The RegExp class includes two methods: exec() and test().
In addition to the exec() and test() methods of the RegExp class, the String class includes the following methods that let you match regular expressions in strings: match(), replace(), search(), and splice().
The test() method of the RegExp class simply checks the supplied string to see if it contains a match for the regular expression, as the following example shows:
var pattern:RegExp = /Class-\w/; var str = "Class-A"; trace(pattern.test(str)); // output: true
The exec() method of the RegExp class checks the supplied string for a match of the regular expression and returns an array with the following:
The array also includes an index property, indicating the index position of the start of the substring match.
For example, consider the following code:
var pattern:RegExp = /\d{3}\-\d{3}-\d{4}/; //U.S phone number
var str:String = "phone: 415-555-1212";
var result:Array = pattern.exec(str);
trace(result.index, " - ", result);
// 7-415-555-1212
Use the exec() method multiple times to match multiple substrings when the g (global) flag is set for the regular expression:
var pattern:RegExp = /\w*sh\w*/gi;
var str:String = "She sells seashells by the seashore";
var result:Array = pattern.exec(str);
while (result != null)
{
trace(result.index, "\t", pattern.lastIndex, "\t", result);
result = pattern.exec(str);
}
//output:
// 0 3 She
// 10 19 seashells
// 27 35 seashore
The following methods of the String class take regular expressions as parameters: match(), replace(), search(), and split(). For more information on these methods, see Finding patterns in strings and replacing substrings.