--- id: 587d7db9367417b2b2512ba7 title: Specify Exact Number of Matches challengeType: 1 forumTopicId: 301365 --- ## Description
You can specify the lower and upper number of patterns with quantity specifiers using curly brackets. Sometimes you only want a specific number of matches. To specify a certain number of patterns, just have that one number between the curly brackets. For example, to match only the word "hah" with the letter a 3 times, your regex would be /ha{3}h/. ```js let A4 = "haaaah"; let A3 = "haaah"; let A100 = "h" + "a".repeat(100) + "h"; let multipleHA = /ha{3}h/; multipleHA.test(A4); // Returns false multipleHA.test(A3); // Returns true multipleHA.test(A100); // Returns false ```
## Instructions
Change the regex timRegex to match the word "Timber" only when it has four letter m's.
## Tests
```yml tests: - text: Your regex should use curly brackets. testString: assert(timRegex.source.match(/{.*?}/).length > 0); - text: Your regex should not match "Timber" testString: assert(!timRegex.test("Timber")); - text: Your regex should not match "Timmber" testString: assert(!timRegex.test("Timmber")); - text: Your regex should not match "Timmmber" testString: assert(!timRegex.test("Timmmber")); - text: Your regex should match "Timmmmber" testString: assert(timRegex.test("Timmmmber")); - text: Your regex should not match "Timber" with 30 m's in it. testString: assert(!timRegex.test("Ti" + "m".repeat(30) + "ber")); ```
## Challenge Seed
```js let timStr = "Timmmmber"; let timRegex = /change/; // Change this line let result = timRegex.test(timStr); ```
## Solution
```js let timStr = "Timmmmber"; let timRegex = /Tim{4}ber/; // Change this line let result = timRegex.test(timStr); ```