\d
, with a lowercase d
. This is equal to the character class [0-9]
, which looks for a single character of any number between zero and nine.
\d
to count how many digits are in movie titles. Written out numbers ("six" instead of 6) do not count.
"9"
.
testString: 'assert("9".match(numRegex).length == 1, "Your regex should find 1 digit in "9"
.");'
- text: Your regex should find 2 digits in "Catch 22"
.
testString: 'assert("Catch 22".match(numRegex).length == 2, "Your regex should find 2 digits in "Catch 22"
.");'
- text: Your regex should find 3 digits in "101 Dalmatians"
.
testString: 'assert("101 Dalmatians".match(numRegex).length == 3, "Your regex should find 3 digits in "101 Dalmatians"
.");'
- text: 'Your regex should find no digits in "One, Two, Three"
.'
testString: 'assert("One, Two, Three".match(numRegex) == null, "Your regex should find no digits in "One, Two, Three"
.");'
- text: Your regex should find 2 digits in "21 Jump Street"
.
testString: 'assert("21 Jump Street".match(numRegex).length == 2, "Your regex should find 2 digits in "21 Jump Street"
.");'
- text: 'Your regex should find 4 digits in "2001: A Space Odyssey"
.'
testString: 'assert("2001: A Space Odyssey".match(numRegex).length == 4, "Your regex should find 4 digits in "2001: A Space Odyssey"
.");'
```