KarimMesallam
KarimMesallam

Reputation: 290

Invalid regular expression error


I'm trying to retrieve the category part this string "property_id=516&category=featured-properties", so the result should be "featured-properties", and I came up with a regular expression and tested it on this website http://gskinner.com/RegExr/, and it worked as expected, but when I added the regular expression to my javascript code, I had a "Invalid regular expression" error, can anyone tell me what is messing up this code?

Thanks!

var url = "property_id=516&category=featured-properties"
var urlRE = url.match('(?<=(category=))[a-z-]+');
alert(urlRE[0]);

Upvotes: 4

Views: 5140

Answers (4)

ajm
ajm

Reputation: 20105

Positive lookbehinds (your ?<=) are not supported in JavaScript environments that do not comply with ECMAScript 2018 standard, which is causing your RegEx to fail.

You can mimic them in a whole bunch of different ways, but this might be a simpler RegEx to get the job done for you:

var url = "property_id=516&category=featured-properties"
var urlRE = url.match(/category=([^&]+)/);
// urlRE => ["category=featured-properties","featured-properties"]
// urlRE[1] => "featured-properties"

That's a super-simple example, but searching StackOverflow for a RegEx pattern to parse URL parameters will turn up more robust examples if you need them.

Upvotes: 8

Marco Demaio
Marco Demaio

Reputation: 34407

  var url = "property_id=516&category=featured-properties",

  urlRE = url.match(/(category=)([a-z-]+)/i); //don't forget i if you want to match also uppercase letters in category "property_id=516&category=Featured-Properties"
  //urlRE = url.match(/(?<=(category=))[a-z-]+/i); //this is a mess

  alert(urlRE[2]); 

Upvotes: 0

DanielB
DanielB

Reputation: 20240

The syntax is messing up your code.

var urlRE = url.match(/category=([a-z-]+)/);
alert(urlRE[1]);

Upvotes: 3

&#193;lvaro Gonz&#225;lez
&#193;lvaro Gonz&#225;lez

Reputation: 146460

If you want to parse URL parameters, you can use the getParameterByName() function from this site:

In any case, as already mentioned, regular expressions in JavaScript are not plain strings:

Upvotes: 0

Related Questions