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The JavaScript Workshop

You're reading from   The JavaScript Workshop Learn to develop interactive web applications with clean and maintainable JavaScript code

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838641917
Length 802 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (8):
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Jahred Love Jahred Love
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Jahred Love
Alonzo L. Hosford Alonzo L. Hosford
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Alonzo L. Hosford
Florian Sloot Florian Sloot
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Florian Sloot
Daniel Rosenbaum Daniel Rosenbaum
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Daniel Rosenbaum
Philip Kirkbride Philip Kirkbride
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Philip Kirkbride
Nick Turner Nick Turner
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Nick Turner
Gaurav Mehla Gaurav Mehla
Author Profile Icon Gaurav Mehla
Gaurav Mehla
Joseph Labrecque Joseph Labrecque
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Joseph Labrecque
+4 more Show less
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting to Know JavaScript FREE CHAPTER 2. Working with JavaScript 3. Programming Fundamentals 4. JavaScript Libraries and Frameworks 5. Beyond the Fundamentals 6. Understanding Core Concepts 7. Popping the Hood 8. Browser APIs 9. Working with Node.js 10. Accessing External Resources 11. Creating Clean and Maintainable Code 12. Using NextGeneration JavaScript 13. JavaScript Programming Paradigms 14. Understanding Functional Programming 15. Asynchronous Tasks Appendix

What Is a Regex?

A regex is a sequence of characters that form a pattern that's used to search. Each character in the pattern either has special meaning (a metacharacter) or is meant to match the character itself (a literal). This is perhaps best understood by the following example.

As a demonstration of the difference between pattern matching with conventional coding versus regex techniques, consider the following code for matching phone number format patterns in a conventional way. We'll then rewrite the matching logic using a regex for comparison. To keep things simple, we will only look for phone numbers that match the following pattern, which is common for phone numbers, particularly in the United States:

	[2-9]XX-XXX-XXXX

Here, X can be any digit from 0-9, and the first digit cannot be a zero or one (only 2-9 are permitted). For example, 234-567-8901 is a valid phone number in this format.

You can use the following code to do the matching using conventional...

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