JavaScript regex multiline text between two tags

JavascriptRegex

Javascript Problem Overview


I wrote a regex to fetch string from HTML, but it seems the multiline flag doesn't work.

This is my pattern and I want to get the text in h1 tag.

var pattern= /<div class="box-content-5">.*<h1>([^<]+?)<\/h1>/mi
m = html.search(pattern);
return m[1];

I created a string to test it. When the string contains "\n", the result is always null. If I removed all the "\n"s, it gave me the right result, no matter with or without the /m flag.

What's wrong with my regex?

Javascript Solutions


Solution 1 - Javascript

You are looking for the /.../s modifier, also known as the dotall modifier. It forces the dot . to also match newlines, which it does not do by default.

The bad news is that it does not exist in JavaScript (it does as of ES2018, see below). The good news is that you can work around it by using a character class (e.g. \s) and its negation (\S) together, like this:

[\s\S]

So in your case the regex would become:

/<div class="box-content-5">[\s\S]*<h1>([^<]+?)<\/h1>/i

As of ES2018, JavaScript supports the s (dotAll) flag, so in a modern environment your regular expression could be as you wrote it, but with an s flag at the end (rather than m; m changes how ^ and $ work, not .):

/<div class="box-content-5">.*<h1>([^<]+?)<\/h1>/is

Solution 2 - Javascript

You want the s (dotall) modifier, which apparently doesn't exist in Javascript - you can replace . with [\s\S] as suggested by @molf. The m (multiline) modifier makes ^ and $ match lines rather than the whole string.

Solution 3 - Javascript

[\s\S] did not work for me in nodejs 6.11.3. Based on the RegExp documentation, it says to use [^] which does work for me.

> (The dot, the decimal point) matches any single character except line > terminators: \n, \r, \u2028 or \u2029. > > Inside a character set, the dot loses its special meaning and matches > a literal dot. > > Note that the m multiline flag doesn't change the dot behavior. So to > match a pattern across multiple lines, the character set [^] can be > used (if you don't mean an old version of IE, of course), it will > match any character including newlines.

For example:

/This is on line 1[^]*?This is on line 3/m

where the *? is the non-greedy grab of 0 or more occurrences of [^].

Solution 4 - Javascript

The dotall modifier has actually made it into JavaScript in June 2018, that is ECMAScript 2018.
https://github.com/tc39/proposal-regexp-dotall-flag

const re = /foo.bar/s; // Or, `const re = new RegExp('foo.bar', 's');`.
re.test('foo\nbar');
// → true
re.dotAll
// → true
re.flags
// → 's'

Solution 5 - Javascript

My suggestion is that it's better to split the multiple-line string with "\n" and concatenate the splits of the original string and becomes a single line and easy to manipulate.

<textarea class="form-control" name="Body" rows="12" data-rule="required" 
                  title='@("Your feedback ".Label())'
                  placeholder='@("Your Feedback here!".Label())' data-val-required='@("Feedback is required".Label())'
                  pattern="^[0-9a-zA-Z ,;/?.\s_-]{3,600}$" data-val="true" required></textarea>


$( document ).ready( function() {
  var errorMessage = "Please match the requested format.";
  var firstVisit = false;
  
  $( this ).find( "textarea" ).on( "input change propertychange", function() {
    
    var pattern = $(this).attr( "pattern" );
    var element = $( this );
    
    if(typeof pattern !== typeof undefined && pattern !== false)
    {
      var ptr = pattern.replace(/^\^|\$$/g, '');
      var patternRegex = new RegExp('^' + pattern.replace(/^\^|\$$/g, '') + '$', 'gm');     
      
      var ks = "";
      $.each($( this ).val().split("\n"), function( index, value ){
        console.log(index + "-" + value);
        ks += " " + value;
      });      
      //console.log(ks);
      
      hasError = !ks.match( patternRegex );
      //debugger;
      
      if ( typeof this.setCustomValidity === "function") 
      {
        this.setCustomValidity( hasError ? errorMessage : "" );
      } 
      else 
      {
        $( this ).toggleClass( "invalid", !!hasError );
        $( this ).toggleClass( "valid", !hasError );
        
        if ( hasError ) 
        {
          $( this ).attr( "title", errorMessage );
        } 
        else
        {
          $( this ).removeAttr( "title" );
        }
      }
    }
    
  });
});

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionwangyhView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - JavascriptmolfView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - JavascriptGregView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - JavascriptMichael GrantView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - JavascriptForivinView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - JavascriptGhebrehiywetView Answer on Stackoverflow