How to match multiple occurrences of a substring

Adding /g isn't enough if you wish to match multiple occurrences of a substring. If that's the case, reluctant quantifiers may be used as described herein.

Given the string:

<div><p>£20<span class="abc" /><span class="def">56</span></p></div>

You will arrive at the text you wanted using:

\d+.*>\d+

But given the same string repeated two times:

<div><p>£20<span class="abc" /><span class="def">56</span></p></div><div><p>£20<span class="abc" /><span class="def">56</span></p></div>

You will not find the target selection multiple times. You'll only find it once due to the greedy nature of .*. To make .* non-greedy, or reluctant, simply add a ? after the * and you will arrive at:

\d+.*?>\d+

Which will find both occurrences of the substring you asked for as shown here.


Just allow the group to be repeated: (?:...)+ means "Match ... 1 or more times:

str.match(/\d+(?:<[^>]*>)+\d+/)

As per Alan Moore's suggestion, I've also changed the \d* into \d+, making the numbers required instead of optional.


To match multiple times use to need use the global option

str.match(/your_expression_here/g)
                                ^

Tags:

Regex