preg_replace()
(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7)
执行一个正则表达式的搜索和替换
说明
preg_replace(mixed $pattern, mixed $replacement, mixed $subject[,int $limit= -1[,int &$count]]): mixed
搜索$subject中匹配$pattern的部分,以$replacement进行替换。
参数
- $pattern
要搜索的模式。可以使一个字符串或字符串数组。
可以使用一些PCRE修饰符。
- $replacement
用于替换的字符串或字符串数组。如果这个参数是一个字符串,并且$pattern是一个数组,那么所有的模式都使用这个字符串进行替换。如果$pattern和$replacement都是数组,每个$pattern使用$replacement中对应的元素进行替换。如果$replacement中的元素比$pattern中的少,多出来的$pattern使用空字符串进行替换。
$replacement中可以包含后向引用n或$n,语法上首选后者。每个这样的引用将被匹配到的第n个捕获子组捕获到的文本替换。n可以是0-99,0和$0代表完整的模式匹配文本。捕获子组的序号计数方式为:代表捕获子组的左括号从左到右,从1开始数。如果要在$replacement中使用反斜线,必须使用4个("",译注:因为这首先是php的字符串,经过转义后,是两个,再经过正则表达式引擎后才被认为是一个原文反斜线)。
当在替换模式下工作并且后向引用后面紧跟着需要是另外一个数字(比如:在一个匹配模式后紧接着增加一个原文数字),不能使用1这样的语法来描述后向引用。比如,11将会使preg_replace()不能理解你希望的是一个1后向引用紧跟一个原文1,还是一个11后向引用后面不跟任何东西。这种情况下解决方案是使用${1}1。这创建了一个独立的$1后向引用,一个独立的原文1。
当使用被弃用的e修饰符时,这个函数会转义一些字符(即:'、"、和 NULL)然后进行后向引用替换。当这些完成后请确保后向引用解析完后没有单引号或双引号引起的语法错误(比如:'strlen('$1')+strlen("$2")')。确保符合PHP的字符串语法,并且符合eval语法。因为在完成替换后,引擎会将结果字符串作为php代码使用eval方式进行评估并将返回值作为最终参与替换的字符串。
- $subject
要进行搜索和替换的字符串或字符串数组。
如果$subject是一个数组,搜索和替换回在$subject的每一个元素上进行,并且返回值也会是一个数组。
- $limit
每个模式在每个$subject上进行替换的最大次数。默认是-1(无限)。
- $count
如果指定,将会被填充为完成的替换次数。
返回值
如果$subject是一个数组,preg_replace()返回一个数组,其他情况下返回一个字符串。
如果匹配被查找到,替换后的$subject被返回,其他情况下返回没有改变的$subject。如果发生错误,返回NULL
。
错误/异常
PHP 5.5.0 起,传入"e"修饰符的时候,会产生一个E_DEPRECATED
错误; PHP 7.0.0 起,会产生E_WARNING
错误,同时"e"也无法起效。
更新日志
版本 | 说明 |
---|---|
7.0.0 | 不再支持/e修饰符。请用preg_replace_callback()代替。 |
5.5.0 | /e修饰符已经被弃用了。使用preg_replace_callback()代替。参见文档中PREG_REPLACE_EVAL关于安全风险的更多信息。 |
5.1.0 | 增加参数$count. |
范例
使用后向引用紧跟数值原文
<?php $string = 'April 15, 2003'; $pattern = '/(\w+) (\d+), (\d+)/i'; $replacement = '${1}1,$3'; echo preg_replace($pattern, $replacement, $string); ?>
以上例程会输出:
April1,2003
preg_replace()中使用基于索引的数组
<?php $string = 'The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.'; $patterns = array(); $patterns[0] = '/quick/'; $patterns[1] = '/brown/'; $patterns[2] = '/fox/'; $replacements = array(); $replacements[2] = 'bear'; $replacements[1] = 'black'; $replacements[0] = 'slow'; echo preg_replace($patterns, $replacements, $string); ?>
以上例程会输出:
The bear black slow jumps over the lazy dog.
对模式和替换内容按key进行排序我们可以得到期望的结果。
<?php ksort($patterns); ksort($replacements); echo preg_replace($patterns, $replacements, $string); ?>
以上例程会输出:
The slow black bear jumps over the lazy dog.
替换一些值
<?php $patterns = array ('/(19|20)(\d{2})-(\d{1,2})-(\d{1,2})/', '/^\s*{(\w+)}\s*=/'); $replace = array ('\3/\4/\1\2', '$\1 ='); echo preg_replace($patterns, $replace, '{startDate} = 1999-5-27'); ?>
以上例程会输出:
$startDate = 5/27/1999
剥离空白字符
这个例子剥离多余的空白字符
<?php $str = 'foo o'; $str = preg_replace('/\s\s+/', ' ', $str); // 将会改变为'foo o' echo $str; ?>
使用参数$count
<?php $count = 0; echo preg_replace(array('/\d/', '/\s/'), '*', 'xp 4 to', -1 , $count); echo $count; //3 ?>
以上例程会输出:
xp***to 3
注释
Note:当使用数组形式的$pattern和$replacement时,将会按照key在数组中出现的顺序进行处理.这不一定和数组的索引顺序一致.如果你期望使用索引对等方式用$replacement对$pattern进行替换,你可以在调用preg_replace()之前对两个数组各进行一次ksort()排序.
参见
- PCRE 模式
preg_quote()
转义正则表达式字符preg_filter()
执行一个正则表达式搜索和替换preg_match()
执行匹配正则表达式preg_replace_callback()
执行一个正则表达式搜索并且使用一个回调进行替换preg_split()
通过一个正则表达式分隔字符串preg_last_error()
返回最后一个PCRE正则执行产生的错误代码
Because i search a lot 4 this: The following should be escaped if you are trying to match that character \ ^ . $ | ( ) [ ] * + ? { } , Special Character Definitions \ Quote the next metacharacter ^ Match the beginning of the line . Match any character (except newline) $ Match the end of the line (or before newline at the end) | Alternation () Grouping [] Character class * Match 0 or more times + Match 1 or more times ? Match 1 or 0 times {n} Match exactly n times {n,} Match at least n times {n,m} Match at least n but not more than m times More Special Character Stuff \t tab (HT, TAB) \n newline (LF, NL) \r return (CR) \f form feed (FF) \a alarm (bell) (BEL) \e escape (think troff) (ESC) \033 octal char (think of a PDP-11) \x1B hex char \c[ control char \l lowercase next char (think vi) \u uppercase next char (think vi) \L lowercase till \E (think vi) \U uppercase till \E (think vi) \E end case modification (think vi) \Q quote (disable) pattern metacharacters till \E Even More Special Characters \w Match a "word" character (alphanumeric plus "_") \W Match a non-word character \s Match a whitespace character \S Match a non-whitespace character \d Match a digit character \D Match a non-digit character \b Match a word boundary \B Match a non-(word boundary) \A Match only at beginning of string \Z Match only at end of string, or before newline at the end \z Match only at end of string \G Match only where previous m//g left off (works only with /g)
Post slug generator, for creating clean urls from titles. It works with many languages. <?php function remove_accent($str) { $a = array('À', 'Á', 'Â', 'Ã', 'Ä', 'Å', 'Æ', 'Ç', 'È', 'É', 'Ê', 'Ë', 'Ì', 'Í', 'Î', 'Ï', 'Ð', 'Ñ', 'Ò', 'Ó', 'Ô', 'Õ', 'Ö', 'Ø', 'Ù', 'Ú', 'Û', 'Ü', 'Ý', 'ß', 'à', 'á', 'â', 'ã', 'ä', 'å', 'æ', 'ç', 'è', 'é', 'ê', 'ë', 'ì', 'í', 'î', 'ï', 'ñ', 'ò', 'ó', 'ô', 'õ', 'ö', 'ø', 'ù', 'ú', 'û', 'ü', 'ý', 'ÿ', 'Ā', 'ā', 'Ă', 'ă', 'Ą', 'ą', 'Ć', 'ć', 'Ĉ', 'ĉ', 'Ċ', 'ċ', 'Č', 'č', 'Ď', 'ď', 'Đ', 'đ', 'Ē', 'ē', 'Ĕ', 'ĕ', 'Ė', 'ė', 'Ę', 'ę', 'Ě', 'ě', 'Ĝ', 'ĝ', 'Ğ', 'ğ', 'Ġ', 'ġ', 'Ģ', 'ģ', 'Ĥ', 'ĥ', 'Ħ', 'ħ', 'Ĩ', 'ĩ', 'Ī', 'ī', 'Ĭ', 'ĭ', 'Į', 'į', 'İ', 'ı', 'IJ', 'ij', 'Ĵ', 'ĵ', 'Ķ', 'ķ', 'Ĺ', 'ĺ', 'Ļ', 'ļ', 'Ľ', 'ľ', 'Ŀ', 'ŀ', 'Ł', 'ł', 'Ń', 'ń', 'Ņ', 'ņ', 'Ň', 'ň', 'ʼn', 'Ō', 'ō', 'Ŏ', 'ŏ', 'Ő', 'ő', 'Œ', 'œ', 'Ŕ', 'ŕ', 'Ŗ', 'ŗ', 'Ř', 'ř', 'Ś', 'ś', 'Ŝ', 'ŝ', 'Ş', 'ş', 'Š', 'š', 'Ţ', 'ţ', 'Ť', 'ť', 'Ŧ', 'ŧ', 'Ũ', 'ũ', 'Ū', 'ū', 'Ŭ', 'ŭ', 'Ů', 'ů', 'Ű', 'ű', 'Ų', 'ų', 'Ŵ', 'ŵ', 'Ŷ', 'ŷ', 'Ÿ', 'Ź', 'ź', 'Ż', 'ż', 'Ž', 'ž', 'ſ', 'ƒ', 'Ơ', 'ơ', 'Ư', 'ư', 'Ǎ', 'ǎ', 'Ǐ', 'ǐ', 'Ǒ', 'ǒ', 'Ǔ', 'ǔ', 'Ǖ', 'ǖ', 'Ǘ', 'ǘ', 'Ǚ', 'ǚ', 'Ǜ', 'ǜ', 'Ǻ', 'ǻ', 'Ǽ', 'ǽ', 'Ǿ', 'ǿ'); $b = array('A', 'A', 'A', 'A', 'A', 'A', 'AE', 'C', 'E', 'E', 'E', 'E', 'I', 'I', 'I', 'I', 'D', 'N', 'O', 'O', 'O', 'O', 'O', 'O', 'U', 'U', 'U', 'U', 'Y', 's', 'a', 'a', 'a', 'a', 'a', 'a', 'ae', 'c', 'e', 'e', 'e', 'e', 'i', 'i', 'i', 'i', 'n', 'o', 'o', 'o', 'o', 'o', 'o', 'u', 'u', 'u', 'u', 'y', 'y', 'A', 'a', 'A', 'a', 'A', 'a', 'C', 'c', 'C', 'c', 'C', 'c', 'C', 'c', 'D', 'd', 'D', 'd', 'E', 'e', 'E', 'e', 'E', 'e', 'E', 'e', 'E', 'e', 'G', 'g', 'G', 'g', 'G', 'g', 'G', 'g', 'H', 'h', 'H', 'h', 'I', 'i', 'I', 'i', 'I', 'i', 'I', 'i', 'I', 'i', 'IJ', 'ij', 'J', 'j', 'K', 'k', 'L', 'l', 'L', 'l', 'L', 'l', 'L', 'l', 'l', 'l', 'N', 'n', 'N', 'n', 'N', 'n', 'n', 'O', 'o', 'O', 'o', 'O', 'o', 'OE', 'oe', 'R', 'r', 'R', 'r', 'R', 'r', 'S', 's', 'S', 's', 'S', 's', 'S', 's', 'T', 't', 'T', 't', 'T', 't', 'U', 'u', 'U', 'u', 'U', 'u', 'U', 'u', 'U', 'u', 'U', 'u', 'W', 'w', 'Y', 'y', 'Y', 'Z', 'z', 'Z', 'z', 'Z', 'z', 's', 'f', 'O', 'o', 'U', 'u', 'A', 'a', 'I', 'i', 'O', 'o', 'U', 'u', 'U', 'u', 'U', 'u', 'U', 'u', 'U', 'u', 'A', 'a', 'AE', 'ae', 'O', 'o'); return str_replace($a, $b, $str); } function post_slug($str) { return strtolower(preg_replace(array('/[^a-zA-Z0-9 -]/', '/[ -]+/', '/^-|-$/'), array('', '-', ''), remove_accent($str))); } ?> Example: post_slug(' -Lo#&@rem IPSUM //dolor-/sit - amet-/-consectetur! 12 -- ') will output: lorem-ipsum-dolor-sit-amet-consectetur-12
If you want to catch characters, as well european, russian, chinese, japanese, korean of whatever, just : - use mb_internal_encoding('UTF-8'); - use preg_replace('`...`u', '...', $string) with the u (unicode) modifier For further information, the complete list of preg_* modifiers could be found at : http://php.net/manual/en/reference.pcre.pattern.modifiers.php
Note that it is in most cases much more efficient to use preg_replace_callback(), with a named function or an anonymous function created with create_function(), instead of the /e modifier. When preg_replace() is called with the /e modifier, the interpreter must parse the replacement string into PHP code once for every replacement made, while preg_replace_callback() uses a function that only needs to be parsed once.
It may be useful to note that if you pass an associative array as the $replacement parameter, the keys are preserved. <?php $replaced = preg_replace('/foo/', 'bar', ['first' => 'foobar', 'second' => 'barfoo']); // $replaced is now ['first' => 'barbar', 'second' => 'barbar']. ?>
If you want to replace only the n-th occurrence of $pattern, you can use this function: <?php function preg_replace_nth($pattern, $replacement, $subject, $nth=1) { return preg_replace_callback($pattern, function($found) use (&$pattern, &$replacement, &$nth) { $nth--; if ($nth==0) return preg_replace($pattern, $replacement, reset($found) ); return reset($found); }, $subject,$nth ); } echo preg_replace_nth("/(\w+)\|/", '${1} is the 4th|', "|aa|b|cc|dd|e|ff|gg|kkk|", 4); ?> this outputs |aa|b|cc|dd is the 4th|e|ff|gg|kkk| backreferences are accepted in $replacement
preg_replace (and other preg-functions) return null instead of a string when encountering problems you probably did not think about! ------------------------- It may not be obvious to everybody that the function returns NULL if an error of any kind occurres. An error I happen to stumple about quite often was the back-tracking-limit: http://de.php.net/manual/de/pcre.configuration.php #ini.pcre.backtrack-limit When working with HTML-documents and their parsing it happens that you encounter documents that have a length of over 100.000 characters and that may lead to certain regular-expressions to fail due the back-tracking-limit of above. A regular-expression that is ungreedy ("U", http://de.php.net/manual/de/reference.pcre.pattern.modifiers.php) often does the job, but still: sometimes you just need a greedy regular expression working on long strings ... Since, an unhandled return-value of NULL usually creates a consecutive error in the application with unwanted and unforeseen consequences, I found the following solution to be quite helpful and at least save the application from crashing: <?php $string_after = preg_replace( '/some_regexp/', "replacement", $string_before ); // if some error occurred we go on working with the unchanged original string if (PREG_NO_ERROR !== preg_last_error()) { $string_after = $string_before; // put email-sending or a log-message here } //if // free memory unset( $string_before ); ?> You may or should also put a log-message or the sending of an email into the if-condition in order to get informed, once, one of your regular-expressions does not have the effect you desired it to have.
[Editor's note: in this case it would be wise to rely on the preg_quote() function instead which was added for this specific purpose] If your replacement string has a dollar sign or a backslash. it may turn into a backreference accidentally! This will fix it. I want to replace 'text' with '$12345' but this becomes a backreference to $12 (which doesn't exist) and then it prints the remaining '34'. The function down below will return a string that escapes the backreferences. OUTPUT: string(8) "some 345" string(11) "some \12345" string(8) "some 345" string(11) "some $12345" <?php $a = 'some text'; // Either of these will backreference and fail $b1 = '\12345'; // Should be '\\12345' to avoid backreference $b2 = '$12345'; // Should be '\$12345' to avoid backreference $d = array($b1, $b2); foreach ($d as $b) { $result1 = preg_replace('#(text)#', $b, $a); // Fails var_dump($result1); $result2 = preg_replace('#(text)#', preg_escape_back($b), $a); // Succeeds var_dump($result2); } // Escape backreferences from string for use with regex function preg_escape_back($string) { // Replace $ with \$ and \ with \\ $string = preg_replace('#(?<!\\\\)(\\$|\\\\)#', '\\\\$1', $string); return $string; } ?>
<?php //:::replace with anything that you can do with searched string::: //Marcin Majchrzak //pixaltic.com $c = "2 4 8"; echo ($c); //display:2 4 8 $cp = "/(\d)\s(\d)\s(\d)/e"; //pattern $cr = "'\\3*\\2+\\1='.(('\\3')*('\\2')+('\\1'))"; //replece $c = preg_replace($cp, $cr, $c); echo ($c); //display:8*4+2=34 ?>
Wasted several hours because of this: <?php $str='It's a string with HTML entities'; preg_replace('~&#(\d+);~e', 'code2utf($1)', $str); ?> This code must convert numeric html entities to utf8. And it does with a little exception. It treats wrong codes starting with � The reason is that code2utf will be called with leading zero, exactly what the pattern matches - code2utf(039). And it does matter! PHP treats 039 as octal number. Try <?php print(011); ?> Solution: <?php preg_replace('~�*(\d+);~e', 'code2utf($1)', $str); ?>
There seems to be some confusion over how greediness works. For those familiar with Regular Expressions in other languages, particularly Perl: it works like you would expect, and as documented. Greedy by default, un-greedy if you follow a quantifier with a question mark. There is a PHP/PCRE-specific U pattern modifier that flips the greediness, so that quantifiers are by default un-greedy, and become greedy if you follow the quantifier with a question mark: http://www.php.net/manual/en/reference.pcre.pattern.modifiers.php To make things clear, a series of examples: <?php $preview = "a bunch of stuff <code>this that</code> and more stuff <code>with a second code block</code> then extra at the end"; $preview_default = preg_replace('/<code>(.*)<\/code>/is', "<code class=\"prettyprint\">$1</code>", $preview); $preview_manually_ungreedy = preg_replace('/<code>(.*?)<\/code>/is', "<code class=\"prettyprint\">$1</code>", $preview); $preview_U_default = preg_replace('/<code>(.*)<\/code>/isU', "<code class=\"prettyprint\">$1</code>", $preview); $preview_U_manually_greedy = preg_replace('/<code>(.*?)<\/code>/isU', "<code class=\"prettyprint\">$1</code>", $preview); echo "Default, no ?: $preview_default\n"; echo "Default, with ?: $preview_manually_ungreedy\n"; echo "U flag, no ?: $preview_U_default\n"; echo "U flag, with ?: $preview_U_manually_greedy\n"; ?> Results in this: Default, no ?: a bunch of stuff <code class="prettyprint">this that</code> and more stuff <code>with a second code block</code> then extra at the end Default, with ?: a bunch of stuff <code class="prettyprint">this that</code> and more stuff <code class="prettyprint">with a second code block</code> then extra at the end U flag, no ?: a bunch of stuff <code class="prettyprint">this that</code> and more stuff <code class="prettyprint">with a second code block</code> then extra at the end U flag, with ?: a bunch of stuff <code class="prettyprint">this that</code> and more stuff <code>with a second code block</code> then extra at the end As expected: greedy by default, ? inverts it to ungreedy. With the U flag, un-greedy by default, ? makes it greedy.
Warning: a common made mistake in trying to remove all characters except numbers and letters from a string, is to use code with a regex similar to preg_replace('[^A-Za-z0-9_]', '', ...). The output goes in an unexpected direction in case your input contains two double quotes. echo preg_replace('[^A-Za-z0-9_]', '', 'D"usseldorfer H"auptstrasse') D"usseldorfer H"auptstrasse It is important to not forget a leading an trailing forward slash in the regex: echo preg_replace('/[^A-Za-z0-9_]/', '', 'D"usseldorfer H"auptstrasse') Dusseldorfer Hauptstrasse PS An alternative is to use preg_replace('/\W/', '', $t) for keeping all alpha numeric characters including underscores.
Take care when you try to strip whitespaces out of an UTF-8 text. Using something like: <?php $text = preg_replace( "{\s+}", ' ', $text ); ?> brokes in my case the letter à which is hex c3a0. But a0 is a whitespace. So use <?php $text = preg_replace( "{[ \t]+}", ' ', $text ); ?> to strip all spaces and tabs, or better, use a multibyte function like mb_ereg_replace.
If there's a chance your replacement text contains any strings such as "$0.95", you'll need to escape those $n backreferences: <?php function escape_backreference($x) { return preg_replace('/\$(\d)/', '\\\$$1', $x); } ?>
Hi, as I wasn't able to find another way to do this, I wrote a function converting any UTF-8 string into a correct NTFS filename (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filename). <?php function strToNTFSFilename($string) { $reserved = preg_quote('\/:*?"<>', '/'); return preg_replace("/([\\x00-\\x1f{$forbidden}])/e", "_", $string); } ?> It converts all control characters and filename characters which are reserved by Windows ('\/:*?"<>') into an underscore. This way you can safely create an NTFS filename out of any UTF-8 string.
$firstname = htmlspecialchars($_POST['campo']); $firstname = preg_replace("/[^a-zA-Z0-9]/", "", $firstname, -1, $count_fn); // $count_fn conta quantos caracteres foram mudados. // $firstname variavel que captura o input
preg_replace to only show alpha numeric characters $info = "The Development of code . http://www."; $info = preg_replace("/[^a-zA-Z0-9]+/", "", $info); echo $info; OUTPUTS: TheDevelopmentofcodehttpwww This is a good workable code http://www.sioure.com
if your intention to code and decode mod_rewrite urls and handle it with php and mysql ,this should work to convert to url $url = preg_replace('/[^A-Za-z0-9_-]+/', '-', $string); And to check in mysql with the url value,use the same expression discounting '-'. first replace the url value with php using preg_replace and use with mysql REGEXP $sql = "select * from table where fieldname_to_check REGEXP '".preg_replace("/-+/",'[^A-Za-z0-9_]+',$url)."'"
There seems to be some unexpected behavior when using the /m modifier when the line terminators are win32 or mac format. If you have a string like below, and try to replace dots, the regex won't replace correctly: <?php $s = "Testing, testing.\r\n" . "Another testing line.\r\n" . "Testing almost done."; echo preg_replace('/\.$/m', '.@', $s); // only last . replaced ?> The /m modifier doesn't seem to work properly when CRLFs or CRs are used. Make sure to convert line endings to LFs (*nix format) in your input string.
Also worth noting is that you can use array_keys()/array_values() with preg_replace like: <?php $subs = array( '/\[b\](.+)\[\/b\]/Ui' => '<strong>$1</strong>', '/_(.+)_/Ui' => '<em>$1</em>' ... ... ); $raw_text = '[b]this is bold[/b] and this is _italic!_'; $bb_text = preg_replace(array_keys($subs), array_values($subs), $raw_text); ?>
Why not offset parameter to replace the string? It would be helpful example: mixed preg_replace (mixed $pattern, mixed $replacement, mixed $subject [, int $limit = -1 [, int & $count [, int $offset = 0]]]) 1 $pattern 2 $replacement 3 $subject 4 $limit 5 $count 6 $offset <- it is planned?
People using the /e modifier with preg_replace should be aware of the following weird behaviour. It is not a bug per se, but can cause bugs if you don't know it's there. The example in the docs for /e suffers from this mistake in fact. With /e, the replacement string is a PHP expression. So when you use a backreference in the replacement expression, you need to put the backreference inside quotes, or otherwise it would be interpreted as PHP code. Like the example from the manual for preg_replace: preg_replace("/(<\/?)(\w+)([^>]*>)/e", "'\\1'.strtoupper('\\2').'\\3'", $html_body); To make this easier, the data in a backreference with /e is run through addslashes() before being inserted in your replacement expression. So if you have the string He said: "You're here" It would become: He said: \"You\'re here\" ...and be inserted into the expression. However, if you put this inside a set of single quotes, PHP will not strip away all the slashes correctly! Try this: print ' He said: \"You\'re here\" '; Output: He said: \"You're here\" This is because the sequence \" inside single quotes is not recognized as anything special, and it is output literally. Using double-quotes to surround the string/backreference will not help either, because inside double-quotes, the sequence \' is not recognized and also output literally. And in fact, if you have any dollar signs in your data, they would be interpreted as PHP variables. So double-quotes are not an option. The 'solution' is to manually fix it in your expression. It is easiest to use a separate processing function, and do the replacing there (i.e. use "my_processing_function('\\1')" or something similar as replacement expression, and do the fixing in that function). If you surrounded your backreference by single-quotes, the double-quotes are corrupt: $text = str_replace('\"', '"', $text); People using preg_replace with /e should at least be aware of this. I'm not sure how it would be best fixed in preg_replace. Because double-quotes are a really bad idea anyway (due to the variable expansion), I would suggest that preg_replace's auto-escaping is modified to suit the placement of backreferences inside single-quotes (which seemed to be the intention from the start, but was incorrectly applied).
Replacement of line numbers, with replacement limit per line. Solution that worked for me. I have a file with tasks listed each starting from number, and only starting number should be removed because forth going text has piles of numbers to be omitted. 56 Patient A of 46 years suffering ... ... 57 Newborn of 26 weeks was ... 58 Jane, having age 18 years recollects onsets of ... ... 587 Patient of 70 years ... etc. <?php // Array obtained from file $array = file($file, true); // Decompile array with foreach loop foreach($array as $value) { // Take away numbers 100-999 // Starting from biggest // // % Delimiter // ^ Make match from beginning of line // [0-9] Range of numbers // {3} Multiplication of digit range (For tree digit numbers) // if(preg_match('%^[0-9]{3}%', $value)) { // Re-assing to value its modified copy $value = preg_replace('%^[0-9]{3}%', '-HERE WAS XXX NUMBER-', $value, 1); } // Take away numbers 10-99 elseif(preg_match('%^[0-9]{2}%', $value)) { $value = preg_replace('%^[0-9]{2}%', '-HERE WAS XX NUMBER-', $value, 1); } // Take away numbers 0-9 elseif(preg_match('%^[0-9]%', $value)) { $value = preg_replace('%^[0-9]%', '-HERE WAS X NUMBER-', $value, 1); } // Build array back $arr[] = array($value); } } ?>
A variable can handle a huge quantity of data but preg_replace can't. Example : <?php $url = "ANY URL WITH LOTS OF DATA"; // We get all the data into $data $data = file_get_contents($url); // We just want to keep the content of <head> $head = preg_replace("#(.*)<head>(.*?)</head>(.*)#is", '$2', $data); ?> $head can have the desired content, or be empty, depends on the length of $data. For this application, just add : $data = substr($data, 0, 4096); before using preg_replace, and it will work fine.
This function will strip all the HTML-like content in a string. I know you can find a lot of similar content on the web, but this one is simple, fast and robust. Don't simply use the built-in functions like strip_tags(), they dont work so good. Careful however, this is not a correct validation of a string ; you should use additional functions like mysql_real_escape_string and filter_var, as well as custom tests before putting a submission into your database. <?php $html = <<<END <div id="function.preg-split" class="refentry"> Bonjour1 \t <div class="refnamediv"> Bonjour2 \t <h1 class="refname">Bonjour3 \t</h1> <h1 class=""">Bonjour4 \t</h1> <h1 class="*%1">Bonjour5 \t</h1> <body>Bonjour6 \t<//body>> </ body>Bonjour7 \t<//// body>> < a href="image.php" alt="trans" / > some leftover text... < DIV class=noCompliant style = "text-align:left;" > ... and some other ... < dIv > < empty> </ empty> <p> This is yet another text <br > that wasn't <b>compliant</b> too... <br /> </p> <div class="noClass" > this one is better but we don't care anyway </div><P> <input type= "text" name ='my "name' value = "nothin really." readonly> end of paragraph </p> </Div> </div> some trailing text END; // This echoes correctly all the text that is not inside HTML tags $html_reg = '/<+\s*\/*\s*([A-Z][A-Z0-9]*)\b[^>]*\/*\s*>+/i'; echo htmlentities( preg_replace( $html_reg, '', $html ) ); // This extracts only a small portion of the text echo htmlentities(strip_tags($html)); ?>
Hi. Not sure if this will be a great help to anyone out there, but thought i'd post just in case. I was having an Issue with a project that relied on $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']. Obviously this wasn't working on IIS. (i am using mod_rewrite in apache to call up pages from a database and IIS doesn't set REQUEST_URI). So i knocked up this simple little preg_replace to use the query string set by IIS when redirecting to a PHP error page. <?php //My little IIS hack :) if(!isset($_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'])){ $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'] = preg_replace( '/404;([a-zA-Z]+:\/\/)(.*?)\//i', "/" , $_SERVER['QUERY_STRING'] ); } ?> Hope this helps someone else out there trying to do the same thing :)
If you have issues where preg_replace returns an empty string, please take a look at these two ini parameters: pcre.backtrack_limit pcre.recursion_limit The default is set to 100K. If your buffer is larger than this, look to increase these two values.
To covert a string to SEO friendly, do this: <?php $realname = "This is the string to be made SEO friendly!" $seoname = preg_replace('/\%/',' percentage',$realname); $seoname = preg_replace('/\@/',' at ',$seoname); $seoname = preg_replace('/\&/',' and ',$seoname); $seoname = preg_replace('/\s[\s]+/','-',$seoname); // Strip off multiple spaces $seoname = preg_replace('/[\s\W]+/','-',$seoname); // Strip off spaces and non-alpha-numeric $seoname = preg_replace('/^[\-]+/','',$seoname); // Strip off the starting hyphens $seoname = preg_replace('/[\-]+$/','',$seoname); // // Strip off the ending hyphens $seoname = strtolower($seoname); echo $seoname; ?> This will print: this-is-the-string-to-be-made-seo-friendly
<?php /** * prepares a string optimized for SEO * @see https://blog.ueffing.net/post/2016/03/14/string-seo-optimieren-creating-seo-friendly-url/ * @param String $string * @return String $string SEO optimized String */ function seofy ($sString = '') { $sString = preg_replace('/[^\\pL\d_]+/u', '-', $sString); $sString = trim($sString, "-"); $sString = iconv('utf-8', "us-ascii//TRANSLIT", $sString); $sString = strtolower($sString); $sString = preg_replace('/[^-a-z0-9_]+/', '', $sString); return $sString; } // Example seofy('Straßenfest in München'); // => strassenfest-in-muenchen seofy('José Ignacio López de Arriortúa'); // => jose-ignacio-lopez-de-arriortua ?> The function seofy () creates a SEO friendly version from a string. Umlauts and other letters not contained in the ASCII character set are either reduced to the basic form equivalent (e. g.: é becomes e and ú wid u) or completely converted (e. g. ß becomes ss and ü becomes ue). On the one hand this succeeds because the php function preg_replace performs the replacement by means of unicode - Unicode Regular Expressions - and on the other hand because an approximate translation is attempted by means of the php function iconv with the TRANSLIT option. Quote php. net about iconv and TRANSLIT: "If you append the character string //TRANSLIT to out_charset, transliteration is activated. This means that a character that cannot be displayed in the target character set can be approximated with one or more similar-looking characters.[…]" Source: https://blog.ueffing.net/post/2016/03/14/string-seo-optimieren-creating-seo-friendly-url/
Hello there, I would like to share a regex (PHP) sniplet of code I wrote (2012) for myself it is also being used in the Yerico sriptmerge plugin for joomla marked as simple code.. To compress javascript code and remove all comments from it. It also works with mootools It is fast... (in compairison to other PHP solutions) and does not damage the Javascript it self and it resolves lots of comment removal isseus. //START Remove comments. $buffer = str_replace('/// ', '///', $buffer); $buffer = str_replace(',//', ', //', $buffer); $buffer = str_replace('{//', '{ //', $buffer); $buffer = str_replace('}//', '} //', $buffer); $buffer = str_replace('*//*', '*/ /*', $buffer); $buffer = str_replace('/**/', '/* */', $buffer); $buffer = str_replace('*///', '*/ //', $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace("/\/\/.*\n\/\/.*\n/", "", $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace("/\s\/\/\".*/", "", $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace("/\/\/\n/", "\n", $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace("/\/\/\s.*.\n/", "\n \n", $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace('/\/\/w[^w].*/', '', $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace('/\/\/s[^s].*/', '', $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace('/\/\/\*\*\*.*/', '', $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace('/\/\/\*\s\*\s\*.*/', '', $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace('/[^\*]\/\/[*].*/', '', $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace('/([;])\/\/.*/', '$1', $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace('/((\r)|(\n)|(\R)|([^0]1)|([^\"]\s*\-))(\/\/)(.*)/', '$1', $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace("/([^\*])[\/]+\/\*.*[^a-zA-Z0-9\s\-=+\|!@#$%^&()`~\[\]{};:\'\",<.>?]/", "$1", $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace("/\/\*/", "\n/*dddpp", $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace('/((\{\s*|:\s*)[\"\']\s*)(([^\{\};\"\']*)dddpp)/','$1$4', $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace("/\*\//", "xxxpp*/\n", $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace('/((\{\s*|:\s*|\[\s*)[\"\']\s*)(([^\};\"\']*)xxxpp)/','$1$4', $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace('/([\"\'])\s*\/\*/', '$1/*', $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace('/(\n)[^\'"]?\/\*dddpp.*?xxxpp\*\//s', '', $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace('/\n\/\*dddpp([^\s]*)/', '$1', $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace('/xxxpp\*\/\n([^\s]*)/', '*/$1', $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace('/xxxpp\*\/\n([\"])/', '$1', $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace('/(\*)\n*\s*(\/\*)\s*/', '$1$2$3', $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace('/(\*\/)\s*(\")/', '$1$2', $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace('/\/\*dddpp(\s*)/', '/*', $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace('/\n\s*\n/', "\n", $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace("/([^\'\"]\s*)<!--.*-->(?!(<\/div>)).*/","$1", $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace('/([^\n\w\-=+\|!@#$%^&*()`~\[\]{};:\'",<.>\/?\\\\])(\/\/)(.*)/', '$1', $buffer); //END Remove comments. //START Remove all whitespaces $buffer = preg_replace('/\s+/', ' ', $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace('/\s*(?:(?=[=\-\+\|%&\*\)\[\]\{\};:\,\.\<\>\!\@\#\^`~]))/', '', $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace('/(?:(?<=[=\-\+\|%&\*\)\[\]\{\};:\,\.\<\>\?\!\@\#\^`~]))\s*/', '', $buffer); $buffer = preg_replace('/([^a-zA-Z0-9\s\-=+\|!@#$%^&*()`~\[\] {};:\'",<.>\/?])\s+([^a-zA-Z0-9\s\-=+\|!@#$%^&*()`~\[\] {};:\'",<.>\/?])/', '$1$2', $buffer); //END Remove all whitespaces I am off coarse not a programmer just wanted to make the plugin work like i wanted it to.... (NOTE: For the webmaster sorry I posted this in the wrong topic before...)
I have been filtering every userinput with preg_replace since 6 Years now and nothing happened. I am running PHP 5.6.6 and because of historical reasons I still do not use mysqli. Now i noticed that this filter [^0-9a-zA-Z_ -|:\.] won't filter anything from a Sleeping-Hack-String like `%' AnD sLeep(3) ANd '1%`: preg_replace ( '/[^0-9a-zA-Z_ -|:\.]/', '', "%' AnD sLeep(3) ANd '1%" ); The reason is, that the fourth Minus has to be escaped! Fix: [^0-9a-zA-Z_ \-|:\.] I tell you because I did not know this and I am pretty sure btw. maybe in older versions of PHP some did not have to escape this minus. Those hacks did not work in the old days, because formerly I have been testing against this. Greetings
A simple BB like thing.. <?php function AddBB($var) { $search = array( '/\[b\](.*?)\[\/b\]/is', '/\[i\](.*?)\[\/i\]/is', '/\[u\](.*?)\[\/u\]/is', '/\[img\](.*?)\[\/img\]/is', '/\[url\](.*?)\[\/url\]/is', '/\[url\=(.*?)\](.*?)\[\/url\]/is' ); $replace = array( '<strong>$1</strong>', '<em>$1</em>', '<u>$1</u>', '<img src="$1" />', '<a href="$1">$1</a>', '<a href="$1">$2</a>' ); $var = preg_replace ($search, $replace, $var); return $var; } ?>
From what I can see, the problem is, that if you go straight and substitute all 'A's wit 'T's you can't tell for sure which 'T's to substitute with 'A's afterwards. This can be for instance solved by simply replacing all 'A's by another character (for instance '_' or whatever you like), then replacing all 'T's by 'A's, and then replacing all '_'s (or whatever character you chose) by 'A's: <?php $dna = "AGTCTGCCCTAG"; echo str_replace(array("A","G","C","T","_","-"), array("_","-","G","A","T","C"), $dna); //output will be TCAGACGGGATC ?> Although I don't know how transliteration in perl works (though I remember that is kind of similar to the UNIX command "tr") I would suggest following function for "switching" single chars: <?php function switch_chars($subject,$switch_table,$unused_char="_") { foreach ( $switch_table as $_1 => $_2 ) { $subject = str_replace($_1,$unused_char,$subject); $subject = str_replace($_2,$_1,$subject); $subject = str_replace($unused_char,$_2,$subject); } return $subject; } echo switch_chars("AGTCTGCCCTAG", array("A"=>"T","G"=>"C")); //output will be TCAGACGGGATC ?>
Be aware that when using the "/u" modifier, if your input text contains any bad UTF-8 code sequences, then preg_replace will return an empty string, regardless of whether there were any matches. This is due to the PCRE library returning an error code if the string contains bad UTF-8.
To split Pascal/CamelCase into Title Case (for example, converting descriptive class names for use in human-readable frontends), you can use the below function: <?php function expandCamelCase($source) { return preg_replace('/(?<!^)([A-Z][a-z]|(?<=[a-z])[^a-z]|(?<=[A-Z])[0-9_])/', ' $1', $source); } ?> Before: ExpandCamelCaseAPIDescriptorPHP5_3_4Version3_21Beta After: Expand Camel Case API Descriptor PHP 5_3_4 Version 3_21 Beta
If you would like to remove a tag along with the text inside it then use the following code. <?php preg_replace('/(<tag>.+?)+(<\/tag>)/i', '', $string); ?> example <?php $string='<span class="normalprice">55 PKR</span>'; ?> <?php $string = preg_replace('/(<span class="normalprice">.+?)+(<\/span>)/i', '', $string); ?> This will results a null or empty string. <?php $string='My String <span class="normalprice">55 PKR</span>'; $string = preg_replace('/(<span class="normalprice">.+?)+(<\/span>)/i', '', $string); ?> This will results a " My String"
Below is a function for converting Hebrew final characters to their normal equivelants should they appear in the middle of a word. The /b argument does not treat Hebrew letters as part of a word, so I had to work around that limitation. <?php $text="עברית מבולגנת"; function hebrewNotWordEndSwitch ($from, $to, $text) { $text= preg_replace('/'.$from.'([א-ת])/u','$2'.$to.'$1',$text); return $text; } do { $text_before=$text; $text=hebrewNotWordEndSwitch("ך","כ",$text); $text=hebrewNotWordEndSwitch("ם","מ",$text); $text=hebrewNotWordEndSwitch("ן","נ",$text); $text=hebrewNotWordEndSwitch("ף","פ",$text); $text=hebrewNotWordEndSwitch("ץ","צ",$text); } while ( $text_before!=$text ); print $text; // עברית מסודרת! ?> The do-while is necessary for multiple instances of letters, such as "אנני" which would start off as "אןןי". Note that there's still the problem of acronyms with gershiim but that's not a difficult one to solve. The code is in use at http://gibberish.co.il which you can use to translate wrongly-encoded Hebrew, transliterize, and some other Hebrew-related functions. To ensure that there will be no regular characters at the end of a word, just convert all regular characters to their final forms, then run this function. Enjoy!
Sample for replacing bracketed short-codes The used short-codes are purely used for educational purposes for they could be shorter as in 'italic' to 'i' or 'bold' to 'b'. Sample text ---- This sample shows how to have [italic]italic[/italic], [bold]bold[/bold] and [underline]underlined[/underline] and [strikethrough]striked[/striketrhough] text. with this function: <?php function textDecoration($html) { $patterns = [ '/\[(italic)\].*?\[\/\1\] ?/', '/\[(bold)\].*?\[\/\1\] ?/', '/\[(underline)\].*?\[\/\1\] ?/' ]; $replacements = [ '<i>$1</i>', '<strong>$1</strong>', '<u>$1</u>' ]; return preg_replace($patterns, $replacements, $html); } $html = textDecoration($html); echo $html; // or return ?> results in: ---- This sample shows how to have <i>italic</i>, <b>bold</b> and <u>underlined</u> and [strikethrough]striked[/striketrhough] text. Notice! There is no [strikethrough]striked[/striketrhough] fallback in the patterns and replacements array
Worth knowing: When arrays of patterns and replacements are provided, they are executed in the order they appear in the array -- so later array elements can act on the results of earlier array elements. For example: <?php echo preg_replace( array( '#cat#', '#dog#', '#eel#', '#snowman#' ), array( 'dog1', 'eel2', 'snowman3', 'monster4' ), 'the good cat and the bad dog wandered on the beach' ); /* result: the good monster4321 and the bad monster432 wandered on the beach */
Note that when given array arguments the replacement happens in sequence: <?php $p = array('/a/', '/b/', '/c/'); $r = array('b', 'c', 'd'); print_r(preg_replace($p, $r, 'a')); // => d ?>
A delimiter can be any ASCII non-alphanumeric, non-backslash, non-whitespace character: !"#$%&'*+,./:;=?@^_`|~- and ({[<>]})
// Function to format Brazilian taxvat using preg_replace // Função para formatar o CPF ou CPF utilizando preg_replace if (!function_exists('cpf_cnpj')) { function cpf_cnpj($cpf_cnpj) { if (!in_array(strlen($cpf_cnpj), [11, 14])) { return $cpf_cnpj; } if (strlen($cpf_cnpj) == 11) { return preg_replace("/(\d{3})(\d{3})(\d{3})(\d{2})/", "$1.$2.$3-$4", $cpf_cnpj); } else { return preg_replace("/(\d{2})(\d{3})(\d{3})(\d{4})(\d{2})/", "$1.$2.$3/$4-$5", $cpf_cnpj); } } } echo cpf_cnpj(12345678901), ' - ', cpf_cnpj(12345678000190); // 123.456.789-01 - 12.345.678/0001-90
$pattern='/(09(1|2|3)\d{8})/'; $string ="n:09138660959 nu: 09371313317 nu:09211313317 n: 09393026988nu:09193472840nnu:09211313317nu:09211313317nu:09121772890"; $replacements='($1 code $2)'; echo preg_replace($pattern, $replacements, $string);
Matching substrings where the match can exist at the end of the string was non-intuitive to me. I found this because: strtotime() interprets 'mon' as 'Monday', but Postgres uses interval types that return short names by default, e.g. interval '1 month' returns as '1 mon'. I used something like this: $str = "mon month monday Mon Monday Month MONTH MON"; $strMonth = preg_replace('~(mon)([^\w]|$)~i', '$1th$2', $str); echo "$str\n$strMonth\n"; //to output: mon month monday Mon Monday Month MONTH MON month month monday Month Monday Month MONTH MONth
An alternative to the method suggested by sheri is to remember that the regex modifier '$' only looks at the end of the STRING, the example given is a single string consisting of multiple lines. Try: <?php // Following is 1 string containing 3 lines $s = "Testing, testing.\r\n" . "Another testing line.\r\n" . "Testing almost done."; echo preg_replace('/\.\\r\\n/m', '@\r\n', $s); ?> This results in the string: Testing, testing@\r\nAnother testing line@\r\nTesting almost done.
I use this to prevent users from overdoing repeated text. The following function only allows 3 identical characters at a time and also takes care of repetitions with whitespace added. This means that 'haaaaaaleluuuujaaaaa' becomes 'haaaleluuujaaa' and 'I am c o o o o o o l' becomes 'I am c o o o l' <?php //Example of user input $str = "aaaaaaaaaaabbccccccccaaaaad d d d d d d ddde''''''''''''"; function stripRepeat($str) { //Do not allow repeated whitespace $str = preg_replace("/(\s){2,}/",'$1',$str); //Result: aaaaaaaaaaabbccccccccaaaaad d d d d d d ddde'''''''''''' //Do not allow more than 3 identical characters separated by any whitespace $str = preg_replace('{( ?.)\1{4,}}','$1$1$1',$str); //Final result: aaabbcccaaad d d ddde''' return $str; } ?> To prevent any repetitions of characters, you only need this: <?php $str = preg_replace('{(.)\1+}','$1',$str); //Result: abcad d d d d d d de' ?>
String to filename: <?php function string_to_filename($word) { $tmp = preg_replace('/^\W+|\W+$/', '', $word); // remove all non-alphanumeric chars at begin & end of string $tmp = preg_replace('/\s+/', '_', $tmp); // compress internal whitespace and replace with _ return strtolower(preg_replace('/\W-/', '', $tmp)); // remove all non-alphanumeric chars except _ and - } ?> Returns a usable & readable filename.
For filename tidying I prefer to only ALLOW certain characters rather than converting particular ones that we want to exclude. To this end I use ... <?php $allowed = "/[^a-z0-9\\040\\.\\-\\_\\\\]/i"; preg_replace($allowed,"",$str)); ?> Allows letters a-z, digits, space (\\040), hyphen (\\-), underscore (\\_) and backslash (\\\\), everything else is removed from the string.