Security News
Input Validation Vulnerabilities Dominate MITRE's 2024 CWE Top 25 List
MITRE's 2024 CWE Top 25 highlights critical software vulnerabilities like XSS, SQL Injection, and CSRF, reflecting shifts due to a refined ranking methodology.
ts-regex-builder
Advanced tools
Build maintainable regular expressions for TypeScript and JavaScript.
Regular expressions are a powerful tool for matching text patterns, yet they are notorious for their hard-to-parse syntax, especially in the case of more complex patterns.
This library allows users to create regular expressions in a structured way, making them easy to write and review. It provides a domain-specific langauge for defining regular expressions, which are finally turned into JavaScript-native RegExp
objects for fast execution.
// Regular JS RegExp
const hexColor = /^#?([a-fA-F0-9]{6}|[a-fA-F0-9]{3})$/;
// TS Regex Builder DSL
const hexDigit = /[a-fA-F0-9]/; // or: charClass(charRange('a', 'f'), charRange('A', 'F'), charRange('0', '9'));
const hexColor = buildRegExp([
startOfString,
optional('#'),
capture(
choiceOf(
repeat(hexDigit, 6), // #rrggbb
repeat(hexDigit, 3), // #rgb
),
),
endOfString,
]);
npm install ts-regex-builder
or
yarn add ts-regex-builder
import { buildRegExp, capture, oneOrMore } from 'ts-regex-builder';
// /Hello (\w+)/
const regex = buildRegExp(['Hello ', capture(oneOrMore(word))]);
TS Regex Builder allows you to build complex regular expressions using domain-specific language.
Terminology:
RegexConstruct
) - common name for all regex constructs like character classes, quantifiers, and anchors.RegexElement
) - a fundamental building block of a regular expression, defined as either a regex construct, a string, or RegExp
literal (/.../
).RegexSequence
) - a sequence of regex elements forming a regular expression. For developer convenience, it also accepts a single element instead of an array.Most of the regex constructs accept a regex sequence as their argument.
Examples of sequences:
capture('Hello')
'Hello'
RegExp
literal): /Hello/
['USD', oneOrMore(digit), /Hello/]
Regex constructs can be composed into a tree structure:
const currencyCode = repeat(charRange('A', 'Z'), 3);
const currencyAmount = buildRegExp([
choiceOf('$', '€', currencyCode), // currency
capture(
oneOrMore(digit), // integer part
optional(['.', repeat(digit, 2)]), // fractional part
),
]);
See Types API doc for more info.
Builder | Regex Syntax | Description |
---|---|---|
buildRegExp(...) | /.../ | Create RegExp instance |
buildRegExp(..., { ignoreCase: true }) | /.../i | Create RegExp instance with flags |
See Builder API doc for more info.
Construct | Regex Syntax | Notes |
---|---|---|
choiceOf(x, y, z) | x|y|z | Match one of provided sequences |
capture(...) | (...) | Create a capture group |
See Constructs API doc for more info.
[!NOTE] TS Regex Builder does not have a construct for non-capturing groups. Such groups are implicitly added when required.
Quantifier | Regex Syntax | Description |
---|---|---|
zeroOrMore(x) | x* | Zero or more occurrence of a pattern |
oneOrMore(x) | x+ | One or more occurrence of a pattern |
optional(x) | x? | Zero or one occurrence of a pattern |
repeat(x, n) | x{n} | Pattern repeats exact number of times |
repeat(x, { min: n, }) | x{n,} | Pattern repeats at least given number of times |
repeat(x, { min: n, max: n2 }) | x{n1,n2} | Pattern repeats between n1 and n2 number of times |
See Quantifiers API doc for more info.
Assertion | Regex Syntax | Description |
---|---|---|
startOfString | ^ | Match the start of the string (or the start of a line in multiline mode) |
endOfString | $ | Match the end of the string (or the end of a line in multiline mode) |
wordBoundary | \b | Match the start or end of a word without consuming characters |
lookahead(...) | (?=...) | Match subsequent text without consuming it |
negativeLookahead(...) | (?!...) | Reject subsequent text without consuming it |
lookbehind(...) | (?<=...) | Match preceding text without consuming it |
negativeLookbehind(...) | (?<!...) | Reject preceding text without consuming it |
See Assertions API doc for more info.
[!TIP] You may also use inline regexes for specifying character classes, as they offer a concise yet readable syntax. For example,
/[a-z0-9_]/
.
Character class | Regex Syntax | Description |
---|---|---|
any | . | Any character |
word | \w | Word character: letter, digit, underscore |
digit | \d | Digit character: 0 to 9 |
whitespace | \s | Whitespace character: space, tab, line break, ... |
anyOf('abc') | [abc] | Any of provided characters |
charRange('a', 'z') | [a-z] | Character in a range |
charClass(...) | [...] | Union of multiple character classes |
negated(...) | [^...] | Negation of a given character class |
See Character Classes API doc and Unicode API doc for more info.
See Examples.
Regular expressions created with this library are executed at runtime, so you should avoid creating them in a context where they would need to be executed multiple times, e.g., inside loops or functions. We recommend that you create a top-level object for each required regex.
See the contributing guide to learn how to contribute to the repository and the development workflow. See the project guidelines to understand our core principles.
MIT
TS Regex Builder is inspired by Swift Regex Builder API.
Made with create-react-native-library
FAQs
Maintainable regular expressions for TypeScript and JavaScript.
The npm package ts-regex-builder receives a total of 20,524 weekly downloads. As such, ts-regex-builder popularity was classified as popular.
We found that ts-regex-builder demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers 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.
Security News
MITRE's 2024 CWE Top 25 highlights critical software vulnerabilities like XSS, SQL Injection, and CSRF, reflecting shifts due to a refined ranking methodology.
Security News
In this segment of the Risky Business podcast, Feross Aboukhadijeh and Patrick Gray discuss the challenges of tracking malware discovered in open source softare.
Research
Security News
A threat actor's playbook for exploiting the npm ecosystem was exposed on the dark web, detailing how to build a blockchain-powered botnet.