I have a string A and want to test if another string B is not part of it. This is a very simple regex whose result can be inverted afterwards.
I could do:
/foobar/.test('foobar@bar.de')
and invert it afterwards, like this:
!(/foobar/).test('foobar@bar.de')
The problem I have is, that I need to do it within the regular expression and not with their result. Something like:
/!foobar/.test('foobar@bar.de')
(which does not work)
In other words: the regular expression should test for a non-existence and return true in that case.
Is this possible with JavaScript?
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Answer
Try:
/^(?!.*foobar)/.test('foobar@bar.de')
A (short) explanation:
^ # start of the string (?! # start negative look-ahead .* # zero or more characters of any kind (except line terminators) foobar # foobar ) # end negative look-ahead
So, in plain English, that regex will look from the start of the string if the string ‘foobar’ can be “seen”. If it can be “seen” there is no* match.
* no match because it’s negative look-ahead!
More about this look-ahead stuff: http://www.regular-expressions.info/lookaround.html But Note that JavaScript only supports look-aheads, no look-behinds!