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Regular expression to get a string between two strings in Javascript

I have found very similar posts, but I can't quite get my regular expression right here.

I am trying to write a regular expression which returns a string which is between two other strings. For example: I want to get the string which resides between the strings "cow" and "milk".

My cow always gives milk

would return

"always gives"

Here is the expression I have pieced together so far:

(?=cow).*(?=milk)

However, this returns the string "cow always gives".

A lookahead (that (?= part) does not consume any input. It is a zero-width assertion (as are boundary checks and lookbehinds).

You want a regular match here, to consume the cow portion. To capture the portion in between, you use a capturing group (just put the portion of pattern you want to capture inside parenthesis):

cow(.*)milk

No lookaheads are needed at all.

Regular expression to get a string between two strings in JavaScript

The most complete solution that will work in the vast majority of cases is using a capturing group with a lazy dot matching pattern . However, a dot . in JavaScript regex does not match line break characters, so, what will work in 100% cases is a [^] or [\\s\\S] / [\\d\\D] / [\\w\\W] constructs.

ECMAScript 2018 and newer compatible solution

In JavaScript environments supporting ECMAScript 2018 , s modifier allows . to match any char including line break chars, and the regex engine supports lookbehinds of variable length. So, you may use a regex like

var result = s.match(/(?<=cow\s+).*?(?=\s+milk)/gs); // Returns multiple matches if any
// Or
var result = s.match(/(?<=cow\s*).*?(?=\s*milk)/gs); // Same but whitespaces are optional

In both cases, the current position is checked for cow with any 1/0 or more whitespaces after cow , then any 0+ chars as few as possible are matched and consumed (=added to the match value), and then milk is checked for (with any 1/0 or more whitespaces before this substring).

Scenario 1: Single-line input

This and all other scenarios below are supported by all JavaScript environments. See usage examples at the bottom of the answer.

cow (.*?) milk

cow is found first, then a space, then any 0+ chars other than line break chars, as few as possible as *? is a lazy quantifier, are captured into Group 1 and then a space with milk must follow (and those are matched and consumed , too).

Scenario 2: Multiline input

cow ([\s\S]*?) milk

Here, cow and a space are matched first, then any 0+ chars as few as possible are matched and captured into Group 1, and then a space with milk are matched.

Scenario 3: Overlapping matches

If you have a string like >>>15 text>>>67 text2>>> and you need to get 2 matches in-between >>> + number + whitespace and >>> , you can't use />>>\\d+\\s(.*?)>>>/g as this will only find 1 match due to the fact the >>> before 67 is already consumed upon finding the first match. You may use a positive lookahead to check for the text presence without actually "gobbling" it (ie appending to the match):

/>>>\d+\s(.*?)(?=>>>)/g

See the online regex demo yielding text1 and text2 as Group 1 contents found.

Also see How to get all possible overlapping matches for a string .

Performance considerations

Lazy dot matching pattern ( .*? ) inside regex patterns may slow down script execution if very long input is given. In many cases, unroll-the-loop technique helps to a greater extent. Trying to grab all between cow and milk from "Their\\ncow\\ngives\\nmore\\nmilk" , we see that we just need to match all lines that do not start with milk , thus, instead of cow\\n([\\s\\S]*?)\\nmilk we can use:

/cow\n(.*(?:\n(?!milk$).*)*)\nmilk/gm

See the regex demo (if there can be \\r\\n , use /cow\\r?\\n(.*(?:\\r?\\n(?!milk$).*)*)\\r?\\nmilk/gm ). With this small test string, the performance gain is negligible, but with very large text, you will feel the difference (especially if the lines are long and line breaks are not very numerous).

Sample regex usage in JavaScript:

 //Single/First match expected: use no global modifier and access match[1] console.log("My cow always gives milk".match(/cow (.*?) milk/)[1]); // Multiple matches: get multiple matches with a global modifier and // trim the results if length of leading/trailing delimiters is known var s = "My cow always gives milk, thier cow also gives milk"; console.log(s.match(/cow (.*?) milk/g).map(function(x) {return x.substr(4,x.length-9);})); //or use RegExp#exec inside a loop to collect all the Group 1 contents var result = [], m, rx = /cow (.*?) milk/g; while ((m=rx.exec(s)) !== null) { result.push(m[1]); } console.log(result);

Using the modern String#matchAll method

 const s = "My cow always gives milk, thier cow also gives milk"; const matches = s.matchAll(/cow (.*?) milk/g); console.log(Array.from(matches, x => x[1]));

Here's a regex which will grab what's between cow and milk (without leading/trailing space):

srctext = "My cow always gives milk.";
var re = /(.*cow\s+)(.*)(\s+milk.*)/;
var newtext = srctext.replace(re, "$2");

An example: http://jsfiddle.net/entropo/tkP74/

  • You need capture the .*
  • You can (but don't have to) make the .* nongreedy
  • There's really no need for the lookahead.

     > /cow(.*?)milk/i.exec('My cow always gives milk'); ["cow always gives milk", " always gives "]

The chosen answer didn't work for me...hmm...

Just add space after cow and/or before milk to trim spaces from " always gives "

/(?<=cow ).*(?= milk)/

在此处输入图片说明

I was able to get what I needed using Martinho Fernandes' solution below. The code is:

var test = "My cow always gives milk";

var testRE = test.match("cow(.*)milk");
alert(testRE[1]);

You'll notice that I am alerting the testRE variable as an array. This is because testRE is returning as an array, for some reason. The output from:

My cow always gives milk

Changes into:

always gives

I find regex to be tedious and time consuming given the syntax. Since you are already using javascript it is easier to do the following without regex:

const text = 'My cow always gives milk'
const start = `cow`;
const end = `milk`;
const middleText = text.split(start)[1].split(end)[0]
console.log(middleText) // prints "always gives"

只需使用以下正则表达式:

(?<=My cow\s).*?(?=\smilk)

If the data is on multiple lines then you may have to use the following,

/My cow ([\s\S]*)milk/gm

My cow always gives 
milk

Regex 101 example

You can use the method match() to extract a substring between two strings. Try the following code:

var str = "My cow always gives milk";
var subStr = str.match("cow(.*)milk");
console.log(subStr[1]);

Output:

always gives

See a complete example here : How to find sub-string between two strings .

The method match() searches a string for a match and returns an Array object.

// Original string
var str = "My cow always gives milk";

// Using index [0] would return<br/>
// "**cow always gives milk**"
str.match(/cow(.*)milk/)**[0]**


// Using index **[1]** would return
// "**always gives**"
str.match(/cow(.*)milk/)[1]

Task

Extract substring between two string (excluding this two strings)

Solution

let allText = "Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry. Lorem Ipsum has been the industry's standard dummy text ever since the 1500s, when an unknown printer took a galley of type and scrambled it to make a type specimen book. It has survived not only five centuries, but also the leap into electronic typesetting, remaining essentially unchanged. It was popularised in the 1960s with the release of Letraset sheets containing Lorem Ipsum passages, and more recently with desktop publishing software like Aldus PageMaker including versions of Lorem Ipsum";
let textBefore = "five centuries,";
let textAfter = "electronic typesetting";
var regExp = new RegExp(`(?<=${textBefore}\\s)(.+?)(?=\\s+${textAfter})`, "g");
var results = regExp.exec(allText);
if (results && results.length > 1) {
    console.log(results[0]);
}

You can use destructuring to only focus on the part of your interest.

So you can do:

 let str = "My cow always gives milk"; let [, result] = str.match(/\\bcow\\s+(.*?)\\s+milk\\b/) || []; console.log(result);

In this way you ignore the first part (the complete match) and only get the capture group's match. The addition of || [] || [] may be interesting if you are not sure there will be a match at all. In that case match would return null which cannot be destructured, and so we return [] instead in that case, and then result will be null .

The additional \\b ensures the surrounding words "cow" and "milk" are really separate words (eg not "milky"). Also \\s+ is needed to avoid that the match includes some outer spacing.

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