I would like to know how to match a string against an array of regular expressions.
I know how to do this looping through the array. I also know how to do this by making a long regular expression separated by | I was hoping for a more efficient way likeif (string contains one of the values in array) {
For example:
string = "the word tree is in this sentence";
array[0] = "dog";
array[1] = "cat";
array[2] = "bird";
array[3] = "birds can fly";
In the above example, the condition would be false.
However,stri开发者_C百科ng = "She told me birds can fly and I agreed"
would return true.How about creating a regular expression on the fly when you need it (assuming the array changes over time)
if( (new RegExp( '\\b' + array.join('\\b|\\b') + '\\b') ).test(string) ) {
alert('match');
}
demo:
string = "the word tree is in this sentence";
var array = [];
array[0] = "dog";
array[1] = "cat";
array[2] = "bird";
array[3] = "birds can fly";
if( (new RegExp( '\\b' + array.join('\\b|\\b') + '\\b') ).test(string) ){
alert('match');
}
else{
alert('no match');
}
For browsers that support javascript version 1.6 you can use the some()
method
if ( array.some(function(item){return (new RegExp('\\b'+item+'\\b')).test(string);}) ) {
alert('match');
}
demo:
string = "the word tree is in this sentence";
var array = [];
array[0] = "dog";
array[1] = "tree";
array[2] = "bird";
array[3] = "birds can fly";
if ( array.some(function(i){return (new RegExp('\\b'+i+'\\b')).test(string);}) ) {
alert('match');
}
(Many years later)
My version of @Gaby's answer, as I needed a way to check CORS origin against regular expressions in an array:
var corsWhitelist = [/^(?:.+\.)?domain\.com/, /^(?:.+\.)?otherdomain\.com/];
var corsCheck = function(origin, callback) {
if (corsWhitelist.some(function(item) {
return (new RegExp(item).test(origin));
})) {
callback(null, true);
}
else {
callback(null, false);
}
}
corsCheck('otherdomain.com', function(err, result) {
console.log('CORS match for otherdomain.com: ' + result);
});
corsCheck('forbiddendomain.com', function(err, result) {
console.log('CORS match for forbiddendomain.com: ' + result);
});
If you have the literal strings in an array called strings
you want to match, you can combine them into an alternation by doing
new RegExp(strings.map(
function (x) { // Escape special characters like '|' and '$'.
return x.replace(/[^a-zA-Z]/g, "\\$&");
}).join("|"))
If you don't have only literal strings, you want to combine regular expressions, then you use http://code.google.com/p/google-code-prettify/source/browse/trunk/js-modules/combinePrefixPatterns.js
/**
* Given a group of {@link RegExp}s, returns a {@code RegExp} that globally
* matches the union of the sets of strings matched by the input RegExp.
* Since it matches globally, if the input strings have a start-of-input
* anchor (/^.../), it is ignored for the purposes of unioning.
* @param {Array.<RegExp>} regexs non multiline, non-global regexs.
* @return {RegExp} a global regex.
*/
Is that ok ?
function checkForMatch(string,array){
var arrKeys = array.length;
var match = false;
var patt;
for(i=0; i < arrKeys; i++ ){
patt=new RegExp(" "+array[i]+" ");
if(patt.test(string))
match = true;
}
return match;
}
string = "She told me birds can fly and I agreed";
var array = new Array();
array[0] = "dog";
array[1] = "cat";
array[2] = "bird";
array[3] = "birds can fly";
alert(checkForMatch(string, array));
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