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Showing content from https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Symbol/match below:

Symbol.match - JavaScript | MDN

Symbol.match

Baseline Widely available

The Symbol.match static data property represents the well-known symbol Symbol.match. The String.prototype.match() method looks up this symbol on its first argument for the method used to match an input string against the current object. This symbol is also used to determine if an object should be treated as a regex.

For more information, see RegExp.prototype[Symbol.match]() and String.prototype.match().

Try it
const regexp1 = /foo/;
// console.log('/foo/'.startsWith(regexp1));
// Expected output (Chrome): Error: First argument to String.prototype.startsWith must not be a regular expression
// Expected output (Firefox): Error: Invalid type: first can't be a Regular Expression
// Expected output (Safari): Error: Argument to String.prototype.startsWith cannot be a RegExp

regexp1[Symbol.match] = false;

console.log("/foo/".startsWith(regexp1));
// Expected output: true

console.log("/baz/".endsWith(regexp1));
// Expected output: false
Value

The well-known symbol Symbol.match.

Writable no Enumerable no Configurable no Description

This function is also used to identify if objects have the behavior of regular expressions. For example, the methods String.prototype.startsWith(), String.prototype.endsWith() and String.prototype.includes(), check if their first argument is a regular expression and will throw a TypeError if they are. Now, if the match symbol is set to false (or a Falsy value except undefined), it indicates that the object is not intended to be used as a regular expression object.

Examples Marking a RegExp as not a regex

The following code will throw a TypeError:

"/bar/".startsWith(/bar/);

// Throws TypeError, as /bar/ is a regular expression
// and Symbol.match is not modified.

However, if you set Symbol.match to false, the object will be considered as not a regular expression object. The methods startsWith and endsWith won't throw a TypeError as a consequence.

const re = /foo/;
re[Symbol.match] = false;
"/foo/".startsWith(re); // true
"/baz/".endsWith(re); // false
Specifications Browser compatibility See also

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