2.5 KiB
id, title, challengeType, forumTopicId, dashedName
id | title | challengeType | forumTopicId | dashedName |
---|---|---|---|---|
587d7dbb367417b2b2512baa | Reuse Patterns Using Capture Groups | 1 | 301364 | reuse-patterns-using-capture-groups |
--description--
Some patterns you search for will occur multiple times in a string. It is wasteful to manually repeat that regex. There is a better way to specify when you have multiple repeat substrings in your string.
You can search for repeat substrings using capture groups. Parentheses, (
and )
, are used to find repeat substrings. You put the regex of the pattern that will repeat in between the parentheses.
To specify where that repeat string will appear, you use a backslash (\
) and then a number. This number starts at 1 and increases with each additional capture group you use. An example would be \1
to match the first group.
The example below matches any word that occurs twice separated by a space:
let repeatStr = "regex regex";
let repeatRegex = /(\w+)\s\1/;
repeatRegex.test(repeatStr); // Returns true
repeatStr.match(repeatRegex); // Returns ["regex regex", "regex"]
Using the .match()
method on a string will return an array with the string it matches, along with its capture group.
--instructions--
Use capture groups in reRegex
to match a string that consists of only the same number repeated exactly three times separated by single spaces.
--hints--
Your regex should use the shorthand character class for digits.
assert(reRegex.source.match(/\\d/));
Your regex should reuse a capture group twice.
assert(reRegex.source.match(/\\1|\\2/g).length >= 2);
Your regex should match "42 42 42"
.
assert(reRegex.test('42 42 42'));
Your regex should match "100 100 100"
.
assert(reRegex.test('100 100 100'));
Your regex should not match "42 42 42 42"
.
assert.equal('42 42 42 42'.match(reRegex.source), null);
Your regex should not match "42 42"
.
assert.equal('42 42'.match(reRegex.source), null);
Your regex should not match "101 102 103"
.
assert(!reRegex.test('101 102 103'));
Your regex should not match "1 2 3"
.
assert(!reRegex.test('1 2 3'));
Your regex should match "10 10 10"
.
assert(reRegex.test('10 10 10'));
--seed--
--seed-contents--
let repeatNum = "42 42 42";
let reRegex = /change/; // Change this line
let result = reRegex.test(repeatNum);
--solutions--
let repeatNum = "42 42 42";
let reRegex = /^(\d+)\s\1\s\1$/;
let result = reRegex.test(repeatNum);