I would like to convert this:
var result = mystring.replace(/[^a-zA-Z0-9]+/g, ' ');
to a functioning unicode version so that I can index ONLY letters and numbers. I don't want [-_%<>...] for example. Since JS does not support this natively, I am using xregexp.
This does not seem to give me any results... Do I have the letter and number part correct here?
<script src="https://unpkg.com/xregexp/xregexp-all.js"></script>
<script>
var s = `joanthan------______++++++ <me> bornss $%^&\` asdfasdf+++áeé´sé´s , н, п, р, с, т, ф, х, ц, ч`;
var r1 = XRegExp.replace(s, /[^\p{L}\p{N}]+/g, ' ');
var r2 = s.replace(/[^a-zA-Z0-9]+/g, ' ');
console.log(r1);
console.log(r2);
</script>
Thoughts? Thanks!
According to their documentation replace
supports two match parameters; string
and Regexp
. That being said it will not parse a string expression, and so would be treated as a literal string replacement. To Use a xregex
you would first have to create a expression instance and then use that as an argument.
var s = `joanthan------______++++++ <me> bornss $%^&\` asdfasdf+++áeé´sé´s , н, п, р, с, т, ф, х, ц, ч`;
var match = XRegExp('[^\\p{L}\\p{N}]+', 'g');
var r1 = XRegExp.replace(s, match, ' ');
var r2 = s.replace(/[^a-zA-Z0-9]+/g, ' ');
console.log(r1);
console.log(r2);
<script src="https://unpkg.com/xregexp/xregexp-all.js"></script>