A part of a pattern can be enclosed in parentheses (...). This is called a “capturing group”.
That has two effects:
It allows to get a part of the match as a separate item in the result array.
If we put a quantifier after the parentheses, it applies to the parentheses as a whole.
In your code you have let url = ///.+?.com?/;
You are only interested in the part following the 2 slashes, so make a capturing group for that by enclosing it in braces: let url = ///(.+?.com?)/;
Then change the code in the loop a bit to get the result from the first capturing group and you end up with:
let tweets = [
"Thank you to the Academy and the incredible cast & crew of #TheRevenant. #Oscars",
"@HardingCompSci department needs student volunteers for #HourOfCode https://hourofcode.com/us",
"Checkout the most comfortable earbud on #Kickstarter and boost your #productivity https://www.kickstarter.com/",
"Curious to see how #StephenCurry handles injury. http://mashable.com/2016/04/25/steph-curry-knee-injury-cries-cried/"
];
let url = ///(.+?.com?)/;
tweets.forEach(function(tweet) {
var match = url.exec(tweet)
console.log(match && match[1] || match);
});
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