The String.prototype.split method is very handy, so it's a shame that if you use a regular expression as its delimiter, the results can be so wildly different cross-browser that odds are you've just introduced bugs into your code (unless you know precisely what kind of data you're working with and are able to avoid the issues). Here's one example of other people venting about the problems. Following are the inconsistencies cross-browser when using regexes with split :

Internet Explorer excludes almost all empty values from the resulting array (e.g., when two delimiters appear next to each other in the data, or when a delimiter appears at the start or end of the data). This doesn't make any sense to me, since IE does include empty values when using a string as the delimiter.

Internet Explorer and Safari do not splice the values of capturing parentheses into the returned array (this functionality can be useful with simple parsers, etc.)

Firefox does not splice undefined values into the returned array as the result of non-participating capturing groups.

values into the returned array as the result of non-participating capturing groups. Internet Explorer, Firefox, and Safari have various additional edge-case bugs where they do not follow the split specification (which is actually quite complex).

The situation is so bad that I've simply avoided using regex-based splitting in the past.

That ends now.

The following script provides a fast, uniform cross-browser implementation of String.prototype.split , and attempts to precisely follow the relevant spec (ECMA-262 v3 §15.5.4.14, pp.103,104).

I've also created a fairly quick and dirty page where you can test the result of more than 50 usages of JavaScript's split method, and quickly compare your browser's results with the correct implementation. On the test page, the pink lines in the third column highlight incorrect results from the native split method. The rightmost column shows the results of the below script. It's all green in every browser I've tested (IE 5.5 – 7, Firefox 2.0.0.4, Opera 9.21, Safari 3.0.1 beta, and Swift 0.2).

Run the tests in your browser.

Here's the script:

/*! * Cross-Browser Split 1.1.1 * Copyright 2007-2012 Steven Levithan <stevenlevithan.com> * Available under the MIT License * ECMAScript compliant, uniform cross-browser split method */ /** * Splits a string into an array of strings using a regex or string separator. Matches of the * separator are not included in the result array. However, if `separator` is a regex that contains * capturing groups, backreferences are spliced into the result each time `separator` is matched. * Fixes browser bugs compared to the native `String.prototype.split` and can be used reliably * cross-browser. * @param {String} str String to split. * @param {RegExp|String} separator Regex or string to use for separating the string. * @param {Number} [limit] Maximum number of items to include in the result array. * @returns {Array} Array of substrings. * @example * * // Basic use * split('a b c d', ' '); * // -> ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'] * * // With limit * split('a b c d', ' ', 2); * // -> ['a', 'b'] * * // Backreferences in result array * split('..word1 word2..', /([a-z]+)(\d+)/i); * // -> ['..', 'word', '1', ' ', 'word', '2', '..'] */ var split; // Avoid running twice; that would break the `nativeSplit` reference split = split || function (undef) { var nativeSplit = String.prototype.split, compliantExecNpcg = /()??/.exec("")[1] === undef, // NPCG: nonparticipating capturing group self; self = function (str, separator, limit) { // If `separator` is not a regex, use `nativeSplit` if (Object.prototype.toString.call(separator) !== "[object RegExp]") { return nativeSplit.call(str, separator, limit); } var output = [], flags = (separator.ignoreCase ? "i" : "") + (separator.multiline ? "m" : "") + (separator.extended ? "x" : "") + // Proposed for ES6 (separator.sticky ? "y" : ""), // Firefox 3+ lastLastIndex = 0, // Make `global` and avoid `lastIndex` issues by working with a copy separator = new RegExp(separator.source, flags + "g"), separator2, match, lastIndex, lastLength; str += ""; // Type-convert if (!compliantExecNpcg) { // Doesn't need flags gy, but they don't hurt separator2 = new RegExp("^" + separator.source + "$(?!\\s)", flags); } /* Values for `limit`, per the spec: * If undefined: 4294967295 // Math.pow(2, 32) - 1 * If 0, Infinity, or NaN: 0 * If positive number: limit = Math.floor(limit); if (limit > 4294967295) limit -= 4294967296; * If negative number: 4294967296 - Math.floor(Math.abs(limit)) * If other: Type-convert, then use the above rules */ limit = limit === undef ? -1 >>> 0 : // Math.pow(2, 32) - 1 limit >>> 0; // ToUint32(limit) while (match = separator.exec(str)) { // `separator.lastIndex` is not reliable cross-browser lastIndex = match.index + match[0].length; if (lastIndex > lastLastIndex) { output.push(str.slice(lastLastIndex, match.index)); // Fix browsers whose `exec` methods don't consistently return `undefined` for // nonparticipating capturing groups if (!compliantExecNpcg && match.length > 1) { match[0].replace(separator2, function () { for (var i = 1; i < arguments.length - 2; i++) { if (arguments[i] === undef) { match[i] = undef; } } }); } if (match.length > 1 && match.index < str.length) { Array.prototype.push.apply(output, match.slice(1)); } lastLength = match[0].length; lastLastIndex = lastIndex; if (output.length >= limit) { break; } } if (separator.lastIndex === match.index) { separator.lastIndex++; // Avoid an infinite loop } } if (lastLastIndex === str.length) { if (lastLength || !separator.test("")) { output.push(""); } } else { output.push(str.slice(lastLastIndex)); } return output.length > limit ? output.slice(0, limit) : output; }; // For convenience String.prototype.split = function (separator, limit) { return self(this, separator, limit); }; return self; }();

Download it.

Please let me know if you find any problems. Thanks!