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Home/ Questions/Q 8309517
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 8, 20262026-06-08T19:08:39+00:00 2026-06-08T19:08:39+00:00

I have this regex var mregex = /(\$m[\w|\.]+)/g; string mstring= $m.x = $m.y; So

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I have this regex

var mregex = /(\$m[\w|\.]+)/g;
string mstring= "$m.x = $m.y";

So basically capture each instance of $m.[+ any number of alphanumeric or . until another character or the end]

I have this working in C# but I’m trying to port it over to javascript, so dropped the name capture.

var match = mregexp.exec(mstring);

match has
0: “$m.x”
1: “$m.x” // not $m.y as I would have expected.

What am i doing wrong?

thanks

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-08T19:08:41+00:00Added an answer on June 8, 2026 at 7:08 pm

    You regular expression just matches once. The [0] element of the return array is the entire matched substring. The [1] element is the first group, which in your case is the same. You’d have to call .exec() again to get it to find the second instance.

    You can pass a function to .replace(), which I personally like:

    mstring.replace(mregexp, function(_, group) {
      console.log( group );
    });
    

    That’d show you both matched groups. (The function is passed arguments that are of the same nature as the elements of the returned array from .exec().)

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