RegExp.prototype.global
Baseline Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since July 2015.
The global
accessor property of RegExp
instances returns whether or not the g
flag is used with this regular expression.
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Description
RegExp.prototype.global
has the value true
if the g
flag was used; otherwise, false
. The g
flag indicates that the regular expression should be tested against all possible matches in a string. Each call to exec()
will update its lastIndex
property, so that the next call to exec()
will start at the next character.
Some methods, such as String.prototype.matchAll()
and String.prototype.replaceAll()
, will validate that, if the parameter is a regex, it is global. The regex's [Symbol.match]()
and [Symbol.replace]()
methods (called by String.prototype.match()
and String.prototype.replace()
) would also have different behaviors when the regex is global.
The set accessor of global
is undefined
. You cannot change this property directly.
Examples
Using global
const regex = /foo/g;
console.log(regex.global); // true
const str = "fooexamplefoo";
const str1 = str.replace(regex, "");
console.log(str1); // example
const regex1 = /foo/;
const str2 = str.replace(regex1, "");
console.log(str2); // examplefoo
Specifications
Specification |
---|
ECMAScript Language Specification # sec-get-regexp.prototype.global |
Browser compatibility
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