String.prototype.matchAll()

Baseline Widely available

This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since January 2020.

The matchAll() method of String values returns an iterator of all results matching this string against a regular expression, including capturing groups.

Try it

Syntax

js
matchAll(regexp)

Parameters

regexp

A regular expression object, or any object that has a Symbol.matchAll method.

If regexp is not a RegExp object and does not have a Symbol.matchAll method, it is implicitly converted to a RegExp by using new RegExp(regexp, 'g').

If regexp is a regex, then it must have the global (g) flag set, or a TypeError is thrown.

Return value

An iterable iterator object (which is not restartable) of matches or an empty iterator if no matches are found. Each value yielded by the iterator is an array with the same shape as the return value of RegExp.prototype.exec().

Exceptions

TypeError

Thrown if the regexp is a regex that does not have the global (g) flag set (its flags property does not contain "g").

Description

The implementation of String.prototype.matchAll doesn't do much other than calling the Symbol.matchAll method of the argument with the string as the first parameter (apart from the extra input validation that the regex is global). The actual implementation comes from RegExp.prototype[Symbol.matchAll]().

Examples

Regexp.prototype.exec() and matchAll()

Without matchAll(), it's possible to use calls to regexp.exec() (and regexes with the g flag) in a loop to obtain all the matches:

js
const regexp = /foo[a-z]*/g;
const str = "table football, foosball";
let match;

while ((match = regexp.exec(str)) !== null) {
  console.log(
    `Found ${match[0]} start=${match.index} end=${regexp.lastIndex}.`,
  );
}
// Found football start=6 end=14.
// Found foosball start=16 end=24.

With matchAll() available, you can avoid the while loop and exec with g. Instead, you get an iterator to use with the more convenient for...of, array spreading, or Array.from() constructs:

js
const regexp = /foo[a-z]*/g;
const str = "table football, foosball";
const matches = str.matchAll(regexp);

for (const match of matches) {
  console.log(
    `Found ${match[0]} start=${match.index} end=${
      match.index + match[0].length
    }.`,
  );
}
// Found football start=6 end=14.
// Found foosball start=16 end=24.

// matches iterator is exhausted after the for...of iteration
// Call matchAll again to create a new iterator
Array.from(str.matchAll(regexp), (m) => m[0]);
// [ "football", "foosball" ]

matchAll will throw an exception if the g flag is missing.

js
const regexp = /[a-c]/;
const str = "abc";
str.matchAll(regexp);
// TypeError

matchAll internally makes a clone of the regexp — so, unlike regexp.exec(), lastIndex does not change as the string is scanned.

js
const regexp = /[a-c]/g;
regexp.lastIndex = 1;
const str = "abc";
Array.from(str.matchAll(regexp), (m) => `${regexp.lastIndex} ${m[0]}`);
// [ "1 b", "1 c" ]

However, this means that unlike using regexp.exec() in a loop, you can't mutate lastIndex to make the regex advance or rewind.

Better access to capturing groups (than String.prototype.match())

Another compelling reason for matchAll is the improved access to capture groups.

Capture groups are ignored when using match() with the global g flag:

js
const regexp = /t(e)(st(\d?))/g;
const str = "test1test2";

str.match(regexp); // ['test1', 'test2']

Using matchAll, you can access capture groups easily:

js
const array = [...str.matchAll(regexp)];

array[0];
// ['test1', 'e', 'st1', '1', index: 0, input: 'test1test2', length: 4]
array[1];
// ['test2', 'e', 'st2', '2', index: 5, input: 'test1test2', length: 4]

Using matchAll() with a non-RegExp implementing [Symbol.matchAll]()

If an object has a Symbol.matchAll method, it can be used as a custom matcher. The return value of Symbol.matchAll becomes the return value of matchAll().

js
const str = "Hmm, this is interesting.";

str.matchAll({
  [Symbol.matchAll](str) {
    return [["Yes, it's interesting."]];
  },
}); // returns [["Yes, it's interesting."]]

Specifications

Specification
ECMAScript Language Specification
# sec-string.prototype.matchall

Browser compatibility

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See also