Research
Security News
Quasar RAT Disguised as an npm Package for Detecting Vulnerabilities in Ethereum Smart Contracts
Socket researchers uncover a malicious npm package posing as a tool for detecting vulnerabilities in Etherium smart contracts.
Get all the matches for a regular expression in a string.
# Using npm
npm install --save match-all
# Using yarn
yarn add match-all
const matchAll = require("match-all");
let s = "Hello _World_ and _Mars_";
console.log(matchAll(s, /_([a-z]+)_/gi).toArray());
// => [ "World", "Mars" ]
// Get matches one by one
let m = matchAll(s, /_([a-z]+)_/gi);
console.log(m.next());
// => "World"
console.log(m.next());
// => "Mars"
console.log(m.next());
// => null
let multipleGroup = "Hello _World001_ and _World002_";
console.log(matchAll(multipleGroup, /_([a-z]+([0-9]+))_/gi).toArray());
// => [ "World", "Mars" ]
// Get matches one by one
let multipleMatch = matchAll(multipleGroup, /_([a-z]+([0-9]+))_/gi);
console.log(multipleMatch.nextRaw());
// => [..., "World001", "001"]
console.log(multipleMatch.nextRaw());
// => [..., "World002", "002"]
let m2 = matchAll("Hello _World_, _Mars_, _Pluto_ and _Moon_!", /_([a-z]+)_/gi);
console.log(m2.next());
// => "World"
// Reset the match index
m2.reset();
console.log(m2.next());
// => "World"
console.log(m2.next());
// => "Mars"
// Set the match index to 20
m2.reset(20);
console.log(m2.next());
// => "Pluto"
There are few ways to get help:
matchAll(s, r)
Get all the matches for a regular expression in a string.
s
: The input string.r
: The regular expression.input
(String): The input string.regex
(RegExp): The regular expression.next
(Function): Get the next match.toArray
(Function): Get all the matches.reset
(Function): Reset the index.next()
Get the next match in single group match.
nextRaw()
Get the next match in raw regex output. Usefull to get another group match.
toArray()
Get all the matches.
reset(i)
Reset the index.
i
: The new index (default: 0
).Have an idea? Found a bug? See how to contribute.
I open-source almost everything I can, and I try to reply to everyone needing help using these projects. Obviously, this takes time. You can integrate and use these projects in your applications for free! You can even change the source code and redistribute (even resell it).
However, if you get some profit from this or just want to encourage me to continue creating stuff, there are few ways you can do it:
Starring and sharing the projects you like :rocket:
—I love books! I will remember you after years if you buy me one. :grin: :book:
—You can make one-time donations via PayPal. I'll probably buy a coffee tea. :tea:
—Set up a recurring monthly donation and you will get interesting news about what I'm doing (things that I don't share with everyone).
Bitcoin—You can send me bitcoins at this address (or scanning the code below): 1P9BRsmazNQcuyTxEqveUsnf5CERdq35V6
Thanks! :heart:
If you are using this library in one of your projects, add it in this list. :sparkles:
@nexrender/core
rucksack
emojer
bot-peripheral
@koumoul/vuetify-jsonschema-form
@dhis2/cli-utils-docsite
csv-to-lines
@koumoul/vjsf
autoload-modules-loader
trello-react-scripts
google-font-downloader
@x1b/vuetify-jsonschema-form
fixturize
text-testing-mocha
json-schema-for-vuetify
@edgar-orozco/vuetify-jsonschema-form
@dev7ch/vuetify-jsonschema-form
@sheetbase/app-scripts
@vitaliikorsakov/thelib
@nickjfree/vuetify-jsonschema-form
@cloedu/vuetify-jsonschema-form
navdata-parser
react-navigation-generated-cli
docker-compose-viz
waqueplus
@emartech/collect-font-families
@strong-config/node
FAQs
Get all the matches for a regular expression in a string.
The npm package match-all receives a total of 57,261 weekly downloads. As such, match-all popularity was classified as popular.
We found that match-all demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Research
Security News
Socket researchers uncover a malicious npm package posing as a tool for detecting vulnerabilities in Etherium smart contracts.
Security News
Research
A supply chain attack on Rspack's npm packages injected cryptomining malware, potentially impacting thousands of developers.
Research
Security News
Socket researchers discovered a malware campaign on npm delivering the Skuld infostealer via typosquatted packages, exposing sensitive data.