Use capturing parentheses:
'good_luck_buddy'.split(/_(.*)/s)
['good', 'luck_buddy', ''] // ignore the third element
They are defined as
If
separator
contains capturing parentheses, matched results are returned in the array.
So in this case we want to split at _.*
(i.e. split separator being a sub string starting with _
) but also let the result contain some part of our separator (i.e. everything after _
).
In this example our separator (matching _(.*)
) is _luck_buddy
and the captured group (within the separator) is lucky_buddy
. Without the capturing parenthesis the luck_buddy
(matching .*
) would’ve not been included in the result array as it is the case with simple split
that separators are not included in the result.
We use the s
regex flag to make .
match on newline (\n
) characters as well, otherwise it would only split to the first newline.