The RegEx
// Requires a decimal and commas
^\$?(([1-9]\d{0,2}(,\d{3})*)|0)?\.\d{1,2}$
// Allows a decimal, requires commas
(?=.*\d)^\$?(([1-9]\d{0,2}(,\d{3})*)|0)?(\.\d{1,2})?$
// Decimal and commas optional
(?=.*?\d)^\$?(([1-9]\d{0,2}(,\d{3})*)|\d+)?(\.\d{1,2})?$
// Decimals required, commas optional
^\$?(([1-9]\d{0,2}(,\d{3})*)|0)?\.\d{1,2}$
// *Requires/allows X here also implies "used correctly"
The RegEx Breakdown
- When the optional parts are too liberal, we need to look ahead and guarantee there's a number:
(?=.*\d)
- May or may not start with a dollar sign (I assume negatives are invalid):
^\$?
- Follow that with
-?
to allow negative numbers
- Begins with 1-3 numbers:
[1-9]\d{0,2}
- Could almost be
(\d{1,3})
, but that would allow "0,123"
- One exception, can start with 0 in the case of "$0.50" or "0.50":
|0
- These regexes assume multiple leading 0's are invalid
- Any number of three digit numbers separated by comma:
(,\d{3})*
- Remove
?
before \.
if you want to disallow numbers starting with "$."
- Requires or allows decimal (one or two digits):
\.\d{1,2}
or (\.\d{1,2})?
respectively
- End with
$
(unescaped) to make sure there's nothing after a valid number (like $1,000.00b)
To use the regex, use the string's match
method and encase the regex between two forward slashes.
// The return will either be your match or null if not found
yourNumber.match(/(?=.)^\$?(([1-9][0-9]{0,2}(,[0-9]{3})*)|0)?(\.[0-9]{1,2})?$/);
// For just a true/false response
!!yourNumber.match(/(?=.)^\$?(([1-9][0-9]{0,2}(,[0-9]{3})*)|0)?(\.[0-9]{1,2})?$/);
Basic Usage Example
Demo with Test Cases
var tests = [
"$1,530,602.24", "1,530,602.24", "$1,666.24$", ",1,666,88,", "1.6.66,6", ".1555."
];
var regex = /(?=.*\d)^\$?(([1-9]\d{0,2}(,\d{3})*)|0)?(\.\d{1,2})?$/;
for (i = 0; i < tests.length; i++) {
console.log(tests[i] + ' // ' + regex.test(tests[i]));
document.write(tests[i] + ' // ' + regex.test(tests[i]) + '<br/>');
}
String.matches
, e.g.var str="123.45"; if(str.matches(/YOUR_REGEX/)) alert("match"); else alert("not a match");
For concrete regular expressions see answers below.match
, (notmatches
). Sorry.