The problem is to get the string between the curly braces. Here we are going to see different Regular Expressions to get the string.
Approach 1:
- Selecting the string between the outer curly braces.
 - The RegExp selects the all curly braces, removes them, and then gets the content.
 
Example: This example illustrates the above approach.
html
<h1 id="h1" style="color:green;">     neveropen </h1>   <p id="GFG_UP"></p>   <button onclick="gfg_Run()">     Click here </button>   <p id="GFG_DOWN"></p>   <script>     var el_up = document.getElementById("GFG_UP");     var el_down = document.getElementById("GFG_DOWN");     var st = '{This is neveropen}';           el_up.innerHTML =         "Click on the button to get the content between"         + " the curly brackets.<br> Str = '" + st + "'";           function gfg_Run() {         st = st.replace(/\{|\}/gi, '');         el_down.innerHTML = st;     } </script> | 
Output:
How to use Regex to get the string between curly braces using JavaScript ?
Approach 2:
- In this approach, we are selecting the string between the curly braces.
 - The RegExp selects the string from the right side. It looks for the opening curly brace from the rightmost curly brace and prints that as a string.
 
Example: This example illustrates the above approach.
html
<h1 style="color:green;">     neveropen </h1>   <p id="GFG_UP"></p>   <button onclick="gfg_Run()">     Click here </button>   <p id="GFG_DOWN"></p>   <script>     var el_up = document.getElementById("GFG_UP");     var el_down = document.getElementById("GFG_DOWN");     var st = '{This is {neveropen}}';           el_up.innerHTML = "Click on the button to get the "             + "content between the curly brackets.<br>"             + "Str = '" + st + "'";           function gfg_Run() {         st = st.replace(/.*\{|\}/gi, '');         el_down.innerHTML = st;     } </script> | 
Output:
How to use Regex to get the string between curly braces using JavaScript ?
