex, index) {
index || (index = 1); // default to the first capturing group
var matches = [];
var match;
while (match = regex.exec(string)) {
matches.push(match[index]);
}
return matches;
}
// Example :
var myString = 'Rs.200 is Debited to A/c ...2031 on 02-12-14 20:05:49 (Clear Bal Rs.66248.77) AT ATM. TollFree 1800223344 18001024455 (6am-10pm)';
var myRegEx = /clear bal.+?(\d+\.?\d{2})/gi;
// Get an array containing the first capturing group for every match
var matches = getMatches(myString, myRegEx, 1);
// Log results
document.write(matches.length + ' matches found: ' + JSON.stringify(matches))
console.log(matches);
function getMatches(string, regex, index) {
index || (index = 1); // default to the first capturing group
var matches = [];
var match;
while (match = regex.exec(string)) {
matches.push(match[index]);
}
return matches;
}
// Example :
var myString = 'something format_abc something format_def something format_ghi';
var myRegEx = /(?:^|\s)format_(.*?)(?:\s|$)/g;
// Get an array containing the first capturing group for every match
var matches = getMatches(myString, myRegEx, 1);
// Log results
document.write(matches.length + ' matches found: ' + JSON.stringify(matches))
console.log(matches);
Your code works for me (FF3 on Mac) even if I agree with PhiLo that the regex should probably be:
/\bformat_(.*?)\b/
(But, of course, I'm not sure because I don't know the context of the regex.)
As #cms said in ECMAScript (ECMA-262) you can use matchAll. It return an iterator and by putting it in [... ] (spread operator) it converts to an array.(this regex extract urls of file names)
let text = `File1 File2`;
let fileUrls = [...text.matchAll(/href="(http\:\/\/[^"]+\.\w{3})\"/g)].map(r => r[1]);
console.log(fileUrls);
/*Regex function for extracting object from "window.location.search" string.
*/
var search = "?a=3&b=4&c=7"; // Example search string
var getSearchObj = function (searchString) {
var match, key, value, obj = {};
var pattern = /(\w+)=(\w+)/g;
var search = searchString.substr(1); // Remove '?'
while (match = pattern.exec(search)) {
obj[match[0].split('=')[0]] = match[0].split('=')[1];
}
return obj;
};
console.log(getSearchObj(search));
You don't really need an explicit loop to parse multiple matches — pass a replacement function as the second argument as described in: String.prototype.replace(regex, func):
var str = "Our chief weapon is {1}, {0} and {2}!";
var params= ['surprise', 'fear', 'ruthless efficiency'];
var patt = /{([^}]+)}/g;
str=str.replace(patt, function(m0, m1, position){return params[parseInt(m1)];});
document.write(str);
The m0 argument represents the full matched substring {0}, {1}, etc. m1 represents the first matching group, i.e. the part enclosed in brackets in the regex which is 0 for the first match. And position is the starting index within the string where the matching group was found — unused in this case.
We can access the matched group in a regular expressions by using backslash followed by number of the matching group:
/([a-z])\1/
In the code \1 represented matched by first group ([a-z])
I you are like me and wish regex would return an Object like this:
{
match: '...',
matchAtIndex: 0,
capturedGroups: [ '...', '...' ]
}
then snip the function from below
/**
* #param {string | number} input
* The input string to match
* #param {regex | string} expression
* Regular expression
* #param {string} flags
* Optional Flags
*
* #returns {array}
* [{
match: '...',
matchAtIndex: 0,
capturedGroups: [ '...', '...' ]
}]
*/
function regexMatch(input, expression, flags = "g") {
let regex = expression instanceof RegExp ? expression : new RegExp(expression, flags)
let matches = input.matchAll(regex)
matches = [...matches]
return matches.map(item => {
return {
match: item[0],
matchAtIndex: item.index,
capturedGroups: item.length > 1 ? item.slice(1) : undefined
}
})
}
let input = "key1:value1, key2:value2 "
let regex = /(\w+):(\w+)/g
let matches = regexMatch(input, regex)
console.log(matches)
One line solution:
const matches = (text,regex) => [...text.matchAll(regex)].map(([match])=>match)
So you can use this way (must use /g):
matches("something format_abc", /(?:^|\s)format_(.*?)(?:\s|$)/g)
result:
[" format_abc"]
JUST USE RegExp.$1...$n th group
eg:
1.To match 1st group RegExp.$1
To match 2nd group RegExp.$2
if you use 3 group in regex likey(note use after string.match(regex))
RegExp.$1 RegExp.$2 RegExp.$3
var str = "The rain in ${india} stays safe";
var res = str.match(/\${(.*?)\}/ig);
//i used only one group in above example so RegExp.$1
console.log(RegExp.$1)
//easiest way is use RegExp.$1 1st group in regex and 2nd grounp like
//RegExp.$2 if exist use after match
var regex=/\${(.*?)\}/ig;
var str = "The rain in ${SPAIN} stays ${mainly} in the plain";
var res = str.match(regex);
for (const match of res) {
var res = match.match(regex);
console.log(match);
console.log(RegExp.$1)
}
Get all group occurrence
let m=[], s = "something format_abc format_def format_ghi";
s.replace(/(?:^|\s)format_(.*?)(?:\s|$)/g, (x,y)=> m.push(y));
console.log(m);
I thought you just want to grab all the words containing the abc substring and store the matched group/entries, so I made this script:
s = 'something format_abc another word abc abc_somestring'
console.log(s.match(/\b\w*abc\w*\b/igm));
\b - a word boundary
\w* - 0+ word chars
abc - your exact match
\w* - 0+ word chars
\b - a word boundary
References: Regex: Match all the words that contains some word
https://javascript.info/regexp-introduction

Google sheet : REGEXREPLACE match everything except a particular pattern

I would try to replace everything inside this string :
[JGMORGAN - BANK2] n° 10 NEWYORK, n° 222 CAEN, MONTELLIER, VANNES / TARARTA TIs
1303222074, 1403281851 & 1307239335 et Cloture TIs 1403277567,
1410315029
Except the following numbers :
1303222074
1403281851
1307239335
1403277567
1410315029
I have built a REGEX to match them :
1[0-9]{9}
But I have not figured it out to do the opposite that is everything except all matches ...
google spreadsheet use the Re2 regex engine and doesn't support many usefull features that can help you to do that. So a basic workaround can help you:
match what you want to preserve first and capture it:
pattern: [0-9]*(?:[0-9]{0,9}[^0-9]+)*(?:([0-9]{9,})|[0-9]*\z)
replacement: $1 (with a space after)
demo
So probably something like this:
=TRIM(REGEXREPLACE("[JGMORGAN - BANK2] n° 10 NEWYORK, n° 222 CAEN, MONTELLIER, VANNES / TARARTA TIs 1303222074, 1403281851 & 1307239335 et Cloture TIs 1403277567, 1410315029"; "[0-9]*(?:[0-9]{0,9}[^0-9]+)*(?:([0-9]{9,})|[0-9]*\z)"; "$1 "))
You can also do this with dynamic native functions:
=REGEXEXTRACT(A1,rept("(\d{10}).*",counta(split(regexreplace(A1,"\d{10}","#"),"#"))-1))
basically it is first split by the desired string, to figure out how many occurrences there are of it, then repeats the regex to dynamically create that number of capture groups, thus leaving you in the end with only those values.
First of all thank you Casimir for your help. It gave me an idea that will not be possible with a built-in functions and strong regex lol.
I found out that I can make a homemade function for my own purposes (yes I'm not very "up to date").
It's not very well coded and it returns doublons. But rather than fixing it properly, I use the built in UNIQUE() function on top of if to get rid of them; it's ugly and I'm lazy but it does the job, that is, a list of all matches of on specific regex (which is: 1[0-9]{9}). Here it is:
function ti_extract(input) {
var tab_tis = new Array();
var tab_strings = new Array();
tab_tis.push(input.match(/1[0-9]{9}/)); // get the TI and insert in tab_tis
var string_modif = input.replace(tab_tis[0], " "); // modify source string (remove everything except the TI)
tab_strings.push(string_modif); // insert this new string in the table
var v = 0;
var patt = new RegExp(/1[0-9]{9}/);
var fin = patt.test(tab_strings[v]);
var first_string = tab_strings[v];
do {
first_string = tab_strings[v]; // string 0, or the string with the first removed TI
tab_tis.push(first_string.match(/1[0-9]{9}/)); // analyze the string and get the new TI to put it in the table
var string_modif2 = first_string.replace(tab_tis[v], " "); // modify the string again to remove the new TI from the old string
tab_strings.push(string_modif2);
v += 1;
}
while(v < 15)
return tab_tis;
}