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  • preg_replace_callback_array()

    版本:php7

    (PHP 7)

    Perform a regular expression search and replace using callbacks

    说明

    preg_replace_callback_array(array $patterns_and_callbacks, mixed $subject[,int $limit= -1[,int &$count]]): mixed

    The behavior of this function is similar to preg_replace_callback(), except that callbacks are executed on a per-pattern basis.

    参数

    $patterns_and_callbacks

    An associative array mapping patterns(keys)to callbacks(values).

    $subject

    The string or an array with strings to search and replace.

    $limit

    The maximum possible replacements for each pattern in each$subjectstring. Defaults to-1(no limit).

    $count

    If specified, this variable will be filled with the number of replacements done.

    返回值

    preg_replace_callback_array() returns an array if the$subjectparameter is an array, or a string otherwise. On errors the return value is NULL

    If matches are found, the new subject will be returned, otherwise$subjectwill be returned unchanged.

    范例

    preg_replace_callback_array() example

    <?php
    $subject = 'Aaaaaa Bbb';
    preg_replace_callback_array(
        [
            '~[a]+~i' => function ($match) {
                echo strlen($match[0]), ' matches for "a" found', PHP_EOL;
            },
            '~[b]+~i' => function ($match) {
                echo strlen($match[0]), ' matches for "b" found', PHP_EOL;
            }
        ],
        $subject
    );
    ?>
    

    以上例程会输出:

    6 matches for "a" found
    3 matches for "b" found
    

    参见

    Based on some tests, I found these important traits of the function. (These would
    be nice to see documented as part of its spec, e.g. for confirmation. Without that,
    this is just experimental curiosity. Still better than guesswork, though! ;) )
    1. Changes cascade over a subject across callbacks, i.e. a change made to a
      subject by a callback will be seen by the next callback, if its pattern matches
      the changed subject.
      (But a change made by a previous call of the *same* callback (on any subject)
      will not be seen by that callback again.)
    2. The pattern + callback pairs will be applied in the order of their appearance
      in $patterns_and_callbacks.
    3. The callback can't be null (or '') for a quick shortcut for empty replacements.
    4. Overall, the algorithm starts iterating over $patterns_and_callbacks, and then
      feeds each $subject to the current callback, repeatedly for every single match
      of its pattern on the current subject (unlike "preg_match_all", that is, which
      can do the same in one go, returning the accumulated results in an array).
      This basically means that the "crown jewel", an even more efficient function:
      "preg_replace_all_callback_array" is still missing from the collection.
      (Of course, that would better fit a new design of the regex API, where one
      API could flexibly handle various different modes via some $flags = [] array.)
    5. (This last one is not specific to this function, but inherent to regexes, OTOH,
      it's probably more relevant here than anywhere else in PHP's regex support.)
      Even apparently simple cases can generate a crazy (and difficult-to-predict)
      number of matches, and therefore callback invokations, so remember the set
      $limit, where affordable. But, of course, try to sharpen your patterns first!
      E.g. use ^...$ anchoring to avoid unintended extra calls on matching substrings
      of a subject, (I.e. '/.*/', without anchoring, would match twice: once for the
      whole subject, and then for a trailing empty substring -- but I'm not quite sure
      this should actually be correct behavior, though.)
    finally!!!
    before (<=php5.6):
    <?php
        $htmlString = preg_replace_callback(
          '/(href="?)(\S+)("?)/i',
          function (&$matches) {
            return $matches[1] . urldecode($matches[2]) . $matches[3];
          },
          $htmlString
        );
        $htmlString = preg_replace_callback(
          '/(href="?\S+)(%24)(\S+)?"?/i', // %24 = $
          function (&$matches) {
            return urldecode($matches[1] . '$' . $matches[3]);
          },
          $htmlString
        );
    ?>
    php7
    <?php
        $htmlString = preg_replace_callback_array(
          [
            '/(href="?)(\S+)("?)/i' => function (&$matches) {
              return $matches[1] . urldecode($matches[2]) . $matches[3];
            },
            '/(href="?\S+)(%24)(\S+)?"?/i' => function (&$matches) {
              return urldecode($matches[1] . '$' . $matches[3]);
            }
          ],
          $htmlString
        );
    ?>
    
    Here's a possible alternative in older PHP.
    <?php
    // if (!function_exists('preg_replace_callback_array')) {
    function preg_replace_callback_array (array $patterns_and_callbacks, $subject, $limit=-1, &$count=NULL) {
      $count = 0;
      foreach ($patterns_and_callbacks as $pattern => &$callback) {
        $subject = preg_replace_callback($pattern, $callback, $subject, $limit, $partial_count);
        $count += $partial_count;
      }
      return preg_last_error() == PREG_NO_ERROR ? $subject : NULL;
    }
    // }
    ?>