How to check if a string contain specific words?
Solution 1:
you can use indexOf for this
var a = 'how are you';
if (a.indexOf('are') > -1) {
return true;
} else {
return false;
}
Edit: This is an old answer that keeps getting up votes every once in a while so I thought I should clarify that in the above code, the if
clause is not required at all because the expression itself is a boolean. Here is a better version of it which you should use,
var a = 'how are you';
return a.indexOf('are') > -1;
Update in ECMAScript2016:
var a = 'how are you';
return a.includes('are'); //true
Solution 2:
indexOf
/includes
should not be used for finding whole words:
A word (in western culture) is a drawing of a symbols close to each other, with some space between each word. A word is considered as such if it's a complete piece of characters draw together and not a partial part of it:
"has a word".indexOf('wor') // 6 ("wor" is not a word in this sentence)
"has a word".includes('ha') // true ("ha" is not a word in this sentence)
Check if a single word (whole word) is in the string
Find a real whole word, not just if the letters of that word are somewhere in the string.
const wordInString = (s, word) => new RegExp('\\b' + word + '\\b', 'i').test(s);
// tests
[
'', // true
' ', // true
'did', // true
'id', // flase
'yo ', // flase
'you', // true
'you not' // true
].forEach(q => console.log(
wordInString('dID You, or did you NOt, gEt WHy?', q)
))
console.log(
wordInString('did you, or did you not, get why?', 'you') // true
)
Check if all words are in the string
var stringHasAll = (s, query) =>
// convert the query to array of "words" & checks EVERY item is contained in the string
query.split(' ').every(q => new RegExp('\\b' + q + '\\b', 'i').test(s));
// tests
[
'', // true
' ', // true
'aa', // true
'aa ', // true
' aa', // true
'd b', // false
'aaa', // false
'a b', // false
'a a a a a ', // false
].forEach(q => console.log(
stringHasAll('aA bB cC dD', q)
))
Solution 3:
If you are looking for exact words and don't want it to match things like "nightmare" (which is probably what you need), you can use a regex:
/\bare\b/gi
\b = word boundary
g = global
i = case insensitive (if needed)
If you just want to find the characters "are", then use indexOf
.
If you want to match arbitrary words, you have to programatically construct a RegExp (regular expression) object itself based on the word string and use test
.
Solution 4:
You're looking for the indexOf function:
if (str.indexOf("are") >= 0){//Do stuff}