The RegExp ^m Quantifier in JavaScript is used to find the match of any string which contains m at the beginning of it.
Syntax:
/^m/
or
new RegExp("^m")
Syntax with modifiers:
/\^m/g
or
new RegExp("^m", "g")
Example 1: This example matches the presence of word ‘Geeks’ at the beginning of the string.
Javascript
function geek() {    let str1 = "Geeksfor123\nGeeks@";    let regex4 = /^Geeks/gim;    let match4 = str1.match(regex4);    console.log("Found " + match4.length        + " matches: " + match4);}geek(); | 
Found 2 matches: Geeks,Geeks
Example 2: This example replaces the character ‘@’ with ‘#’.
Javascript
function geek() {    let str1 = "@128Geek";    let regex4 = new RegExp("^@", "gi");    let replace = "#";    let match4 = str1.replace(regex4, replace);    console.log(" New string: " + match4);}geek(); | 
New string: #128Geek
Supported Browsers: The browsers supported by RegExp ^ Quantifier are listed below:
- Google Chrome
 - Apple Safari
 - Mozilla Firefox
 - Opera
 - Edge
 
We have a complete list of Javascript RegExp expressions, to check those please go through this JavaScript RegExp Complete Reference article.
We have a Cheat Sheet on Javascript where we covered all the important topics of Javascript to check those please go through Javascript Cheat Sheet-A Basic guide to JavaScript.
