Thanks, Tom, will follow. On Wed, Oct 8, 2014 at 10:50 AM, Tom Chiverton <[email protected]> wrote:
> You may need to escape the brackets too > /new Date\([0-9]+\)/ > > Tom > > > On 08/10/14 16:45, Tom Chiverton wrote: > >> That's handy, [0-9]+ means at least one number :-) >> >> Tom >> >> On 08/10/14 16:43, mark goldin wrote: >> >>> What I was saying by .... is that I dont know how many numbers are going >>> to >>> sent to Date function. >>> >>> On Wed, Oct 8, 2014 at 10:39 AM, Tom Chiverton <[email protected]> >>> wrote: >>> >>> You could just add speech marks to the end of the string if it matches >>>> /new Date([0-9]+)/ ? Or at the .... to be matched too ? >>>> >>>> Tom >>>> >>>> >>>> On 08/10/14 16:32, mark goldin wrote: >>>> >>>> I need to come up with a regex that would do the following: >>>>> >>>>> source: new Date(1234567890 .....123456) >>>>> result: "new Date(1234567890 .....123456)" >>>>> >>>>> Thanks for the help. >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> ______________________________________________________________________ >>>>> This email has been scanned by the Symantec Email Security.cloud >>>>> service. >>>>> For more information please visit http://www.symanteccloud.com >>>>> ______________________________________________________________________ >>>>> >>>>> >>>> >>> ______________________________________________________________________ >>> This email has been scanned by the Symantec Email Security.cloud service. >>> For more information please visit http://www.symanteccloud.com >>> ______________________________________________________________________ >>> >> >> >> >> ______________________________________________________________________ >> This email has been scanned by the Symantec Email Security.cloud service. >> For more information please visit http://www.symanteccloud.com >> ______________________________________________________________________ >> > >
