Case insensitive string replacement in JavaScript?

I need to highlight, case insensitively, given keywords in a JavaScript string.

For example:

I need the code to work for any keyword, and therefore using a hardcoded regular expression like /foo/i is not a sufficient solution.

What is the easiest way to do this?

(This an instance of a more general problem detailed in the title, but I feel that it's best to tackle with a concrete, useful example.)

Upvotes: 54

Views: 58911

Answers (7)

okoman
okoman

Reputation: 5657

You can use regular expressions if you prepare the search string. In PHP e.g. there is a function preg_quote, which replaces all regex-chars in a string with their escaped versions.

Here is such a function for javascript (source):

function preg_quote (str, delimiter) {
  //  discuss at: https://locutus.io/php/preg_quote/
  // original by: booeyOH
  // improved by: Ates Goral (https://magnetiq.com)
  // improved by: Kevin van Zonneveld (https://kvz.io)
  // improved by: Brett Zamir (https://brett-zamir.me)
  // bugfixed by: Onno Marsman (https://twitter.com/onnomarsman)
  //   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('[.\\\\+*?\\[\\^\\]$(){}=!<>|:\\' + (delimiter || '') + '-]', 'g'), '\\$&')
}

So you could do the following:

function highlight(str, search) {
    return str.replace(new RegExp("(" + preg_quote(search) + ")", 'gi'), "<b>$1</b>");
}

Upvotes: 74

exebook
exebook

Reputation: 33900

For those poor with disregexia or regexophobia:

function replacei(str, sub, f){
	let A = str.toLowerCase().split(sub.toLowerCase());
	let B = [];
	let x = 0;
	for (let i = 0; i < A.length; i++) {
		let n = A[i].length;
		B.push(str.substr(x, n));
		if (i < A.length-1)
			B.push(f(str.substr(x + n, sub.length)));
		x += n + sub.length;
	}
	return B.join('');
}

s = 'Foo and FOO (and foo) are all -- Foo.'
t = replacei(s, 'Foo', sub=>'<'+sub+'>')
console.log(t)

Output:

<Foo> and <FOO> (and <foo>) are all -- <Foo>.

Upvotes: 3

GitCarter
GitCarter

Reputation: 140

What about something like this:

if(typeof String.prototype.highlight !== 'function') {
  String.prototype.highlight = function(match, spanClass) {
    var pattern = new RegExp( match, "gi" );
    replacement = "<span class='" + spanClass + "'>$&</span>";

    return this.replace(pattern, replacement);
  }
}

This could then be called like so:

var result = "The Quick Brown Fox Jumped Over The Lazy Brown Dog".highlight("brown","text-highlight");

Upvotes: 5

Tomalak
Tomalak

Reputation: 338228

You can enhance the RegExp object with a function that does special character escaping for you:

RegExp.escape = function(str) 
{
  var specials = /[.*+?|()\[\]{}\\$^]/g; // .*+?|()[]{}\$^
  return str.replace(specials, "\\$&");
}

Then you would be able to use what the others suggested without any worries:

function highlightWordsNoCase(line, word)
{
  var regex = new RegExp("(" + RegExp.escape(word) + ")", "gi");
  return line.replace(regex, "<b>$1</b>");
}

Upvotes: 12

bobince
bobince

Reputation: 536409

Regular expressions are fine as long as keywords are really words, you can just use a RegExp constructor instead of a literal to create one from a variable:

var re= new RegExp('('+word+')', 'gi');
return s.replace(re, '<b>$1</b>');

The difficulty arises if ‘keywords’ can have punctuation in, as punctuation tends to have special meaning in regexps. Unfortunately unlike most other languages/libraries with regexp support, there is no standard function to escape punctation for regexps in JavaScript.

And you can't be totally sure exactly what characters need escaping because not every browser's implementation of regexp is guaranteed to be exactly the same. (In particular, newer browsers may add new functionality.) And backslash-escaping characters that are not special is not guaranteed to still work, although in practice it does.

So about the best you can do is one of:

  • attempting to catch each special character in common browser use today [add: see Sebastian's recipe]
  • backslash-escape all non-alphanumerics. care: \W will also match non-ASCII Unicode characters, which you don't really want.
  • just ensure that there are no non-alphanumerics in the keyword before searching

If you are using this to highlight words in HTML which already has markup in, though, you've got trouble. Your ‘word’ might appear in an element name or attribute value, in which case attempting to wrap a < b> around it will cause brokenness. In more complicated scenarios possibly even an HTML-injection to XSS security hole. If you have to cope with markup you will need a more complicated approach, splitting out ‘< ... >’ markup before attempting to process each stretch of text on its own.

Upvotes: 6

tvanfosson
tvanfosson

Reputation: 532485

function highlightWords( line, word )
{
     var regex = new RegExp( '(' + word + ')', 'gi' );
     return line.replace( regex, "<b>$1</b>" );
}

Upvotes: 63

Erik Hesselink
Erik Hesselink

Reputation: 2530

Why not just create a new regex on each call to your function? You can use:

new Regex([pat], [flags])

where [pat] is a string for the pattern, and [flags] are the flags.

Upvotes: 0

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