I am trying to write a regular expression which returns a three digit integer only. Not less than three or more than three. However my regex below is also true for four digit numbers. Am i missing something?
var threeDigits = /\d{3}$/
console.log(threeDigits.test("12"))// false
console.log(threeDigits.test("123"))// true
console.log(threeDigits.test("1234"))// true yet this is four digits???
I am trying to write a regular expression which returns a three digit integer only. Not less than three or more than three. However my regex below is also true for four digit numbers. Am i missing something?
var threeDigits = /\d{3}$/
console.log(threeDigits.test("12"))// false
console.log(threeDigits.test("123"))// true
console.log(threeDigits.test("1234"))// true yet this is four digits???
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asked May 17, 2017 at 17:01
ochieng benjaochieng benja
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You should use
^\d{3}$
where^
is for start of string. – Sahil Gulati Commented May 17, 2017 at 17:02
2 Answers
Reset to default 6You have the ending anchor $
, but not the starting anchor ^
:
var threeDigits = /^\d{3}$/
Without the anchor, the match can start anywhere in the string, e.g.
"1234".match(/\d{3}$/g) // ["234"]
Use either one ^[0-9]{3}$ or ^\d{3}$ .