73

I'm having a tough time getting this to work. I have a string like:

something/([0-9])/([a-z])

And I need regex or a method of getting each match between the parentheses and return an array of matches like:

[
  [0-9],
  [a-z]
]

The regex I'm using is /\((.+)\)/ which does seem to match the right thing if there is only one set of parenthesis.

How can I get an array like above using any RegExp method in JavaScript? I need to return just that array because the returned items in the array will be looped through to create a URL routing scheme.

2
  • 2
    When you say "one set of parentheses", are you referring to nested parentheses? It's basically beyond the power of regular expressions to understand the whole "balanced parentheses" thing.
    – Pointy
    Jun 1, 2011 at 22:15
  • 1
    Anything inside of the (). So if the string was something/([0-9])/((a)(b)) it'd return [ [0-9], (a)(b) ]. Im not going to validate these, just throwing em inside a new RegExp() Jun 1, 2011 at 22:20

4 Answers 4

157

You need to make your regex pattern 'non-greedy' by adding a ? after the .+

By default, * and + are greedy in that they will match as long a string of chars as possible, ignoring any matches that might occur within the string.

Non-greedy makes the pattern only match the shortest possible match.

See Watch Out for The Greediness! for a better explanation.

Or alternately, change your regex to

\(([^\)]+)\)

which will match any grouping of parentheses that do not, themselves, contain parentheses.

8
  • Perfect, that matches it! but im stuck at how to get make an array from that? I just get ["([0-9])"] with str.match(/\([^\)]+\)/g) :( Jun 1, 2011 at 22:27
  • 2
    You're missing the internal start and end capture parens. Try /\(([^)]+)\)/g which will capture all possible parenthesized values. Note the second pair of parens after \( and before \).
    – Rob Raisch
    Jun 1, 2011 at 22:29
  • Thanks for the "greedy" part. Helped a lot.
    – Dmitri
    Dec 8, 2015 at 11:18
  • 2
    In my case to include parens that do not contain any other parens, I had to add open parens to the regex: \(([^\)(]+)\) Jan 28, 2016 at 8:55
  • This is great, but is there a way to not match the actual parens themselves? I can always remove the first and last character of every match, but it would be nice if it could all be done in one line.
    – adrianmcli
    Jan 17, 2017 at 21:48
17

Use this expression:

/\(([^()]+)\)/g

e.g:

function()
{
    var mts = "something/([0-9])/([a-z])".match(/\(([^()]+)\)/g );
    alert(mts[0]);
    alert(mts[1]);
}
7

If s is your string:

s.replace(/^[^(]*\(/, "") // trim everything before first parenthesis
 .replace(/\)[^(]*$/, "") // trim everything after last parenthesis
 .split(/\)[^(]*\(/);      // split between parenthesis
4
var getMatchingGroups = function(s) {
  var r=/\((.*?)\)/g, a=[], m;
  while (m = r.exec(s)) {
    a.push(m[1]);
  }
  return a;
};

getMatchingGroups("something/([0-9])/([a-z])"); // => ["[0-9]", "[a-z]"]

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