Reputation: 13850
I want to search for titles using shell wildcards like *.js
, *.*.*
etc. in js. The thing is I loop through a list of titles and I need to filter the files using a js regex test. How do I convert shell wildcards to regex in a good way or are there any libraries that already does that?
Note: I want a generic converter from shell wildcards to regex.
Upvotes: 9
Views: 5045
Reputation: 39540
If you want a generic converter function, this should work:
function globStringToRegex(str) {
return new RegExp(preg_quote(str).replace(/\\\*/g, '.*').replace(/\\\?/g, '.'), 'g');
}
function preg_quote (str, delimiter) {
// http://kevin.vanzonneveld.net
// + original by: booeyOH
// + improved by: Ates Goral (http://magnetiq.com)
// + improved by: Kevin van Zonneveld (http://kevin.vanzonneveld.net)
// + bugfixed by: Onno Marsman
// + improved by: Brett Zamir (http://brett-zamir.me)
// * example 1: preg_quote("$40");
// * returns 1: '\$40'
// * example 2: preg_quote("*RRRING* Hello?");
// * returns 2: '\*RRRING\* Hello\?'
// * example 3: preg_quote("\\.+*?[^]$(){}=!<>|:");
// * returns 3: '\\\.\+\*\?\[\^\]\$\(\)\{\}\=\!\<\>\|\:'
return (str + '').replace(new RegExp('[.\\\\+*?\\[\\^\\]$(){}=!<>|:\\' + (delimiter || '') + '-]', 'g'), '\\$&');
}
(preg_quote function from here: http://phpjs.org/functions/preg_quote/).
Use:
var realRegex = globStringToRegex("2012-*-*.js"); //returns a RegExp object of /2012\-.*\-.*\.js/g
Here's a JS fiddle of it working:
You can then use the RegExp object to match:
if (yourString.match(realRegex)) { //do something
Update: Supports ?
for single wildcard character.
Basically all this does is convert the whole string to non regex, and then makes sure that *
gets mapped to .*
and ?
gets mapped to .
, as they're the equivalent.
Upvotes: 19
Reputation: 1254
if regexp used to get boolean result (when you don't need a match result), it is better to use test method.
/.*\.js$/i.test(yourVar)
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 81
This should be pretty close.
yourVar.match(/.*\.js$/i)
meaning
.*
.js
in the end \.js$
/i
Upvotes: 1