5461

Given a string:

string = "Test abc test test abc test test test abc test test abc";

This seems to only remove the first occurrence of abc in the string above:

string = string.replace('abc', '');

How do I replace all occurrences of it?

3
  • 19
    When replacing all occurrences of aba in ababa with ca, which result do you expect? caba? abca? cca? Aug 2, 2019 at 12:58
  • 19
    String.prototype.replaceAll() is now a standard part of ECMAScript tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-string.prototype.replaceall, documented at developer.mozilla.org/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/… and shipped in Safari 13.1, Firefox 77 and Chrome Dev/Canary and will ship in Chrome 85. From the docs: “If searchValue is a string, replaces all occurrences of searchValue (as if .split(searchValue).join(replaceValue) or a global & properly-escaped regular expression had been used). If searchValue is a non-global regular expression, throws an exception”
    – sideshowbarker
    Jun 29, 2020 at 5:26
  • 19
    Use regex instead of string, should look like str.replace(/abc/g, ''); so g to get all matches.
    – sarea
    Jul 29, 2020 at 6:17

79 Answers 79

10

Although people have mentioned the use of regex, there's a better approach if you want to replace the text irrespective of the case of the text. Like uppercase or lowercase. Use the below syntax:

// Consider the below example
originalString.replace(/stringToBeReplaced/gi, '');

// The output will be all the occurrences removed irrespective of casing.

You can refer to the detailed example here.

1
  • from the example site: "/toBeReplacedString/gi is the regex you need to use. Here g represents for global match and i represents case insensitive. By default regex is case sensitive"
    – alikuli
    Aug 3, 2016 at 10:15
10

With the regular expression i flag for case insensitive

console.log('App started'.replace(/a/g, '')) // Result: "App strted"
console.log('App started'.replace(/a/gi, '')) // Result: "pp strted"
8

Just add /g

document.body.innerHTML = document.body.innerHTML.replace('hello', 'hi');

to

// Replace 'hello' string with /hello/g regular expression.
document.body.innerHTML = document.body.innerHTML.replace(/hello/g, 'hi');

/g means global

7

The following function works for me:

String.prototype.replaceAllOccurence = function(str1, str2, ignore)
{
    return this.replace(new RegExp(str1.replace(/([\/\,\!\\\^\$\{\}\[\]\(\)\.\*\+\?\|\<\>\-\&])/g,"\\$&"),(ignore?"gi":"g")),(typeof(str2)=="string")?str2.replace(/\$/g,"$$$$"):str2);
} ;

Now call the functions like this:

"you could be a Project Manager someday, if you work like this.".replaceAllOccurence ("you", "I");

Simply copy and paste this code in your browser console to TEST.

7

This can be achieved using regular expressions. A few combinations that might help someone:

var word = "this,\\ .is*a*test,    '.and? / only /     'a \ test?";
var stri = "This      is    a test         and only a        test";

To replace all non alpha characters,

console.log(word.replace(/([^a-z])/g,' ').replace(/ +/g, ' '));
Result: [this is a test and only a test]

To replace multiple continuous spaces with one space,

console.log(stri.replace(/  +/g,' '));
Result: [This is a test and only a test]

To replace all * characters,

console.log(word.replace(/\*/g,''));
Result: [this,\ .isatest,    '.and? / only /     'a  test?]

To replace question marks (?)

console.log(word.replace(/\?/g,'#'));
Result: [this,\ .is*a*test,    '.and# / only /     'a  test#]

To replace quotation marks,

console.log(word.replace(/'/g,'#'));
Result: [this,\ .is*a*test,    #.and? / only /     #a  test?]

To replace all ' characters,

console.log(word.replace(/,/g,''));
Result: [this\ .is*a*test    '.and? / only /     'a  test?]

To replace a specific word,

console.log(word.replace(/test/g,''));
Result: [this,\ .is*a*,    '.and? / only /     'a  ?]

To replace backslash,

console.log(word.replace(/\\/g,''));
Result: [this, .is*a*test,    '.and? / only /     'a  test?]

To replace forward slash,

console.log(word.replace(/\//g,''));
Result: [this,\ .is*a*test,    '.and?  only      'a  test?]

To replace all spaces,

console.log(word.replace(/ /g,'#'));
Result: [this,\#.is*a*test,####'.and?#/#only#/#####'a##test?]

To replace dots,

console.log(word.replace(/\./g,'#'));
Result: [this,\ #is*a*test,    '#and? / only /     'a  test?]
6

My implementation, very self explanatory

function replaceAll(string, token, newtoken) {
    if(token!=newtoken)
    while(string.indexOf(token) > -1) {
        string = string.replace(token, newtoken);
    }
    return string;
}
3
  • 1
    This is incorrect. replaceAll("123434", "1234", "12") should return "1234" but instead returns "12".
    – Bryan
    Apr 16, 2013 at 13:58
  • 2
    it depends if you allow to replace "recursively" or not.
    – Vitim.us
    Apr 16, 2013 at 16:16
  • 11
    replaceAll("abc", "a", "ab") never terminates May 16, 2013 at 14:44
6

You can simply use below method

/**
 * Replace all the occerencess of $find by $replace in $originalString
 * @param  {originalString} input - Raw string.
 * @param  {find} input - Target key word or regex that need to be replaced.
 * @param  {replace} input - Replacement key word
 * @return {String}       Output string
 */
function replaceAll(originalString, find, replace) {
  return originalString.replace(new RegExp(find, 'g'), replace);
};
6

I use p to store the result from the previous recursion replacement:

function replaceAll(s, m, r, p) {
    return s === p || r.contains(m) ? s : replaceAll(s.replace(m, r), m, r, s);
}

It will replace all occurrences in the string s until it is possible:

replaceAll('abbbbb', 'ab', 'a') → 'abbbb' → 'abbb' → 'abb' → 'ab' → 'a'

To avoid infinite loop I check if the replacement r contains a match m:

replaceAll('abbbbb', 'a', 'ab') → 'abbbbb'
6

I use split and join or this function:

function replaceAll(text, busca, reemplaza) {
  while (text.toString().indexOf(busca) != -1)
    text = text.toString().replace(busca, reemplaza);
  return text;
}
1
  • That work wrong in case of replaceAll('aaaaaa','aa','a') Jan 29, 2022 at 5:06
6

Check this answer. Maybe it will help, and I used it in my project.

function replaceAll(searchString, replaceString, str) {
    return str.split(searchString).join(replaceString);
}

replaceAll('abc', '',"Test abc test test abc test test test abc test test abc" ); // "Test  test test  test test test  test test "
6

In terms of performance related to the main answers, these are some online tests.

While the following are some performance tests using console.time() (they work best in your own console because the time is very short to be seen in the following snippet).

console.time('split and join');
"javascript-test-find-and-replace-all".split('-').join(' ');
console.timeEnd('split and join')

console.time('regular expression');
"javascript-test-find-and-replace-all".replace(new RegExp('-', 'g'), ' ');
console.timeEnd('regular expression');

console.time('while');
let str1 = "javascript-test-find-and-replace-all";
while (str1.indexOf('-') !== -1) {
    str1 = str1.replace('-', ' ');
}
console.timeEnd('while');

The interesting thing to notice is that if you run them multiple times, the results are always different even though the regular expression solution seems the fastest on average and the while loop solution the slowest.

6

For replacing all kind of characters, try this code:

Suppose we have a need to send " and \ in my string. Then we will convert it " to \" and \ to \\.

So this method will solve this issue.

String.prototype.replaceAll = function (find, replace) {
     var str = this;
     return str.replace(new RegExp(find.replace(/[-\/\\^$*+?.()|[\]{}]/g, '\\$&'), 'g'), replace);
 };

var message = $('#message').val();
message = message.replaceAll('\\', '\\\\'); /*it will replace \ to \\ */
message = message.replaceAll('"', '\\"');   /*it will replace " to \\"*/

I was using Ajax, and I had the need to send parameters in JSON format. Then my method is looking like this:

 function sendMessage(source, messageID, toProfileID, userProfileID) {

     if (validateTextBox()) {
         var message = $('#message').val();
         message = message.replaceAll('\\', '\\\\');
         message = message.replaceAll('"', '\\"');
         $.ajax({
             type: "POST",
             async: "false",
             contentType: "application/json; charset=utf-8",
             url: "services/WebService1.asmx/SendMessage",
             data: '{"source":"' + source + '","messageID":"' + messageID + '","toProfileID":"' + toProfileID + '","userProfileID":"' + userProfileID + '","message":"' + message + '"}',
             dataType: "json",
             success: function (data) {
                 loadMessageAfterSend(toProfileID, userProfileID);
                 $("#<%=PanelMessageDelete.ClientID%>").hide();
                 $("#message").val("");
                 $("#delMessageContainer").show();
                 $("#msgPanel").show();
             },
             error: function (result) {
                 alert("message sending failed");
             }
         });
     }
     else {
         alert("Please type message in message box.");
         $("#message").focus();

     }
 }

 String.prototype.replaceAll = function (find, replace) {
     var str = this;
     return str.replace(new RegExp(find.replace(/[-\/\\^$*+?.()|[\]{}]/g, '\\$&'), 'g'), replace);
 };
0
5

Method 1

Try to implement a regular expression:

"Test abc test test abc test test test abc test test abc".replace(/\abc/g, ' ');

Method 2

Split and join. Split with abc and join with empty space.

"Test abc test test abc test test test abc test test abc".split("abc").join(" ")

5

Most people are likely doing this to encode a URL. To encode a URL, you shouldn't only consider spaces, but convert the entire string properly with encodeURI.

encodeURI("http://www.google.com/a file with spaces.html")

to get:

http://www.google.com/a%20file%20with%20spaces.html
1
  • This answers some completely different question. And also does it badly because encodeURI is not a silver bullet for any and all URL-related encodings: the URL object is much more powerful and makes handling URL encoding much easier.
    – VLAZ
    Jan 10 at 14:13
5

In my applications, I use a custom function that is the most powerful for this purpose, and even wrapping the split/join solution in the simpler case, it is a little bit faster in Chrome 60 and Firefox 54 (JSBEN.CH) than other solutions. My computer runs Windows 7 64 bits.

The advantage is that this custom function can handle many substitutions at the same time using strings or characters, which can be a shortcut for some applications.

Like the above split/join solution, the solution below doesn't have any problems with escape characters, differently than the regular expression approach.

function replaceAll(s, find, repl, caseOff, byChar) {
    if (arguments.length<2)
        return false;
    var destDel = ! repl;       // If destDel delete all keys from target
    var isString = !! byChar;   // If byChar, replace set of characters
    if (typeof find !== typeof repl && ! destDel)
        return false;
    if (isString && (typeof find !== "string"))
        return false;

    if (! isString && (typeof find === "string")) {
        return s.split(find).join(destDel ? "" : repl);
    }

    if ((! isString) && (! Array.isArray(find) ||
        (! Array.isArray(repl) && ! destDel)))
        return false;

    // If destOne replace all strings/characters by just one element
    var destOne = destDel ? false : (repl.length === 1);

    // Generally source and destination should have the same size
    if (! destOne && ! destDel && find.length !== repl.length)
        return false

    var prox, sUp, findUp, i, done;
    if (caseOff)  { // Case insensitive

    // Working with uppercase keys and target
    sUp = s.toUpperCase();
    if (isString)
       findUp = find.toUpperCase()
    else
       findUp = find.map(function(el) {
                    return el.toUpperCase();
                });
    }
    else { // Case sensitive
        sUp = s;
        findUp = find.slice(); // Clone array/string
    }

    done = new Array(find.length); // Size: number of keys
    done.fill(null);

    var pos = 0;  // Initial position in target s
    var r = "";   // Initial result
    var aux, winner;
    while (pos < s.length) {       // Scanning the target
        prox  = Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER;
        winner = -1;  // No winner at the start
        for (i=0; i<findUp.length; i++) // Find next occurence for each string
            if (done[i]!==-1) { // Key still alive

                // Never search for the word/char or is over?
                if (done[i] === null || done[i] < pos) {
                    aux = sUp.indexOf(findUp[i], pos);
                    done[i] = aux;  // Save the next occurrence
                }
                else
                    aux = done[i]   // Restore the position of last search

                if (aux < prox && aux !== -1) { // If next occurrence is minimum
                    winner = i; // Save it
                    prox = aux;
                }
        } // Not done

        if (winner === -1) { // No matches forward
            r += s.slice(pos);
            break;
        } // No winner

        // Found the character or string key in the target

        i = winner;  // Restore the winner
        r += s.slice(pos, prox); // Update piece before the match

        // Append the replacement in target
        if (! destDel)
            r += repl[destOne ? 0 : i];
        pos = prox + (isString ? 1 : findUp[i].length); // Go after match
    }  // Loop

    return r; // Return the resulting string
}

The documentation is below:

 replaceAll

 Syntax
 ======

      replaceAll(s, find, [repl, caseOff, byChar)

 Parameters
 ==========

   "s" is a string target of replacement.
   "find" can be a string or array of strings.
   "repl" should be the same type than "find" or empty

  If "find" is a string, it is a simple replacement for
    all "find" occurrences in "s" by string "repl"

  If "find" is an array, it will replaced each string in "find"
    that occurs in "s" for corresponding string in "repl" array.
  The replace specs are independent: A replacement part cannot
  be replaced again.


  If "repl" is empty all "find" occurrences in "s" will be deleted.
  If "repl" has only one character or element,
      all occurrences in "s" will be replaced for that one.

  "caseOff" is true if replacement is case insensitive
       (default is FALSE)

  "byChar" is true when replacement is based on set of characters.
  Default is false

  If "byChar", it will be replaced in "s" all characters in "find"
  set of characters for corresponding character in "repl"
  set of characters

 Return
 ======

  The function returns the new string after the replacement.

To be fair, I ran the benchmark with no parameter test.

Here is my test set, using Node.js:

function l() {
    return console.log.apply(null, arguments);
}

var k = 0;
l(++k, replaceAll("banana is a ripe fruit harvested near the river",
      ["ri", "nea"], ["do", "fa"]));  // 1
l(++k, replaceAll("banana is a ripe fruit harvested near the river",
      ["ri", "nea"], ["do"])); // 2
l(++k, replaceAll("banana is a ripe fruit harvested near the river",
      ["ri", "nea"])); // 3
l(++k, replaceAll("banana is a ripe fruit harvested near the river",
     "aeiou", "", "", true)); // 4
l(++k, replaceAll("banana is a ripe fruit harvested near the river",
      "aeiou", "a", "", true)); // 5
l(++k, replaceAll("banana is a ripe fruit harvested near the river",
      "aeiou", "uoiea", "", true)); // 6
l(++k, replaceAll("banana is a ripe fruit harvested near the river",
      "aeiou", "uoi", "", true)); // 7
l(++k, replaceAll("banana is a ripe fruit harvested near the river",
      ["ri", "nea"], ["do", "fa", "leg"])); // 8
l(++k, replaceAll("BANANA IS A RIPE FRUIT HARVESTED NEAR THE RIVER",
      ["ri", "nea"], ["do", "fa"])); // 9
l(++k, replaceAll("BANANA IS A RIPE FRUIT HARVESTED NEAR THE RIVER",
      ["ri", "nea"], ["do", "fa"], true)); // 10
return;

And the results:

1 'banana is a dope fruit harvested far the dover'
2 'banana is a dope fruit harvested dor the dover'
3 'banana is a pe fruit harvested r the ver'
4 'bnn s rp frt hrvstd nr th rvr'
5 'banana as a rapa fraat harvastad naar tha ravar'
6 'bununu is u ripo frait hurvostod nour tho rivor'
7 false
8 false
9 'BANANA IS A RIPE FRUIT HARVESTED NEAR THE RIVER'
10 'BANANA IS A doPE FRUIT HARVESTED faR THE doVER'

3
  • 2
    Downvoted because using this much code to achieve something so basic feels overkill to me.
    – Bart Read
    Sep 4, 2017 at 6:53
  • 1
    It's matter of opinion. For me It's a powerhouse and fast function. I've used for years. One cannot do it on fewer lines. For those who just want to replace chars and pieces in strings without worrying about escape characters from regular expressions, it might be a good choice. The number of lines does not matter much, since it works is a tested black box Sep 5, 2017 at 18:34
  • I like how the function deal with array inputs, same as method of str_replace of PHP, but: 1. The function "caseOff" will not work while inputs be Strings. - 2. The benchmark absolutely and logically look not fair, When you define a function as prototype and redefine this and comment part of your code and also use just string inputs, the result is not fair. The fair can be this : jsben.ch/38Gj1 (Much different in results) Jan 20, 2022 at 5:33
5

There is now a finished proposal for integrating String.prototype.replaceAll into the official specification. Eventually, developers will not have to come up with their own implementations for replaceAll - instead, modern JavaScript engines will support it natively.

The proposal is at stage 4, which means that everything is complete, and all that's left is for browsers to start implementing it.

It has shipped in the latest versions of Chrome, Firefox, and Safari.

Here are the implementation details:

Per the current TC39 consensus, String.prototype.replaceAll behaves identically to String.prototype.replace in all cases, except for the following two cases:

  1. If searchValue is a string, String.prototype.replace only replaces a single occurrence of the searchValue, whereas String.prototype.replaceAll replaces all occurrences of the searchValue (as if .split(searchValue).join(replaceValue) or a global & properly-escaped regular expression had been used).
  2. If searchValue is a non-global regular expression, String.prototype.replace replaces a single match, whereas String.prototype.replaceAll throws an exception. This is done to avoid the inherent confusion between the lack of a global flag (which implies "do NOT replace all") and the name of the method being called (which strongly suggests "replace all").

Notably, String.prototype.replaceAll behaves just like String.prototype.replace if searchValue is a global regular expression.

You can see a specification-compliant polyfill here.

In supported environments, the following snippet will log foo-bar-baz, without throwing an error:

const str = 'foo bar baz';
console.log(
  str.replaceAll(' ', '-')
);

0
4

If using a library is an option for you then you will get the benefits of the testing and community support that goes with a library function. For example, the string.js library has a replaceAll() function that does what you're looking for:

// Include a reference to the string.js library and call it (for example) S.
str = S(str).replaceAll('abc', '').s;
3
function replaceAll(str, find, replace) {
    var $r="";
    while($r!=str){ 
        $r = str;
        str = str.replace(find, replace);
    }
    return str;
}
1
  • 3
    if the replacement contains the "find" youi will have an infinite loop Jun 24, 2016 at 8:44
3

In November 2019, a new feature is added to the JavaScript, string.prototype.replaceAll().

Currently it's only supported with Babel, but maybe in the future it can be implemented in all the browsers. For more information, read here.

1
  • 5
    Wow, javascript is finally adding what Java 1.0 had in 1995. Great!
    – Ali
    Dec 13, 2019 at 15:59
3

Here's a very simple solution. You can assign a new method to a String object

String.prototype.replaceAll = function(search, replace){
   return this.replace(new RegExp(search, 'g'), replace)
}

var str = "Test abc test test abc test test test abc test test abc";
str = str.replaceAll('abc', '');

console.log(str) // -> Test  test test  test test test  test test
4
  • 1
    Assigning to the prototype of a global object is called prototype population and considered a pretty bad anti pattern. It is only acceptable for polyfills that implement the specified behavior of a function for old engines that don't support it yet. This implementation has different semantics than the spec. Consider 'hi'.replaceAll('.', 'x') // => 'xx'
    – Moritz
    Jul 28, 2020 at 15:16
  • Thanks Moritz I think extending or modification of the prototypes of any objects, especially native ones is consider bad practice, but not to add new method If you have any source Please share Jul 29, 2020 at 16:38
  • 2
    Extending and "adding new methods" seems like the same thing to me. This is a problem because now there actually is a replaceAll method in the spec and it has different semantics which might break code, even in external dependencies. See: flaviocopes.com/javascript-why-not-modify-object-prototype
    – Moritz
    Jul 30, 2020 at 17:24
  • @IftikharHussain it's very simple to prove that's bad practice, with your code you have hidden the native implementation of .replaceAll(). Thus you've introduced inconsistencies and bugs for any and all code that uses the native .replaceAll() method. That can be code in third party libraries or other code you don't control. If your code is a library, then you've affected all consumers and changed the semantics of their whole application.
    – VLAZ
    Jan 10 at 14:08
2

This can be solved using regular expressions and the flag g, which means to not stop after finding the first match. Really, regular expressions are life savers!

function replaceAll(string, pattern, replacement) {
    return string.replace(new RegExp(pattern, "g"), replacement);
}

// or if you want myString.replaceAll("abc", "");

String.prototype.replaceAll = function(pattern, replacement) {
    return this.replace(new RegExp(pattern, "g"), replacement);
};
2

Here is the working code with prototype:

String.prototype.replaceAll = function(find, replace) {
    var str = this;
    return str.replace(new RegExp(find.replace(/([.*+?^=!:${}()|\[\]\/\\])/g, "\\$1"), 'g'), replace);
};
2

In string first element search and replace

var str = '[{"id":1,"name":"karthikeyan.a","type":"developer"}]'
var i = str.replace('"[','[').replace(']"',']');
console.log(i,'//first element search and replace')

In string global search and replace

var str = '[{"id":1,"name":"karthikeyan.a","type":"developer"}]'
var j = str.replace(/\"\[/g,'[').replace(/\]\"/g,']');
console.log(j,'//global search and replace')

2
  • The text is ***** incomprehensible *****: "In string first element search and replace" and "In string global search and replace". Are you using machine translation and/or are some words missing? Can you fix it? Sep 24, 2022 at 18:58
  • Neither the first, nor the second code block do anything. Both just try to replace some values but no such values exist in the string they are being replaced in. The printed string is thus exactly equivalent to the input.
    – VLAZ
    Jan 10 at 14:14
2

For unique replaceable values

String.prototype.replaceAll = function(search_array, replacement_array) {
  //
  var target = this;
  //
  search_array.forEach(function(substr, index) {
    if (typeof replacement_array[index] != "undefined") {
      target = target.replace(new RegExp(substr, 'g'), replacement_array[index])
    }
  });
  //
  return target;
};

//  Use:
var replacedString = "This topic commented on :year. Talking :question.".replaceAll([':year', ':question'], ['2018', 'How to replace all occurrences of a string in JavaScript']);
//
console.log(replacedString);

3
  • Your code doesn't work if words share the same letters. Example : var test = "Groups_4_Questions_0__Options_0_Wording".replaceAll([4, 0, 0], [100, 200, 300])
    – rak007
    Apr 20, 2018 at 13:19
  • Not meant for it. Only for unique replaceable values.
    – TheAivis
    Apr 20, 2018 at 13:52
  • 2
    this is useless then in most case
    – rak007
    Apr 20, 2018 at 13:53
2

JavaScript provides a direct way to replace a part of a string with another string and there are some tricks also by which you can do this.

To replace all the occurrences you can use replace() or replaceAll method in JavaScript.

  1. replace() method - To replace all elements using this method use a regular expression as a pattern to find the matching string and then replace it with a new string. Please consider using the /g flag with it.

const str = "To do or not to do";
const pattern = /do/g;
const replaceBy = "Code";
console.log(str.replace(pattern, replaceBy));

  1. replaceAll() method - To replace all elements using this method, use either a string or regular expression as a pattern to find the matching string and then replace it with a new string. We must use the /g flag with a regular expression in the replaceAll method.

const str = "To do or not to do";
const pattern = "do";
const replaceBy = "Code";
console.log(str.replaceAll(pattern, replaceBy));

const pattern2 = /do/g;
console.log(str.replaceAll(pattern2, replaceBy));

Alternate method: By using split and join method

Split the string at what you want to replace and join by using the new string as a separator. See the example.

const str = "To do or not to do";
const newStr = str.split("do").join("Code");
console.log(newStr);

2

Use split and join:

var str = "Test abc test test abc test test test abc test test abc";
var replaced_str = str.split('abc').join('');
console.log(replaced_str);

2
  • Like many previous answers. What is different? Sep 24, 2022 at 20:21
  • Split and join is a great way to do replaceAll for two reasons: 1- Availability for String.prototype.replaceAll depends on the NodeJS version you're using. 2- If the searched value for replacement contains characters, using replace with regex global flag becomes harder.
    – zed
    Jan 2, 2023 at 11:07
2

This solution combines some previous answers and conforms somewhat better to the proposed August 2020 standard solution. This solution is still viable for me in September 2020, as String.replaceAll is not available in the Node.js binary I am using.


RegExp.escape is a separate issue to deal with, but it is important here, because the official proposed solution will automatically escape string-based find input. This String.replaceAll polyfill would not without the RegExp.escape logic.

I have added an answer which doesn't polyfill RegExp.Escape, in the case that you don't want that.


If you pass a regular expression to find, you must include g as a flag. This polyfill won't provide a nice TypeError for you and will cause you a major bad time.

If you need exact standards conformance, for an application which is rigorously relying on the standard implementation, then I suggest using Babel or some other tool to get you the 'right answer' every time instead of Stack Overflow. That way you won't have any surprises.


Code:

if (!Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(RegExp, 'escape')) {
  RegExp.escape = function(string) {
    // https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Guide/Regular_Expressions#Escaping
    // https://github.com/benjamingr/RegExp.escape/issues/37
    return string.replace(/[.*+\-?^${}()|[\]\\]/g, '\\$&'); // $& means the whole matched string
  };
}

if (!Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(String, 'replaceAll')) {
  String.prototype.replaceAll = function(find, replace) {
    // https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/String/replaceAll
    // If you pass a RegExp to 'find', you _MUST_ include 'g' as a flag.
    // TypeError: "replaceAll must be called with a global RegExp" not included, will silently cause significant errors. _MUST_ include 'g' as a flag for RegExp.
    // String parameters to 'find' do not require special handling.
    // Does not conform to "special replacement patterns" when "Specifying a string as a parameter" for replace
    // Does not conform to "Specifying a function as a parameter" for replace
    return this.replace(
          Object.prototype.toString.call(find) == '[object RegExp]' ?
            find :
            new RegExp(RegExp.escape(find), 'g'),
          replace
        );
  }
}

Code, Minified:

Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(RegExp,"escape")||(RegExp.escape=function(e){return e.replace(/[.*+\-?^${}()|[\]\\]/g,"\\$&")}),Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(String,"replaceAll")||(String.prototype.replaceAll=function(e,t){return this.replace("[object RegExp]"==Object.prototype.toString.call(e)?e:new RegExp(RegExp.escape(e),"g"),t)});

Example:

console.log(
  't*.STVAL'
    .replaceAll(
      new RegExp(RegExp.escape('T*.ST'), 'ig'),
      'TEST'
    )
);

console.log(
  't*.STVAL'
    .replaceAll(
      't*.ST',
      'TEST'
    );
);

Code without RegExp.Escape:

if (!Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(String, 'replaceAll')) {
  String.prototype.replaceAll = function(find, replace) {
    // https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/String/replaceAll
    // If you pass a RegExp to 'find', you _MUST_ include 'g' as a flag.
    // TypeError: "replaceAll must be called with a global RegExp" not included, will silently cause significant errors. _MUST_ include 'g' as a flag for RegExp.
    // String parameters to 'find' do not require special handling.
    // Does not conform to "special replacement patterns" when "Specifying a string as a parameter" for replace
    // Does not conform to "Specifying a function as a parameter" for replace
    return this.replace(
          Object.prototype.toString.call(find) == '[object RegExp]' ?
            find :
            new RegExp(find.replace(/[.*+\-?^${}()|[\]\\]/g, '\\$&'), 'g'),
          replace
        );
  }
}

Code without RegExp.Escape, Minified:

Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(String,"replaceAll")||(String.prototype.replaceAll=function(e,t){return this.replace("[object RegExp]"==Object.prototype.toString.call(e)?e:new RegExp(e.replace(/[.*+\-?^${}()|[\]\\]/g,"\\$&"),"g"),t)});
3
  • RegExp.Escape was based on my answer linked here: stackoverflow.com/a/63838890/5979634 Sep 13, 2020 at 9:47
  • 1
    The Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(String, 'replaceAll') will return false anyway, because it owned by String.prototype So it should be like: Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(String.prototype, 'replaceAll') Jan 2, 2022 at 3:52
  • MMMahdy-PAPION is right, but in addition it would be simpler and more transparent to simply check for String.prototype.hasOwnProperty('replaceAll')
    – Sebastian
    Mar 15, 2023 at 13:08
1

I just want to share my solution, based on some of the functional features of last versions of JavaScript:

   var str = "Test abc test test abc test test test abc test test abc";

   var result = str.split(' ').reduce((a, b) => {
      return b == 'abc' ? a : a + ' ' + b;   })

  console.warn(result)
1

You can do it without Regex, but you need to be careful if the replacement text contains the search text.

e.g.

replaceAll("nihIaohi", "hI", "hIcIaO", true)

So here is a proper variant of replaceAll, including string-prototype:

function replaceAll(str, find, newToken, ignoreCase)
{
    let i = -1;

    if (!str)
    {
        // Instead of throwing, act as COALESCE if find == null/empty and str == null
        if ((str == null) && (find == null))
            return newToken;

        return str;
    }

    if (!find) // sanity check 
        return str;

    ignoreCase = ignoreCase || false;
    find = ignoreCase ? find.toLowerCase() : find;

    while ((
        i = (ignoreCase ? str.toLowerCase() : str).indexOf(
            find, i >= 0 ? i + newToken.length : 0
        )) !== -1
    )
    {
        str = str.substring(0, i) +
            newToken +
            str.substring(i + find.length);
    } // Whend 

    return str;
}

Or, if you want to have a string-prototype function:

String.prototype.replaceAll = function (find, replace) {
    let str = this;

    let i = -1;

    if (!str)
    {
        // Instead of throwing, act as COALESCE if find == null/empty and str == null
        if ((str == null) && (find == null))
            return newToken;

        return str;
    }

    if (!find) // sanity check 
        return str;

    ignoreCase = ignoreCase || false;
    find = ignoreCase ? find.toLowerCase() : find;

    while ((
        i = (ignoreCase ? str.toLowerCase() : str).indexOf(
            find, i >= 0 ? i + newToken.length : 0
        )) !== -1
    )
    {
        str = str.substring(0, i) +
            newToken +
            str.substring(i + find.length);
    } // Whend 

    return str;
};
1
str = "Test abc test test abc test test test abc test test abc"

str.split(' ').join().replace(/abc/g,'').replace(/,/g, ' ')

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