RegExp.prototype.unicode
The unicode
accessor property of RegExp
instances returns whether or not the u
flag is used with this regular expression.
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Description
RegExp.prototype.unicode
has the value true
if the u
flag was used; otherwise, false
. The u
flag enables various Unicode-related features. With the "u" flag:
- Any Unicode code point escapes (
\u{xxxx}
,\p{UnicodePropertyValue}
) will be interpreted as such instead of identity escapes. For example/\u{61}/u
matches"a"
, but/\u{61}/
(withoutu
flag) matches"u".repeat(61)
, where the\u
is equivalent to a singleu
. - Surrogate pairs will be interpreted as whole characters instead of two separate characters. For example,
/[😄]/u
would only match"😄"
but not"\ud83d"
. - When
lastIndex
is automatically advanced (such as when callingexec()
), unicode regexes advance by Unicode code points instead of UTF-16 code units.
There are other changes to the parsing behavior that prevent possible syntax mistakes (which are analogous to strict mode for regex syntax). These syntaxes are all deprecated and only kept for web compatibility, and you should not rely on them.
The set accessor of unicode
is undefined
. You cannot change this property directly.
Unicode-aware mode
When we refer to Unicode-aware mode, we mean the regex has either the u
or the v
flag, in which case the regex enables Unicode-related features (such as Unicode character class escape) and has much stricter syntax rules. Because u
and v
interpret the same regex in incompatible ways, using both flags results in a SyntaxError
.
Similarly, a regex is Unicode-unaware if it has neither the u
nor the v
flag. In this case, the regex is interpreted as a sequence of UTF-16 code units, and there are many legacy syntaxes that do not become syntax errors.
Examples
Using the unicode property
js
const regex = /\u{61}/u;
console.log(regex.unicode); // true
Specifications
Specification |
---|
ECMAScript Language Specification # sec-get-regexp.prototype.unicode |
Browser compatibility
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