Can I use
\d\d\d\d[^\d]
to check for four consecutive numbers?
For example,
411112 OK
455553 OK
1200003 OK
f44443 OK
g55553 OK
3333 OK
f4442 No
45553 No
f4444g4444 No
f44444444 No
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Can I use
\d\d\d\d[^\d]
to check for four consecutive numbers?
For example,
411112 OK
455553 OK
1200003 OK
f44443 OK
g55553 OK
3333 OK
f4442 No
45553 No
f4444g4444 No
f44444444 No
If you want to find any series of 4 digits in a string /\d\d\d\d/
or /\d{4}/
will do. If you want to find a series of exactly 4 digits, use /[^\d]\d{4}[^\d]/
. If the string should simply contain 4 consecutive digits use /^\d{4}$/
.
Edit: I think you want to find 4 of the same digits, you need a backreference for that. /(\d)\1{3}/
is probably what you're looking for.
Edit 2: /(^|(.)(?!\2))(\d)\3{3}(?!\3)/
will only match strings with exactly 4 of the same consecutive digits.
The first group matches the start of the string or any character. Then there's a negative look-ahead that uses the first group to ensure that the following characters don't match the first character, if any. The third group matches any digit, which is then repeated 3 times with a backreference to group 3. Finally there's a look-ahead that ensures that the following character doesn't match the series of consecutive digits.
This sort of stuff is difficult to do in javascript because you don't have things like forward references and look-behind.
\1
in the regex references the first group in regex ((\d)
). Read more about them here: regular-expressions.info/brackets.html. This will also match strings like "41111114", though. Is that what you want?
– Daan
Apr 24 '12 at 9:12
Should the numbers be part of a string, or do you want only the four numbers. In the later case, the regexp should be ^\d{4}$
. The ^
marks the beginning of the string, $
the end. That makes sure, that only four numbers are valid, and nothing before or after that.
That should match four digits (\d\d\d\d
) followed by a non digit character ([^\d]
). If you just want to match any four digits, you should used \d\d\d\d
or \d{4}
. If you want to make sure that the string contains just four consecutive digits, use ^\d{4}$
. The ^
will instruct the regex engine to start matching at the beginning of the string while the $
will instruct the regex engine to stop matching at the end of the string.
/^\d{4}$/
– npinti
Apr 24 '12 at 9:01