text = 'ticket number #1234 and #8976 ';
r = /#(\d+)/g;
var match = r.exec(text);
log(match); // ["#1234", "1234"]
In the above case I would like to capture both 1234 and 8976. How do I do that. Also the sentence can have any number of '#' followed by integers. So the solution should not hard not be hard coded assuming that there will be at max two occurrences.
Update: Just curious . Checkout the following two cases.
var match = r.exec(text); // ["#1234", "1234"]
var match = text.match(开发者_如何学Cr); //["#1234", "#8976"]
Why in the second case I am getting # even though I am not capturing it. Looks like string.match does not obey capturing rules.
exec
it multiple times to get the rest.
while((match = r.exec(text)))
log(match);
Use String.prototype.match
instead of RegExp.prototype.exec
:
var match = text.match(r);
That will give you all matches at once (requires g flag) instead of one match at a time.
Here's another way
var text = 'ticket number #1234 and #8976 ';
var r = /#(\d+)/g;
var matches = [];
text.replace( r, function( all, first ) {
matches.push( first )
});
log(matches);
// ["1234", "8976"]
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