quantity specifiers using curly brackets. Sometimes you only want a specific number of matches.
To specify a certain number of patterns, just have that one number between the curly brackets.
For example, to match only the word "hah" with the letter a 3 times, your regex would be /ha{3}h/.
let A4 = "haaaah";
let A3 = "haaah";
let A100 = "h" + "a".repeat(100) + "h";
let multipleHA = /ha{3}h/;
multipleHA.test(A4); // Returns false
multipleHA.test(A3); // Returns true
multipleHA.test(A100); // Returns false
timRegex to match the word "Timber" only when it has four letter m's.
"Timber"
testString: 'assert(!timRegex.test("Timber"), "Your regex should not match "Timber"");'
- text: Your regex should not match "Timmber"
testString: 'assert(!timRegex.test("Timmber"), "Your regex should not match "Timmber"");'
- text: Your regex should not match "Timmmber"
testString: 'assert(!timRegex.test("Timmmber"), "Your regex should not match "Timmmber"");'
- text: Your regex should match "Timmmmber"
testString: 'assert(timRegex.test("Timmmmber"), "Your regex should match "Timmmmber"");'
- text: Your regex should not match "Timber" with 30 m's in it.
testString: 'assert(!timRegex.test("Ti" + "m".repeat(30) + "ber"), "Your regex should not match "Timber" with 30 m\"s in it.");'
```