I see an line in my JavaScript code like this:
var regex = /[^\w\s]/gi;
What's the meaning of this /gi in the regex?
Other part I can understand as it accepts a group of word and spaces, but not /gi.
I see an line in my JavaScript code like this:
var regex = /[^\w\s]/gi;
What's the meaning of this /gi in the regex?
Other part I can understand as it accepts a group of word and spaces, but not /gi.
g modifier: global. All matches (don't return on first match)
i modifier: insensitive. Case insensitive match (ignores case of [a-zA-Z])
In your case though i is immaterial as you dont capture [a-zA-Z].
For input like !@#$ if g modifier is not there regex will return first match !See here.
If g is there it will return the whole or whatever it can match.See here
The beginning and ending / are called delimiters. They tell the interpreter where the regex begins and ends. Anything after the closing delimiter is called a "modifier," in this case g and i.
The g and i modifiers have these meanings:
g = global, match all instances of the pattern in a string, not just onei = case-insensitive (so, for example, /a/i will match the string "a" or "A".In the context you gave (/[^\w\s]/gi), the i is meaningless, because there are no case-specific portions of the regex.