Javascript lookaheads and lookbehinds

Kelvin Wangonya - Aug 28 '18 - - Dev Community

Regular expressions (also called regex) are patterns used to match character combinations in strings. They help us work with strings in a very performant way.

By formulating regex with a special syntax, you can:

  • search text in a string
  • replace substrings in a string
  • extract information from a string

If all this is completely new to you, take a look at the mdn web docs for more info.

For this post, I'll focus on one of the easier (and very useful) ways you can use regex.

Lookaheads: match a string depending on what follows it

Format: x(?=y)

x(?=y) matches 'x' only if 'x' is followed by 'y'.
Let's see an example:

// check to see if we have the right 'Kanye'
// /Kanye(?= West)/ : the string 'Kanye' must be followed by 'West'

/Kanye(?= West)/.test('I heard Kanye will be performing tonight') // false. we cant really be sure it's the right Kanye
/Kanye(?= West)/.test('I heard Kanye East will be performing tonight') // false. Kanye who???
/Kanye(?= West)/.test('I heard Kanye West will be performing tonight') // true
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

You can also do /Kanye(?= West | East)/ to match Kanye if it's followed by either 'East' or 'West'.

Format: x(?!y)

x(?!y) performs the inverse operation, matching 'x' only if 'x' is not followed by 'y'. This is called a negated lookahead.

// we want a different 'Kanye'
// /Kanye(?! West)/ : the string 'Kanye' must not be followed by 'West'

/Kanye(?! West)/.test('I heard Kanye will be performing tonight') // true. might be West, but I'll just take the risk and see
/Kanye(?! West)/.test('I heard Kanye East will be performing tonight') // true. let's give the new guy a chance
/Kanye(?! West)/.test('I heard Kanye West will be performing tonight') // false 
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Lookbehinds: match a string depending on what precedes it

This is an ES2018 feature πŸŽ‰πŸŽŠπŸš€πŸŽΈπŸ€˜πŸΎ

Format: (?<=y)x

(?<=y)x matches 'x' only if it's preceded by 'y'

// check to see if we have the right 'Kanye West'
// /(?<= Kanye) West/ : the string 'West' must be preceded by 'Kanye'

/(?<= Kanye) West/.test('I heard West will be performing tonight') // false. we cant really be sure it's the right West 
/(?<= Kanye) West/.test('I heard Keith West will be performing tonight') // false 
/(?<= Kanye) West/.test('I heard Kanye West will be performing tonight') // true
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode
Format: (?<!y)x

(?<!y)x matches 'x' only if it's not preceded by 'y'

// check to see if we have another 'West'
// /(?<= Kanye) West/ : the string 'West' must be not be preceded by 'Kanye'

/(?<! Kanye) West/.test('I heard West will be performing tonight') // true 
/(?<! Kanye) West/.test('I heard Keith West will be performing tonight') // true 
/(?<! Kanye) West/.test('I heard Kanye West will be performing tonight') // false
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

There you have it πŸ˜„. Regex might be a bit hard to master, but once you do, you'll find that it makes working with strings so much easier. Let me know of some other cool ways you've been using regex.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .