421

I am designing a regular expression tester in HTML and JavaScript. The user will enter a regex, a string, and choose the function they want to test with (e.g. search, match, replace, etc.) via radio button and the program will display the results when that function is run with the specified arguments. Naturally there will be extra text boxes for the extra arguments to replace and such.

My problem is getting the string from the user and turning it into a regular expression. If I say that they don't need to have //'s around the regex they enter, then they can't set flags, like g and i. So they have to have the //'s around the expression, but how can I convert that string to a regex? It can't be a literal since its a string, and I can't pass it to the RegExp constructor since its not a string without the //'s. Is there any other way to make a user input string into a regex? Will I have to parse the string and flags of the regex with the //'s then construct it another way? Should I have them enter a string, and then enter the flags separately?

15 Answers 15

724

Use the RegExp object constructor to create a regular expression from a string:

var re = new RegExp("a|b", "i");
// same as
var re = /a|b/i;
11
  • 1
    would be nice to have online tool with a input field
    – holms
    Nov 14, 2013 at 4:10
  • 77
    When doing it this way, you must escape the backslash, e.g. var re = new RegExp("\\w+");
    – JD Smith
    Sep 12, 2014 at 15:59
  • 16
    @holms regex101.com is a great regex online tool as well Jul 18, 2016 at 8:38
  • 3
    It took me a while to see that there are no trailing slashes required
    – ESP32
    Dec 7, 2016 at 23:52
  • 2
    @JDSmith I didn't mean it in your example. I meant that you need to escape double quotes if you want them to be a part of the regex provided it is hard coded. Obviously, none of this applies if the string is in a variable like from an <input> HTML tag. var re = new RegExp("\"\\w+\""); is an example of a hard coded regex using the RegExp constructor and the escaping of the double quotes is necessary. What I mean by a string in a variable is that you can just do var re = new RegExp(str); and str may contain double quotes or backslashes without a problem.
    – Luis Paulo
    Apr 17, 2018 at 0:23
85
var flags = inputstring.replace(/.*\/([gimy]*)$/, '$1');
var pattern = inputstring.replace(new RegExp('^/(.*?)/'+flags+'$'), '$1');
var regex = new RegExp(pattern, flags);

or

var match = inputstring.match(new RegExp('^/(.*?)/([gimy]*)$'));
// sanity check here
var regex = new RegExp(match[1], match[2]);
4
  • You should consider that an invalid input like /\/ is recognized.
    – Gumbo
    May 17, 2009 at 15:14
  • 12
    Or let the RegExp constructor fail, "trailing \ in regular expression", instead of writing a complicated parser.
    – Anonymous
    May 17, 2009 at 15:23
  • Note that users can input as many flags as they want, e.g.: /foo/ggggg. In the first example you could change the flags replace to replace('/.*\/(?!.*(.).*\1)([gimy]*)$/', '$2'). Or use the following regex for the 2nd example ^\/(.*)\/(?!.*(.).*\2)([gimy]*)$, what will put the flags in match group 3.
    – luukvhoudt
    May 14, 2021 at 14:33
  • the real anwser... flags: dgimsuvy Mar 16 at 19:09
36

Here is a one-liner: str.replace(/[|\\{}()[\]^$+*?.]/g, '\\$&')

I got it from the escape-string-regexp NPM module.

Trying it out:

escapeStringRegExp.matchOperatorsRe = /[|\\{}()[\]^$+*?.]/g;
function escapeStringRegExp(str) {
    return str.replace(escapeStringRegExp.matchOperatorsRe, '\\$&');
}

console.log(new RegExp(escapeStringRegExp('example.com')));
// => /example\.com/

Using tagged template literals with flags support:

function str2reg(flags = 'u') {
    return (...args) => new RegExp(escapeStringRegExp(evalTemplate(...args))
        , flags)
}

function evalTemplate(strings, ...values) {
    let i = 0
    return strings.reduce((str, string) => `${str}${string}${
        i < values.length ? values[i++] : ''}`, '')
}

console.log(str2reg()`example.com`)
// => /example\.com/u
2
  • 2
    this seems to be the opposite of what the question asks. It wants to treat a string like a regex expression, so user can give input like /.*\.com$/ and have it match example.com
    – Geoduck
    Mar 2, 2023 at 19:01
  • right, in this case, based on the end of the question "Should I have them enter a string, and then enter the flags separately?" the response could be to just use the RegExp constructor, or extract the flags like in stackoverflow.com/a/874742/2234156
    – Rivenfall
    Mar 7, 2023 at 9:53
18

Use the JavaScript RegExp object constructor.

var re = new RegExp("\\w+");
re.test("hello");

You can pass flags as a second string argument to the constructor. See the documentation for details.

13

In my case the user input somethimes was sorrounded by delimiters and sometimes not. therefore I added another case..

var regParts = inputstring.match(/^\/(.*?)\/([gim]*)$/);
if (regParts) {
    // the parsed pattern had delimiters and modifiers. handle them. 
    var regexp = new RegExp(regParts[1], regParts[2]);
} else {
    // we got pattern string without delimiters
    var regexp = new RegExp(inputstring);
}
2
  • 4
    you could always use the .split() function instead of a long regex string. regParts = inputstring.split('/') this would make regParts[1] the regex string, and regParts[2] the delimiters (assuming the setup of the regex is /.../gim). You could check if there are delimiters with regParts[2].length < 0.
    – ZomoXYZ
    Apr 21, 2016 at 17:17
  • 1
    @ZomoXYZ Don't use split, it won't handle escaped / in the regex
    – Tofandel
    Mar 22, 2021 at 17:38
12

Try using the following function:

const stringToRegex = str => {
    // Main regex
    const main = str.match(/\/(.+)\/.*/)[1]
    
    // Regex options
    const options = str.match(/\/.+\/(.*)/)[1]
    
    // Compiled regex
    return new RegExp(main, options)
}

You can use it like so:

"abc".match(stringToRegex("/a/g"))
//=> ["a"]
7

Here is my one liner function that handles custom delimiters and invalid flags

// One liner
var stringToRegex = (s, m) => (m = s.match(/^([\/~@;%#'])(.*?)\1([gimsuy]*)$/)) ? new RegExp(m[2], m[3].split('').filter((i, p, s) => s.indexOf(i) === p).join('')) : new RegExp(s);

// Readable version
function stringToRegex(str) {
  const match = str.match(/^([\/~@;%#'])(.*?)\1([gimsuy]*)$/);
  return match ? 
    new RegExp(
      match[2],
      match[3]
        // Filter redundant flags, to avoid exceptions
        .split('')
        .filter((char, pos, flagArr) => flagArr.indexOf(char) === pos)
        .join('')
    ) 
    : new RegExp(str);
}

console.log(stringToRegex('/(foo)?\/bar/i'));
console.log(stringToRegex('#(foo)?\/bar##gi')); //Custom delimiters
console.log(stringToRegex('#(foo)?\/bar##gig')); //Duplicate flags are filtered out
console.log(stringToRegex('/(foo)?\/bar')); // Treated as string
console.log(stringToRegex('gig')); // Treated as string

4
  • 5
    Just because you crammed 10 statements into one line, it's not a one-liner :)
    – raveren
    Apr 30, 2021 at 8:48
  • 2
    10 statements? It's just a ternary expression, and if it's one line, it's a one liner ;) And if you say it's 3 line because of the function that's just for readability otherwise you can do const stringToRegex = (s, m) => (m = s.match(/^([\/~@;%#'])(.*?)\1([gimsuy]*)$/)) ? new RegExp(m[2], m[3].split('').filter((i, p, s) => s.indexOf(i) === p).join('')) : new RegExp(s);
    – Tofandel
    Apr 30, 2021 at 14:29
  • Readable and RegExp? LOL
    – TomeeNS
    Aug 13, 2022 at 6:08
  • Nice. this seems to be the only useful answer to the question.
    – Geoduck
    Mar 2, 2023 at 19:03
3

I suggest you also add separate checkboxes or a textfield for the special flags. That way it is clear that the user does not need to add any //'s. In the case of a replace, provide two textfields. This will make your life a lot easier.

Why? Because otherwise some users will add //'s while other will not. And some will make a syntax error. Then, after you stripped the //'s, you may end up with a syntactically valid regex that is nothing like what the user intended, leading to strange behaviour (from the user's perspective).

2

This will work also when the string is invalid or does not contain flags etc:

function regExpFromString(q) {
  let flags = q.replace(/.*\/([gimuy]*)$/, '$1');
  if (flags === q) flags = '';
  let pattern = (flags ? q.replace(new RegExp('^/(.*?)/' + flags + '$'), '$1') : q);
  try { return new RegExp(pattern, flags); } catch (e) { return null; }
}

console.log(regExpFromString('\\bword\\b'));
console.log(regExpFromString('\/\\bword\\b\/gi'));
            

1

Thanks to earlier answers, this blocks serves well as a general purpose solution for applying a configurable string into a RegEx .. for filtering text:

var permittedChars = '^a-z0-9 _,.?!@+<>';
permittedChars = '[' + permittedChars + ']';

var flags = 'gi';
var strFilterRegEx = new RegExp(permittedChars, flags);

log.debug ('strFilterRegEx: ' + strFilterRegEx);

strVal = strVal.replace(strFilterRegEx, '');
// this replaces hard code solt:
// strVal = strVal.replace(/[^a-z0-9 _,.?!@+]/ig, '');
1

You can ask for flags using checkboxes then do something like this:

var userInput = formInput;
var flags = '';
if(formGlobalCheckboxChecked) flags += 'g';
if(formCaseICheckboxChecked) flags += 'i';
var reg = new RegExp(userInput, flags);
0
0

Safer, but not safe. (A version of Function that didn't have access to any other context would be good.)

const regexp = Function('return ' + string)()
0

I found @Richie Bendall solution very clean. I added few small modifications because it falls appart and throws error (maybe that's what you want) when passing non regex strings.

const stringToRegex = (str) => {
const re = /\/(.+)\/([gim]?)/
const match = str.match(re);
if (match) {
    return new RegExp(match[1], match[2])
}

}

Using [gim]? in the pattern will ignore any match[2] value if it's invalid. You can omit the [gim]? pattern if you want an error to be thrown if the regex options is invalid.

0

Here is a runnnable snippet with input field that converts the input to regex:

  • If the user did not properly delimit with /, no flags are assumed
  • If the pattern includes a /, and thus escaped like \/, then it is retained and not mistaken for a / delimiter.

function toRegExp(s) {
    const [, ...parts] = s.match(/^\/((?:\\.|[^\\])*)\/(.*)$/) ?? [, s];
    try {
        return RegExp(...parts);
    } catch (e) {
        return e; // Could for instance be an error about invalid flags
    }
}

const [input, output] = document.querySelectorAll("input, span");
input.addEventListener("input", refresh);
refresh()

function refresh() {
    const regex = toRegExp(input.value);
    output.textContent = regex;
}
Regex:<br>
<input value="/test/gi"><p>
RegExp object back to string:<br>
<span></span>

-7

I use eval to solve this problem.

For example:

    function regex_exec() {

        // Important! Like @Samuel Faure mentioned, Eval on user input is a crazy security risk, so before use this method, please take care of the security risk. 
        var regex = $("#regex").val();

        // eval()
        var patt = eval(userInput);

        $("#result").val(patt.exec($("#textContent").val()));
    }
3
  • 8
    eval on userInput is a crazy security risk Jul 22, 2019 at 14:53
  • 4
    mr bobby tables ! Mar 4, 2020 at 14:44
  • @SamuelFaure is it always though? If this application is a JavaScript web app, then the client has full access to the environment via the console. If it's code running in a server side environment obviously eval is a nitemare. I just struggle to see why eval is bad by default in a client side application running in a browser. Jan 14, 2023 at 3:34

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