Replace all braced strings in javascript - javascript

i want to make this:
i went to the [open shops], but the [open shops] were closed
look like this:
i went to the markets, but the markets were closed
with javascript replace
im not very good with regex and the square brackets need delimited im sure

Try this:
"i went to the [open shops], but the [open shops] were closed".replace(/\[open shops\]/g, 'markets');
The tricky part is the the need to escape the brackets and add the global match to replace each matching instance. For more info: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/String/replace

All you need to do is put \ before [ and ] to treat it as a regular character. This way your regex would become \[openshops\].
If you have multiple things that need to be replaced (eg. [shops] and [state]) you can do the following which dynamically creates the regex. This way you don't have to hard code it for each thing.
var str = "I went to the [shops], but the [shops] were [state]. I hate it when the [shops] are [state].";
var things = {
shops: "markets",
state: "closed"
};
for (thing in things) {
var re = new RegExp("\\["+thing+"\\]", "g");
str = str.replace(re, things[thing]);
}
console.log(str);
Note that you need to use two backslashes instead of just one when doing it this way.

If you don't want to use regex. You could use something like.
var a = "i went to the [open shops], but the [open shops] were closed";
var replacement = "KAPOW!";
while(a.contains("[") && a.contains("]"))
{
var left = a.indexOf("[");
var right = a.indexOf("]");
a = a.substring(0,left) + replacement + a.substring(right+ 1);
}
console.log(a);

Related

How can you add e.g. 'gm' to a regex to avoid repeating the full regex again? [duplicate]

I am trying to create something similar to this:
var regexp_loc = /e/i;
except I want the regexp to be dependent on a string, so I tried to use new RegExp but I couldn't get what i wanted.
Basically I want the e in the above regexp to be a string variable but I fail with the syntax.
I tried something like this:
var keyword = "something";
var test_regexp = new RegExp("/" + keyword + "/i");
Basically I want to search for a sub string in a larger string then replace the string with some other string, case insensitive.
regards,
alexander
You need to pass the second parameter:
var r = new RegExp(keyword, "i");
You will also need to escape any special characters in the string to prevent regex injection attacks.
You should also remember to watch out for escape characters within a string...
For example if you wished to detect for a single number \d{1} and you did this...
var pattern = "\d{1}";
var re = new RegExp(pattern);
re.exec("1"); // fail! :(
that would fail as the initial \ is an escape character, you would need to "escape the escape", like so...
var pattern = "\\d{1}" // <-- spot the extra '\'
var re = new RegExp(pattern);
re.exec("1"); // success! :D
When using the RegExp constructor, you don't need the slashes like you do when using a regexp literal. So:
new RegExp(keyword, "i");
Note that you pass in the flags in the second parameter. See here for more info.
Want to share an example here:
I want to replace a string like: hi[var1][var2] to hi[newVar][var2].
and var1 are dynamic generated in the page.
so I had to use:
var regex = new RegExp("\\\\["+var1+"\\\\]",'ig');
mystring.replace(regex,'[newVar]');
This works pretty good to me. in case anyone need this like me.
The reason I have to go with [] is var1 might be a very easy pattern itself, adding the [] would be much accurate.
var keyword = "something";
var test_regexp = new RegExp(something,"i");
You need to convert RegExp, you actually can create a simple function to do it for you:
function toReg(str) {
if(!str || typeof str !== "string") {
return;
}
return new RegExp(str, "i");
}
and call it like:
toReg("something")

Unable to convert a string to the desired regexp in Javascript [duplicate]

I am trying to create something similar to this:
var regexp_loc = /e/i;
except I want the regexp to be dependent on a string, so I tried to use new RegExp but I couldn't get what i wanted.
Basically I want the e in the above regexp to be a string variable but I fail with the syntax.
I tried something like this:
var keyword = "something";
var test_regexp = new RegExp("/" + keyword + "/i");
Basically I want to search for a sub string in a larger string then replace the string with some other string, case insensitive.
regards,
alexander
You need to pass the second parameter:
var r = new RegExp(keyword, "i");
You will also need to escape any special characters in the string to prevent regex injection attacks.
You should also remember to watch out for escape characters within a string...
For example if you wished to detect for a single number \d{1} and you did this...
var pattern = "\d{1}";
var re = new RegExp(pattern);
re.exec("1"); // fail! :(
that would fail as the initial \ is an escape character, you would need to "escape the escape", like so...
var pattern = "\\d{1}" // <-- spot the extra '\'
var re = new RegExp(pattern);
re.exec("1"); // success! :D
When using the RegExp constructor, you don't need the slashes like you do when using a regexp literal. So:
new RegExp(keyword, "i");
Note that you pass in the flags in the second parameter. See here for more info.
Want to share an example here:
I want to replace a string like: hi[var1][var2] to hi[newVar][var2].
and var1 are dynamic generated in the page.
so I had to use:
var regex = new RegExp("\\\\["+var1+"\\\\]",'ig');
mystring.replace(regex,'[newVar]');
This works pretty good to me. in case anyone need this like me.
The reason I have to go with [] is var1 might be a very easy pattern itself, adding the [] would be much accurate.
var keyword = "something";
var test_regexp = new RegExp(something,"i");
You need to convert RegExp, you actually can create a simple function to do it for you:
function toReg(str) {
if(!str || typeof str !== "string") {
return;
}
return new RegExp(str, "i");
}
and call it like:
toReg("something")

Trimming whitespace without affecting strings

So, I recently found this example on trimming whitespace, but I've found that it also affects strings in code. For instance, say I'm doing a lesson on string comparison, and to demonstrate that "Hello World!" and "Hello World!" are different, I need the code compression to not have any effect on those two strings.
I'm using the whitespace compression so that people with different formatting styles won't be punished for using something that I don't use. For instance, I like to format my functions like this:
function foo(){
return 0;
};
While others may format it like this:
function foo()
{
return 0;
};
So I use whitespace compression around punctuation to make sure it always comes out the same, but I don't want it to affect anything within a string. Is there a way to add exceptions in JavaScript's replace() function?
UPDATE:
check this jsfiddle
var str='dfgdfg fdgfd fd gfd g print("Hello World!"); sadfds dsfgsgdf'
var regex=/(?:(".*"))|(\s+)/g;
var newStr=str.replace(regex, '$1 ');
console.log(newStr);
console.log(str);
In this code it will process everything except the quoted strings
to play with the code more comfortably you can see how the regex is working :
https://regex101.com/r/tG5qH2/1
I made a jsfiddle here: https://jsfiddle.net/cuywha8t/2/
var stringSplitRegExp = /(".+?"|'.+?')/g;
var whitespaceRegExp = /\s+\{/g;
var whitespaceReplacement = "{"
var exampleCode = `var str = "test test test" + 'asdasd "sd"';\n`+
`var test2 = function()\n{\nconsole.log("This is a string with 'single quotes'")\n}\n`+
`console.log('this is a string with "double quotes"')`;
console.log(exampleCode)
var separatedStrings =(exampleCode.split(stringSplitRegExp))
for(var i = 0; i < separatedStrings.length; i++){
if (i%2 === 1){
continue;
}
var oldString = separatedStrings[i];
separatedStrings[i] = oldString.replace(whitespaceRegExp, whitespaceReplacement)
}
console.log(separatedStrings.join(""))
I believe this is what you are looking for. it handles cases where a string contains the double quotes, etc. without modifying. This example just does the formatting of the curly-braces as you mentioned in your post.
Basically, the behavior of split allows the inclusion of the splitter in the array. And since you know the split is always between two non-string elements you can leverage this by looping over and modifying only every even-indexed array element.
If you want to do general whitespace replacement you can of course modify the regexp or do multiple passes, etc.

Replace string between "[]" with javascript using regexp

I have a string coming back from a webservice the contains open brackets like such "[]"
so the string would look like something like this:
[1] blabh balh blah
I would like to write a regexp that would remove the "[1]" or anything between open brackets.
Right now I've tried something like:
var regexp = /\[[]\\]/g;
but this does not work. I'm stumbling on my own two feet here.
I simply just want to find anything that starts with "[" and ends with "]" and replace everything in the middle including the open and closed brackets.
Any help or guidance would be much appreciated.
This should work:
var str = '[1] blabh balh blah';
str = str.replace(/\[.*?\]\s?/g, '');
If you have nested brackets regexp might no be the best option though.
Is using regexp a requirement? If not, a simple solution might be:
var myString = '[1] Bob Loblaw is the man';
myString = myString.slice(myString.indexOf(']')+1);

Simple Javascript string manipulation

I have a string that will look something like this:
I'm sorry the code "codehere" is not valid
I need to get the value inside the quotes inside the string. So essentially I need to get the codehere and store it in a variable.
After some researching it looks like I could loop through the string and use .charAt(i) to find the quotes and then pull the string out one character at a time in between the quotes.
However I feel there has to be a simpler solution for this out there. Any input would be appreciated. Thanks!
You could use indexOf and lastIndexOf to get the position of the quotes:
var openQuote = myString.indexOf('"'),
closeQuote = myString.lastIndexOf('"');
Then you can validate they are not the same position, and use substring to retrieve the code:
var code = myString.substring(openQuote, closeQuote + 1);
Regex:
var a = "I'm sorry the code \"codehere\" is not valid";
var m = a.match(/"[^"]*"/ig);
alert(m[0]);
Try this:
var str = "I'm sorry the code \"cod\"eh\"ere\" is not valid";
alert(str.replace(/^[^"]*"(.*)".*$/g, "$1"));
You could use Javascript's match function. It takes as parameter, a regular expression. Eg:
/\".*\"/
Use regular expressions! You can find a match using a simple regular expressions like /"(.+)"/ with the Javascript RegExp() object. Fore more info see w3schools.com.
Try this:
var msg = "I'm sorry the code \"codehere\" is not valid";
var matchedContent = msg.match(/\".*\"/ig);
//matchedContent is an array
alert(matchedContent[0]);
You should use a Regular Expression. This is a text pattern matcher that is built into the javascript language. Regular expressions look like this: /thing to match/flags* for example, /"(.*)"/, which matches everything between a set of quotes.
Beware, regular expressions are limited -- they can't match nested things, so if the value inside quotes contains quotes itself, you'll end up with a big ugly mess.
*: or new RegExp(...), but use the literal syntax; it's better.
You could always use the .split() string function:
var mystring = 'I\'m sorry the code "codehere" is not valid' ;
var tokens = [] ;
var strsplit = mystring.split('\"') ;
for(var i=0;i<strsplit.length;i++) {
if((i % 2)==0) continue; // Ignore strings outside the quotes
tokens.push(strsplit[i]) ; // Store strings inside quotes.
}
// Output:
// tokens[0] = 'codehere' ;

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