I need a regular expression that will match any character that is not a letter or a number. Once found I want to replace it with a blank space.
11 Answers
To match anything other than letter or number you could try this:
[^a-zA-Z0-9]
And to replace:
var str = 'dfj,dsf7lfsd .sdklfj';
str = str.replace(/[^A-Za-z0-9]/g, ' ');
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26
\w
is for Word characters and is exactly the same as[a-zA-Z0-9_]
(notice that underscore is considered a word character.) ...so the shorthand would bestr.replace(/[^\w]/g, ' ')
Commented Aug 30, 2013 at 16:41 -
but it will include many unicode letters, too! is there any way to exclude unicode letters? Commented May 4, 2017 at 12:06
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2
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1@Dave: As of 2018 you can't without a polyfill, apparently... stackoverflow.com/questions/280712/javascript-unicode-regexes– NickolayCommented Jun 7, 2018 at 16:39
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is there a way, instead of repalce with a space... replace with "\" followed by the character that was been identified? Like this: make this dfj,dsf7lfsd .sdklfj into this dfj\,dsf7lfsd \.sdklfj?– CrazySpyCommented Nov 26, 2019 at 13:52
This regular expression matches anything that isn't a letter, digit, or an underscore (_
) character.
\W
For example in JavaScript:
"(,,@,£,() asdf 345345".replace(/\W/g, ' '); // Output: " asdf 345345"
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I believe he is looking for /(_|\W)/g, to match anything not a digit or letter (english language)– kennebecCommented Jun 7, 2010 at 18:44
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@sbmaxx I want to replace all except &, (, ) these characters. how could i add this condition in the current regex. Commented Feb 21, 2019 at 11:24
You are looking for:
var yourVar = '1324567890abc§$)%';
yourVar = yourVar.replace(/[^a-zA-Z0-9]/g, ' ');
This replaces all non-alphanumeric characters with a space.
The "g" on the end replaces all occurrences.
Instead of specifying a-z (lowercase) and A-Z (uppercase) you can also use the in-case-sensitive option: /[^a-z0-9]/gi
.
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Will it match spaces aswell? I need spaces to be kept. Thanks. Commented Jun 7, 2010 at 18:17
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Space characters would match, but then would be replaced by space characters, so in effect it would leave them alone (a space will stay a space).– jimboCommented Jun 7, 2010 at 18:42
- Match letters only
/[A-Z]/ig
- Match anything not letters
/[^A-Z]/ig
- Match number only
/[0-9]/g
or/\d+/g
- Match anything not number
/[^0-9]/g
or/\D+/g
- Match anything not number or letter
/[^A-Z0-9]/ig
There are other possible patterns
This is way way too late, but since there is no accepted answer I'd like to provide what I think is the simplest one: \D - matches all non digit characters.
var x = "123 235-25%";
x.replace(/\D/g, '');
Results in x: "12323525"
See https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Guide/Regular_Expressions
Just for others to see:
someString.replaceAll("([^\\p{L}\\p{N}])", " ");
will remove any non-letter and non-number unicode characters.
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I'm not sure where the two upvotes came from, but in JavaScript (which this question is about) there's no
replaceAll
, and the\p{..}
property escapes are not widely implemented.– NickolayCommented Jun 7, 2018 at 16:43 -
1
try doing str.replace(/[^\w]/); It will replace all the non-alphabets and numbers from your string!
Edit 1: str.replace(/[^\w]/g, ' ')
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2A working answer would be
str.replace(/[^\w]/g, ' ')
. If you don't include/g
flag it will only replace the first occurence. And if you don't define a replacement string, here a blank space' '
, it will replace byundefined
all over the place. Finally, underscores will not be replaced because they match\w
. This answer is not a perfect fit. Commented Feb 18, 2017 at 17:25
To match anything other than letter or number or letter with diacritics like é
you could try this:
[^\wÀ-úÀ-ÿ]
And to replace:
var str = 'dfj,dsf7é@lfsd .sdklfàj1';
str = str.replace(/[^\wÀ-úÀ-ÿ]/g, '_');
Inspired by the top post with support for diacritics
Have you tried str = str.replace(/\W|_/g,'');
it will return a string without any character and you can specify if any especial character after the pipe bar |
to catch them as well.
var str = "1324567890abc§$)% John Doe #$@'.replace(/\W|_/g, '');
it will return str = 1324567890abcJohnDoe
or look for digits and letters and replace them for empty string (""):
var str = "1324567890abc§$)% John Doe #$@".replace(/\w|_/g, '');
it will return str = '§$)% #$@';
To match anything other than letter or number you could try this:
import re
regular_expression = r'[^a-zA-Z0-9\s]'
new_string = re.sub(regular_expression, '', old_string)
re substring is an alternative to the replace command but the key here is the regular expression.
The ^ means italic NOT ONE of the character contained between the brackets.
The /s _italic_means ANY ONE space/non-space character.
I recommend this web which explains regular expressions arguments: https://www3.ntu.edu.sg/home/ehchua/programming/howto/Regexe.html
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You might want to add some context to your answer, what is this code doing?– mozwayCommented Oct 24, 2023 at 11:43
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