\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".'');'
```