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I am going through learncodethehardway's regular expression courses.

One matching criteria is [A-Za-z]+?

The author explains that by adding the ?, this matching criteria will be "non-greedy".

However, I think the following two are equivalent. Shouldn't it always generate the same output if I use it for parsing strings?

[A-Za-z]+?

[A-Za-z]+

Am I correct?

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1 Answer 1

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Actually, no they are not the same. If you include the "?", it will match as FEW characters as possible. Here's an example:

var string = 'abcdefg';

alert(string.match(/[A-Za-z]+/));

var string = 'abcdefg';

alert(string.match(/[A-Za-z]+?/));

Now, the "?" can still match multiple characters, but only if it has too, like this:

var string = 'abcdefg>';

alert(string.match(/[A-Za-z]+>/));

Now it gets a little confusing. Check out this example that does NOT include the "?" (the dot character matches everything but a space or new line character):

var string = '<abcdefg>sldkfjsldkj>';

alert(string.match(/<.+>/));

You can see that it matches everything. However, with the "?", it will match only up to the first ">".

var string = '<abcdefg>sldkfjsldkj>';

alert(string.match(/<.+?>/));

Now it's time for a practical example of why we would need the "?" symbol. Suppose I want to match everything between <strong> HTML tags:

var string = '<strong>I\'m strong<\/strong> I\'m not strong <strong> I am again.<\/strong>';

alert(string.match(/<strong>[\s\S]+<\/strong>/));

As you can see, that matched EVERYTHING between the first and last <strong> tags. To match ONLY one, use the life-saving "?" symbol again:

var string = '<strong>I\'m strong<\/strong> I\'m not strong <strong> I am again.<\/strong>';

alert(string.match(/<strong>[\s\S]+?<\/strong>/));

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  • \s matches any space character, and \S matches any character that's not a space character. If you put characters between brackets, it tells the browser to match any of the characters between the brackets. So, essentially, [\s\S] matches ANY character. Dec 14, 2014 at 2:38

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