I'm writing a database backup function as part of my school project.
I need to write a regex rule so the database backup name can only contain legal characters.
By 'legal' I mean a string that doesn't contain ANY symbols or spaces. Only letters from the alphabet and numbers.
An example of a valid string would be '31Jan2012'
or '63927jkdfjsdbjk623'
or 'hello123backup'
.
Here's my JS code so far:
// Check if the input box contains the charactes a-z, A-Z ,or 0-9 with a regular expression.
function checkIfContainsNumbersOrCharacters(elem, errorMessage){
var regexRule = new RegExp("^[\w]+$");
if(regexRule.test( $(elem).val() ) ){
return true;
}else{
alert(errorMessage);
return false;
}
}
//call the function
checkIfContainsNumbersOrCharacters("#backup-name", "Input can only contain the characters a-z or 0-9.");
I've never really used regular expressions before though, however after a quick bit of googling i found this tool, from which I wrote the following regex rule:
^[\w]+$
^ = start of string
[/w] = a-z/A-Z/0-9
'+' = characters after the string.
When running my function, the whatever string I input seems to return false :( is my code wrong? or am I not using regex rules correctly?
/^[\w]+$/.test("ads123")
in my JS console, and it works, that is, returnstrue
as it should.new Regexp("[regexp-goes-here]", "[modifiers]")
and/[regexp-goes-here]/[modifiers]
are equivalent. Do note the use of quotes in the former one, and absence in the latter.+
would be "match the previous token (i.e.\w
) 1 or more times". But the code should work, from what I can see.