JavaScript Replace All Instances of a String

I’ve started building out our JavaScript Glossary and when I got to the replace() method, I had to build out a snippet to handle replacing all occurrences of a string in a string.
myMessage.replace(‘sentence’, ‘message’);
https://gist.github.com/chris-sev/7be587f89ba2ee18f105a57a791a2c18
Normally String replace() only replaces the first instance it finds. If we want JavaScript to replace all, we’ll have to use a regular expression using /g.
myMessage.replace(/sentence/g, ‘message’);
https://gist.github.com/chris-sev/452b0b9c2ff1d4ddf1ae3449f90ef595
In addition to using the inline /g, we can use the constructor function of the RegExp object.
myMessage.replace(new RegExp(‘sentence’, ‘g’), ‘message’);
https://gist.github.com/chris-sev/fcd4396ee879d3ccc306512a59e2608a
To replace special characters like -/^$*+?.()|[]{}) we’ll need to use a backslash to escape them.
Here we’ll replace all the – in this string with just -. I ran into this when building out the Scotch dashboard with markdown trying to escape all my symbols.
// replace – with – myUrl.replace(/-/g, ‘-‘); // or with RegExp myUrl.replace(new RegExp(‘-‘, ‘g’), ‘-‘);
https://gist.github.com/chris-sev/d1d233fb4ff5264cd50b8208a03dcf84
Thanks for learning with the DigitalOcean Community. Check out our offerings for compute, storage, networking, and managed databases.