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regexStarQuantifiers

Reports quantifiers {0,} in regular expressions that should use * instead.

✅ This rule is included in the ts stylisticStrict presets.

Reports quantifiers using {0,} in regular expressions and suggests using the more concise * quantifier instead. Both forms are semantically equivalent (matching zero or more of the preceding element), but * is the idiomatic form.

const
const pattern: RegExp
pattern
= /a{0,}/;
const
const pattern: RegExp
pattern
= /a{0,}?/;
const
const pattern: RegExp
pattern
= /(ab){0,}/;
const
const pattern: RegExp
pattern
= new
var RegExp: RegExpConstructor
new (pattern: RegExp | string, flags?: string) => RegExp (+2 overloads)
RegExp
("a{0,}");

This rule is not configurable.

If your project has a style guide that prefers the explicit {0,} syntax for clarity, or if you are programmatically generating regular expressions where {0,} is easier to produce, you might want to disable this rule.

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