--description--
You can specify the lower and upper number of patterns with quantity specifiers using curly brackets. Sometimes you only want a specific number of matches.
To specify a certain number of patterns, just have that one number between the curly brackets.
For example, to match only the word hah
with the letter a
3
times, your regex would be /ha{3}h/
.
let A4 = "haaaah";
let A3 = "haaah";
let A100 = "h" + "a".repeat(100) + "h";
let multipleHA = /ha{3}h/;
multipleHA.test(A4);
multipleHA.test(A3);
multipleHA.test(A100);
In order, the three test
calls would return false
, true
, and false
.
--instructions--
Change the regex timRegex
to match the word Timber
only when it has four letter m
's.
--hints--
Your regex should use curly brackets.
assert(timRegex.source.match(/{.*?}/).length > 0);
Your regex should not match the string Timber
timRegex.lastIndex = 0;
assert(!timRegex.test('Timber'));
Your regex should not match the string Timmber
timRegex.lastIndex = 0;
assert(!timRegex.test('Timmber'));
Your regex should not match the string Timmmber
timRegex.lastIndex = 0;
assert(!timRegex.test('Timmmber'));
Your regex should match the string Timmmmber
timRegex.lastIndex = 0;
assert(timRegex.test('Timmmmber'));
Your regex should not match the string Timber
with 30 m
's in it.
timRegex.lastIndex = 0;
assert(!timRegex.test('Ti' + 'm'.repeat(30) + 'ber'));
--seed--
--seed-contents--
let timStr = "Timmmmber";
let timRegex = /change/; // Change this line
let result = timRegex.test(timStr);
--solutions--
let timStr = "Timmmmber";
let timRegex = /Tim{4}ber/; // Change this line
let result = timRegex.test(timStr);