783

Given a string like:

"The dog      has a long   tail, and it     is RED!"

What kind of jQuery or JavaScript magic can be used to keep spaces to only one space max?

Goal:

"The dog has a long tail, and it is RED!"
6
  • 5
    Do you also want to match whitespacy tab characters? Dec 30, 2009 at 17:34
  • @Chris, Yes please, great question.... With all these different answers, how is one supposed to know which is the most efficient solution? Dec 30, 2009 at 17:37
  • 4
    Everyone below is right, but this is the most optimized regex: str.replace(/ +(?= )/g,''); you're not replacing anything you don't have to. Dec 30, 2009 at 17:46
  • 2
    There's not going to be any noticeable difference in performance. You could always profile it, but I doubt it would be worth it. I would go for the clearest.
    – Draemon
    Dec 30, 2009 at 18:15
  • 1
    @EvanCarroll: Not true -- at least on Firefox. That version runs significantly slower. See the profiling results in my answer (below). Dec 30, 2009 at 19:28

27 Answers 27

1384

Given that you also want to cover tabs, newlines, etc, just replace \s\s+ with ' ':

string = string.replace(/\s\s+/g, ' ');

If you really want to cover only spaces (and thus not tabs, newlines, etc), do so:

string = string.replace(/  +/g, ' ');
11
  • 2
    Does this also remove, whitespacy tab characters? Dec 30, 2009 at 17:39
  • 9
    This is not working when a blank instead of a tab or newline is needed. Right? /\s+/ would be working.
    – Fabian
    Feb 20, 2013 at 11:01
  • 6
    it would might be better for you as a function such as function removeExtraSpaces(string){ return string.replace(/\s{2,}/g, ' ');} Sep 8, 2013 at 23:03
  • 9
    @Ethan: JS has a builtin function for that: trim(). It's faster than regex. You could just do string.trim().replace(/\s\s+/g, ' '); or string.replace(/\s\s+/g, ' ').trim();.
    – BalusC
    Apr 12, 2018 at 6:12
  • 14
    /\s\s+/g and /\s{2,}/g do not match whitespacey characters unless there are at least two adjacent to each other, e.g. will match \t\t but will not match single \t. string.replace(/\s+/g, ' ') will match all single and multiple whitespacey character substrings and replace with single space. Sep 19, 2018 at 23:08
243

Since you seem to be interested in performance, I profiled these with firebug. Here are the results I got:

str.replace( /  +/g, ' ' )       ->  380ms
str.replace( /\s\s+/g, ' ' )     ->  390ms
str.replace( / {2,}/g, ' ' )     ->  470ms
str.replace( / +/g, ' ' )        ->  790ms
str.replace( / +(?= )/g, ' ')    -> 3250ms

This is on Firefox, running 100k string replacements.

I encourage you to do your own profiling tests with firebug, if you think performance is an issue. Humans are notoriously bad at predicting where the bottlenecks in their programs lie.

(Also, note that IE 8's developer toolbar also has a profiler built in -- it might be worth checking what the performance is like in IE.)

4
  • 6
    jsperf.com/removing-multiple-spaces Go forth and JSPerf! The last method; ( / +(?= )/g, ' '); fails in IE9, it leaves double spaces: "Foo Bar Baz".replace(/ +(?= )/g, ' '); --> "Foo Bar Baz" Apr 26, 2013 at 10:22
  • @VivekPanday - I imagine that this is because the second line is only replacing occurrences of double spaces with a single space, while the first is replacing any space with a space as well. Whether this is time saved during the search or the actual replace, I don't know.
    – Maloric
    Aug 16, 2016 at 11:27
  • This doesn't remove the initial and trailing whitespaces. For that see this answer.
    – Ethan
    Apr 12, 2018 at 5:04
  • None of it worked for a multiline text: const text = Your text here a as da das das d asdasd KEEP IN NEW LINE NUMBER 1 as da s as. a asda dfadasd KEEP IN NEW LINE ALSO KEEP IN NEW LINE Feb 5 at 23:05
57
var str = "The      dog        has a long tail,      and it is RED!";
str = str.replace(/ {2,}/g,' ');

EDIT: If you wish to replace all kind of whitespace characters the most efficient way would be like that:

str = str.replace(/\s{2,}/g,' ');
0
18

A more robust method: This takes care of also removing the initial and trailing spaces, if they exist. Eg:

// NOTE the possible initial and trailing spaces
var str = "  The dog      has a long   tail, and it     is RED!  "

str = str.replace(/^\s+|\s+$|\s+(?=\s)/g, "");

// str -> "The dog has a long tail, and it is RED !"

Your example didn't have those spaces but they are a very common scenario too, and the accepted answer was only trimming those into single spaces, like: " The ... RED! ", which is not what you will typically need.

2
  • 3
    I used this pattern on PHP and works. $parts = preg_split("/^\s+|\s+$|\s+(?=\s)/", "Avenida Tancredo Neves, 745 Piso Térreo Sala"); Jan 16, 2017 at 1:32
  • 1
    This looks more inefficient than a simple preliminary .trim(). May 31, 2022 at 19:40
17

This is one solution, though it will target all space characters:

"The      dog        has a long tail,      and it is RED!".replace(/\s\s+/g, ' ')

"The dog has a long tail, and it is RED!"

Edit: This is probably better since it targets a space followed by 1 or more spaces:

"The      dog        has a long tail,      and it is RED!".replace(/  +/g, ' ')

"The dog has a long tail, and it is RED!"

Alternative method:

"The      dog        has a long tail,      and it is RED!".replace(/ {2,}/g, ' ')
"The dog has a long tail, and it is RED!"

I didn't use /\s+/ by itself since that replaces spaces that span 1 character multiple times and might be less efficient since it targets more than necessary.

I didn't deeply test any of these so lmk if there are bugs.

Also, if you're going to do string replacement remember to re-assign the variable/property to its own replacement, eg:

var string = 'foo'
string = string.replace('foo', '')

Using jQuery.prototype.text:

var el = $('span:eq(0)');
el.text( el.text().replace(/\d+/, '') )
3
  • 1
    The first one is totally pointless, \s\s+ means, an \s followed by one or more \s+, which can be reduced to a single \s+, the second example is more accurate because we only want to replace double spaces, not newlines, the third is more optimized because it only applies to examples with 2+ spaces. But str.replace(/ +(?= )/g,'');, only applies to examples with 2+ spaces but saves overwriting a space with a space step. Dec 30, 2009 at 17:55
  • 4
    EvanCarroll you fail because \s\s+ is definitely different to \s+. \s\s+ would match '\t\t' or '\t\t\t' but NOT '\t'. And that's what it's all about, you don't want replace every f-en single whitespace character.
    – watain
    Dec 30, 2009 at 18:11
  • I do. Used for full-text search (and snippet-display): No random tabs, non-breakers or thingymajigs, please.
    – T4NK3R
    Jan 21, 2016 at 13:03
16

I have this method, I call it the Derp method for lack of a better name.

while (str.indexOf("  ") !== -1) {
    str = str.replace(/  /g, " ");
}

Running it in JSPerf gives some surprising results where it beat some of the more sophisticated approaches EDIT Original JSPerf link http://jsperf.com/removing-multiple-spaces/3 seems to be dead at the time

2
  • I didn’t downvote this, but this looks inefficient and the JSPerf link is dead that I can’t check out the “surprising results.” So I ask you instead: was this surprising enough to be upvoted? May 31, 2022 at 19:36
  • @КонстантинВан Thanks for pointing out the dead link! Jun 1, 2022 at 9:58
13

Here is an alternate solution if you do not want to use replace (replace spaces in a string without using replace javascript)

var str="The dog      has a long   tail, and it     is RED!";
var rule=/\s{1,}/g;

str = str.split(rule).join(" "); 

document.write(str);

2
  • 1
    If you do not want to use replace”? Why would one not want to use it? spliting and joining is obviously much slower than a replace call. May 31, 2022 at 19:16
  • @КонстантинВан In my case eBay templates restricted the use of replace
    – imos
    Jan 27, 2023 at 16:30
10

More robust:

function trim(word)
{
    word = word.replace(/[^\x21-\x7E]+/g, ' '); // change non-printing chars to spaces
    return word.replace(/^\s+|\s+$/g, '');      // remove leading/trailing spaces
}
1
9

I suggest

string = string.replace(/ +/g," ");

for just spaces
OR

string = string.replace(/(\s)+/g,"$1");

for turning multiple returns into a single return also.

6

Also a possibility:

str.replace( /\s+/g, ' ' )
5

I know that I am late to the party, but I discovered a nice solution.

Here it is:

var myStr = myStr.replace(/[ ][ ]*/g, ' ');
1
4

Comprehensive unencrypted answer for newbies et al.

This is for all of the dummies like me who test the scripts written by some of you guys which do not work.

The following 3 examples are the steps I took to remove special characters AND extra spaces on the following 3 websites (all of which work perfectly) {1. EtaVisa.com 2. EtaStatus.com 3. Tikun.com} so I know that these work perfectly.

We have chained these together with over 50 at a time and NO problems.

// This removed special characters + 0-9 and allows for just letters (upper and LOWER case)

function NoDoublesPls1()
{
var str=document.getElementById("NoDoubles1");
var regex=/[^a-z]/gi;
str.value=str.value.replace(regex ,"");
}

// This removed special characters and allows for just letters (upper and LOWER case) and 0-9 AND spaces

function NoDoublesPls2()
{
var str=document.getElementById("NoDoubles2");
var regex=/[^a-z 0-9]/gi;
str.value=str.value.replace(regex ,"");
}

// This removed special characters and allows for just letters (upper and LOWER case) and 0-9 AND spaces // The .replace(/\s\s+/g, " ") at the end removes excessive spaces // when I used single quotes, it did not work.

function NoDoublesPls3()
{    var str=document.getElementById("NoDoubles3");
var regex=/[^a-z 0-9]/gi;
str.value=str.value.replace(regex ,"") .replace(/\s\s+/g, " ");
}

::NEXT:: Save #3 as a .js // I called mine NoDoubles.js

::NEXT:: Include your JS into your page

 <script language="JavaScript" src="js/NoDoubles.js"></script>

Include this in your form field:: such as

<INPUT type="text" name="Name"
     onKeyUp="NoDoublesPls3()" onKeyDown="NoDoublesPls3()" id="NoDoubles3"/>

So that it looks like this

<INPUT type="text" name="Name" onKeyUp="NoDoublesPls3()" onKeyDown="NoDoublesPls3()" id="NoDoubles3"/>

This will remove special characters, allow for single spaces and remove extra spaces.

0
3
var string = "The dog      has a long   tail, and it     is RED!";
var replaced = string.replace(/ +/g, " ");

Or if you also want to replace tabs:

var replaced = string.replace(/\s+/g, " ");
2
  • 1
    using + seems cleaner but it will also replace single spaces with single spaces, a little bit redundant and I'm not sure but it may create performace problems with a much longer text.
    – ahmetunal
    Dec 30, 2009 at 17:39
  • 1
    I tend to use the shortest, simplest solution that will work, and only worry about that sort of optimization if I know that I need to be matching against a very large string, an at that point I will actually measure different solutions to see which will be faster. It can be hard to predict in advance what will be fastest without testing; for instance, in JavaScript interpreters, some complicated regular expressions will cause you to switch from a fast JIT compiled implementation to a slow interpreted one. Dec 30, 2009 at 17:44
3

It's as easy as doing:

const myString = "  Hello     World       !   "
const parsed = myString.replace(/ +/g, ' ') // " Hello World ! "

Now, if you wanna get rid of the starting and ending spaces, you can do:

const trimmed = parsed.trim() // "Hello World !"

ONE LINER (TL;DR)

const parsedSTring = "   John     Doe    ".replace(/ +/g, ' ').trim() // "John Doe"
2

// replace multiple white spaces with one white space

String replacedDisplayName = displayName.replaceAll("\\s{2,}", " ");
2
  • \s means \s stands for “whitespace character”. ... That is: \s matches a space, a tab, a carriage return, a line feed, or a form feed. regular-expressions.info/shorthand.html Jan 18, 2023 at 8:57
  • This doesn't work 'a b'.replaceAll("\\s{2,}", " ") -> 'a b'
    – Dominic
    Mar 6, 2023 at 17:11
0
var myregexp = new RegExp(/ {2,}/g);

str = str.replace(myregexp,' ');
0
var text = `xxx  df dfvdfv  df    
                     dfv`.split(/[\s,\t,\r,\n]+/).filter(x=>x).join(' ');

result:

"xxx df dfvdfv df dfv"
2
  • Great answer. It removes newline breaks too :)
    – Spidy
    May 3, 2022 at 9:12
  • First, why would you splitjoin when you can do a simple replace? Second, your character set also matches “,”. May 31, 2022 at 19:25
0

I know we have to use regex, but during an interview, I was asked to do WITHOUT USING REGEX.

@slightlytyler helped me in coming with the below approach.

const testStr = "I   LOVE    STACKOVERFLOW   LOL";

const removeSpaces = str  => {
  const chars = str.split('');
  const nextChars = chars.reduce(
    (acc, c) => {
      if (c === ' ') {
        const lastChar = acc[acc.length - 1];
        if (lastChar === ' ') {
          return acc;
        }
      }
      return [...acc, c];
    },
    [],
  );
  const nextStr = nextChars.join('');
  return nextStr
};

console.log(removeSpaces(testStr));

4
  • 2
    consider: console.log(testStr.split(" ").filter(s => s.length).join(" "))
    – dpjanes
    Mar 28, 2020 at 9:29
  • @dpjanes thanks, mate, do we have any similar chain function to get "DISTINCT" element from an array, we will be using the same array, no new array
    – xSachinx
    Jun 22, 2020 at 15:09
  • 1
    hahah I love a challenge. Not fully chained, but one line: console.log(Array.from(new Set("I LOVE STACKOVERFLOW LOL LOVE".split(" ").filter(s => s.length))).join(" "))
    – dpjanes
    Jun 23, 2020 at 16:39
  • The core concept being Array.from(new Set(<some list>)).
    – dpjanes
    Jun 23, 2020 at 16:40
0

here is my solutions that work well for me:

var text = "    Tes ddas    dMd WAlkman 3Dsfd    "
    .toLowerCase()
    .replace(/\b\s+/g, " ")
    .replace(/\b\w/g, s => s.toUpperCase())
    .trimStart()
    .trimEnd();
    
console.log(text);

// result: Tes Ddas Dmd Walkman 3dsfd

-1

We can use the following regex explained with the help of sed system command. The similar regex can be used in other languages and platforms.

Add the text into some file say test

manjeet-laptop:Desktop manjeet$ cat test
"The dog      has a long   tail, and it     is RED!"

We can use the following regex to replace all white spaces with single space

manjeet-laptop:Desktop manjeet$ sed 's/ \{1,\}/ /g' test
"The dog has a long tail, and it is RED!"

Hope this serves the purpose

-1

Try this to replace multiple spaces with a single space.

<script type="text/javascript">
    var myStr = "The dog      has a long   tail, and it     is RED!";
    alert(myStr);  // Output 'The dog      has a long   tail, and it     is RED!'

    var newStr = myStr.replace(/  +/g, ' ');
    alert(newStr);  // Output 'The dog has a long tail, and it is RED!'
</script>

Read more @ Replacing Multiple Spaces with Single Space

1
-1

For more control you can use the replace callback to handle the value.

value = "tags:HUNT  tags:HUNT         tags:HUNT  tags:HUNT"
value.replace(new RegExp(`(?:\\s+)(?:tags)`, 'g'), $1 => ` ${$1.trim()}`)
//"tags:HUNT tags:HUNT tags:HUNT tags:HUNT"
-1

This script removes any white space (multiple spaces, tabs, returns, etc) between words and trims:

// Trims & replaces any wihtespacing to single space between words
String.prototype.clearExtraSpace = function(){
  var _trimLeft  = /^\s+/,
      _trimRight = /\s+$/,
      _multiple  = /\s+/g;

  return this.replace(_trimLeft, '').replace(_trimRight, '').replace(_multiple, ' ');
};
1
-1

' mouse pointer touch '.replace(/^\s+|\s+$|(\s)+/g, "$1") should do the trick!

-1

Using nodepad++ function, below regex works fine for me,

Find: {1}\K\s+
Replace:leave it empty

-2
let nameCorrection = function (str) {
  let strPerfect = str.replace(/\s+/g, " ").trim();
  let strSmall = strPerfect.toLowerCase();
  let arrSmall = strSmall.split(" ");
  let arrCapital = [];
  for (let x of arrSmall.values()) {
    arrCapital.push(x[0].toUpperCase() + x.slice(1));
  }

  let result = arrCapital.join(" ");
  console.log(result);
};
nameCorrection("Pradeep kumar dHital");
2
  • the second line of code is helping to replace the multiple white space with just one. and the trim method at the end trims the white space out if there is any at the beginning of the string or at the end Jan 7, 2022 at 0:39
  • I mean, this is not your notebook. Title-casing is irrelevant to the question. May 31, 2022 at 19:30
-2

def removeblanks(text): return re.sub(r'\s\s+'," ",text) I was working on a large textual data with a lot of duplicate spaces. The above RE worked for me. All the duplicate blank spaces were replaced by a single space.

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