Regex
regex
December 24, 20222 min read

Regex for one or more characters

In computer science, a character is a unit of information that represents a single letter, digit, punctuation mark, or other symbol. Characters are typically stored as sequences of bits (binary digits) in a computer's memory, and they are used to represent text, numbers, and other types of data. In this article let's understand how we can create a regex for character and how regex can be matched for a given character.

Regex (short for regular expression) is a powerful tool used for searching and manipulating text. It is composed of a sequence of characters that define a search pattern. Regex can be used to find patterns in large amounts of text, validate user input, and manipulate strings. It is widely used in programming languages, text editors, and command line tools.

Structure of a character

The character should have the following criteria and structure-

  • a character is a unit of information that represents a single letter, digit, punctuation mark, or other symbol. Characters are typically stored as sequences of bits (binary digits) in a computer's memory, and they are used to represent text, numbers, and other types of data.
  • It can contain one or more characters.

Regex for checking if one or more characters is valid or not

Regular Expression for character-

/^.+$/igm

Test string examples for the above regex-

Input StringMatch Output
aematches
12Gmatches
2matches
Amatches
;matches

Here is a detailed explanation of the above regex-

/^.+$/igm

^ asserts position at start of a line
. matches any character (except for line terminators)
+ matches the previous token between one and unlimited times, as many times as possible, giving back as needed (greedy)
$ asserts position at the end of a line
Global pattern flags
m modifier: multi line. Causes ^ and $ to match the begin/end of each line (not only begin/end of string)
g modifier: global. All matches (don't return after first match)
i modifier: insensitive. Case insensitive match (ignores case of [a-zA-Z])

Hope this article was useful to check if the string is a valid characters or not.

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About the Author
Satvik
Satvik
Entrepreneur
Satvik is a passionate developer turned Entrepreneur. He is fascinated by JavaScript, Operating System, Deep Learning, AR/VR. He has published several research papers and applied for patents in the field as well. Satvik is a speaker in conferences, meetups talking about Artificial Intelligence, JavaScript and related subjects. His goal is to solve complex problems that people face with automation. Related projects can be seen at - [Projects](/projects)
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