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The code is showed as follows:

alert(/symbol([.\n]+?)symbol/gi.test('symbolbbbbsymbol'));

or

alert(/#([.\n]+?)#/gi.test('#bbbb#'));
4
  • 1
    Change to /<(.+?)>/gi . Also, don't parse HTML with RegExp that's a horrible idea stackoverflow.com/questions/1732348/… Mar 10, 2013 at 16:41
  • Why did you change the code in the question?
    – gdoron
    Mar 10, 2013 at 16:44
  • I am sorry for the incomplete code posted before.What I want is to find all strings between two symbols such as '#***#' or '<symbol>***</symbol>'
    – fancy
    Mar 10, 2013 at 16:49
  • The principle is the same: [.] matches literally the . character and nothing else.
    – JJJ
    Mar 10, 2013 at 16:52

2 Answers 2

8

Because you are looking for dots with a character class inside of < and >. Remove the character class:

/<(.+?)>/

Clarification after question edit:

First code block should be using this pattern: /symbol(.+?)symbol/

Second code block should be using this pattern: /#(.+?)#/

2

The regex returns false because a dot loses its special power to match any character (but newlines) when placed within a character class [] - it only matches a simple ".".

To match and capture the substring delimited at either end by the same single character, the most efficient pattern to use is

/#([^#]+)#/

To match and capture the substring delimited at either end by the same sequence of characters, the pattern to use is

/symbol(.+?)symbol/

or, if you want to match across newlines

/symbol([\s\S]+?)symbol/

where [\s\S] matches any space or non-space character, which equates to any character.

The ? is inlcuded to make the pattern match lazily, i.e. to make sure the match ends on the first occurence of "symbol".

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