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LXXXIX. Regular Expression Functions (POSIX Extended)Bevezet�sMegjegyz�s:
PHP also supports regular expressions using a Perl-compatible syntax
using the PCRE functions. Those functions
support non-greedy matching, assertions, conditional subpatterns, and a
number of other features not supported by the POSIX-extended regular
expression syntax.
Figyelem |
These regular expression functions are not binary-safe. The PCRE functions are.
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Regular expressions are used for complex string manipulation in
PHP. The functions that support regular expressions are:
These functions all take a regular expression string as their
first argument. PHP uses the POSIX extended regular expressions
as defined by POSIX 1003.2. For a full description of POSIX
regular expressions see the regex man pages included in the regex
directory in the PHP distribution. It's in manpage format, so
you'll want to do something along the lines of man
/usr/local/src/regex/regex.7 in order to read it.
K�vetelm�nyekAz itt le�rt f�ggv�nyek a standard modulban
tal�lhat�ak, ami mindig rendelkez�sre �ll. Telep�t�sSemmilyen telep�t�s nem sz�ks�ges ezen f�ggv�nyek
haszn�lat�hoz, a PHP alapelemei. Fut�sidej� be�ll�t�sokEz a kiterjeszt�s semmilyen konfigur�ci�s
be�ll�t�sokat nem defini�l. Er�forr�s t�pusokEz a kiterjeszt�s semmilyen er�forr�s
t�pust nem defini�l. El�re defini�lt �lland�kEz a kiterjeszt�s semmilyen konstans
�rt�ket nem defini�l. P�ld�k
P�lda 1. Regular Expression Examples ereg ("abc", $string);
/* Returns true if"abc"
is found anywhere in $string. */
ereg ("^abc", $string);
/* Returns true if "abc";
is found at the beginning of $string. */
ereg ("abc$", $string);
/* Returns true if "abc"
is found at the end of $string. */
eregi ("(ozilla.[23]|MSIE.3)", $HTTP_USER_AGENT);
/* Returns true if client browser
is Netscape 2, 3 or MSIE 3. */
ereg ("([[:alnum:]]+) ([[:alnum:]]+) ([[:alnum:]]+)", $string,$regs);
/* Places three space separated words
into $regs[1], $regs[2] and $regs[3]. */
$string = ereg_replace ("^", "<br />", $string);
/* Put a <br /> tag at the beginning of $string. */
$string = ereg_replace ("$", "<br />", $string);
/* Put a <br />; tag at the end of $string. */
$string = ereg_replace ("\n", "", $string);
/* Get rid of any newline
characters in $string. */ |
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L�sd m�g
For regular expressions in Perl-compatible syntax have a look at the
PCRE functions.
- Tartalom
- ereg_replace -- Replace regular expression
- ereg -- Regular expression match
- eregi_replace -- replace regular expression case insensitive
- eregi -- case insensitive regular expression match
- split -- split string into array by regular expression
- spliti --
Split string into array by regular expression case insensitive
- sql_regcase --
Make regular expression for case insensitive match
User Contributed Notes Regular Expression Functions (POSIX Extended) |
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07-Mar-2001 06:38 |
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If you don't have commandline access to the manpage cited above, note that
the "POSIX 1003.2 Regular Expressions" manpage is also widely
re-published on the web. See, for instance:
The
"POSIX 1003.2 Regular Expressions" manpage provides a good basic
reference for the syntax used by ereg_* functions. Most tutorials on
"extended regular expressions" are also applicable.
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[email protected]
07-Mar-2001 01:53 |
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Dario seems to have made a nice tutorial about regular
expressions:
Thanks
Dario! ...
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[email protected]
18-Dec-2001 12:39 |
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I noticed Cyro's link had gone old. So I made copy of the regex manpage and
placed it on my site. You can get it from the following
address:
This
is primarily for Windows users, who have no access to the man pages in
Linux distributions.
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03-Feb-2002 02:02 |
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if you are looking for the abbreviations like tab, carriage return,
regex-class definitions
you should look here:
some
excerpts:
\a control characters bell \b backspace \f form
feed \n line feed \r carriage return \t horizontal
tab \v vertical tab
class example \cLu all uppercase
letters
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[email protected]
21-Feb-2002 04:12 |
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It's easy to exclude characters but excluding words with a regular
expression is a bit more tricky. For parentheses there is no equivalent to
the ^ for brackets. The only way I've found to exclude a string is to
proceed by inverse logic: accept all the words that do NOT correspond to
the string. So if you want to accept all strings except those _begining_
with "abc", you'd have to accept any string that matches one of
the following: ^(ab[^c]) ^(a[^b]c) ^(a[^b][^c])
^([^a]bc) ^([^a]b[^c]) ^([^a][^b]c)
^([^a][^b][^c])
which, put together, gives the regex
^(ab[^c]|a[^b]c|a[^b][^c]|[^a]bc|[^a]b[^c]|[^a][^b]c|[^a][^b][^c])
Note
that this won't work to detect the word "abc" anywhere in a
string. You need to have some way of anchoring the inverse word
match like: ^(a[^b]|[^a]b|[^a][^b]) ;"ab" not at begining
of line or: (a[^b]|[^a]b|[^a][^b])& ;"ab" not at end
of line or: 123(a[^b]|[^a]b|[^a][^b]) ;"ab" not after
"123"
I don't know why "(abc){0,0}" is an
invalid synthax. It would've made all this much simpler.
Slightly off-topic, here's a regex date validator (format yyyy-mm-dd,
remove all spaces and linefeeds):
^(19|20)([0-9]{2}-((0[13-9]|1[0-2])-(0[1-9]|[12][0-9]|30)|
(0[13578]|1[02])-31|02-(0[1-9]|1[0-9]|2[0-8]))|([2468]0|
[02468][48]|[13579][26])-02-29)$
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luciano_at_braziliantranslation.net
03-Mar-2002 07:15 |
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mholdgate wrote a very nice quick reference guide in the next page (),
but I felt it could be improved a
little: ________________
^ Start of line $ End of
line n? Zero or only one single occurrence of character
'n' n* Zero or more occurrences of character 'n' n+ At least one
or more occurrences of character 'n' n{2} Exactly two occurrences of
'n' n{2,} At least 2 or more occurrences of 'n' n{2,4} From 2 to 4
occurrences of 'n' . Any single character () Parenthesis to group
expressions (.*) Zero or more occurrences of any single character, ie,
anything! (n|a) Either 'n' or 'a' [1-6] Any single digit in the
range between 1 and 6 [c-h] Any single lower case letter in the range
between c and h [D-M] Any single upper case letter in the range
between D and M [^a-z] Any single character EXCEPT any lower case
letter between a and z.
Pitfall: the ^ symbol only acts as an
EXCEPT rule if it is the very first character inside a range, and it
denies the entire range including the ^ symbol itself if it appears
again later in the range. Also remember that if it is the first
character in the entire expression, it means "start of
line". In any other place, it is always treated as a regular ^
symbol. In other words, you cannot deny a word with ^undesired_word
or a group with ^(undesired_phrase). Read more detailed regex
documentation to find out what is necessary to achieve
this.
[_4^a-zA-Z] Any single character which can be the underscore
or the number 4 or the ^ symbol or any letter, lower or upper
case
?, +, * and the {} count parameters can be appended not only
to a single character, but also to a group() or a
range[].
therefore, ^.{2}[a-z]{1,2}_?[0-9]*([1-6]|[a-f])[^1-9]{2}a+$ would
mean:
^.{2} = A line beginning with any two characters,
[a-z]{1,2} = followed by either 1 or 2 lower case letters, _? =
followed by an optional underscore, [0-9]* = followed by zero or
more digits, ([1-6]|[a-f]) = followed by either a digit between 1 and
6 OR a lower case letter between a and f, [^1-9]{2} = followed
by any two characters except digits between 1 and 9 (0 is possible),
a+$ = followed by at least one or more occurrences of 'a' at
the end of a line.
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[email protected]
07-Mar-2002 05:26 |
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sorry to be picky here but saying ^ is beginning of a line or $ is end of
line is rather misleading, if you're working on a daily basis with
regexes.
it might be that it is most of the time correct BUT in
some occasions you'd be better off to think of ^ as "start of
string" and $ as "end of string".
there are ways to
make your regex engine forget about your system's notion of a newline,
it's what is commonly refered to as multiline regexes...
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[email protected]
08-Mar-2002 05:33 |
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Follow-up to my previous post: Some simple optimization allowed me to
realize that excluding a word at the beginning of a string has a degree of
complexity O(n) rather than O(n^2). I only had to follow the
logic:
if str[0] != badword[0] then OK else if str[1] !=
badword[1] then OK else if str[2] != badword[2] then OK
else ...
So excluding the word 'abc' at the beginning of a string
is much more simple than I had made it out to be:
^([^a]|a[^b]|ab[^c])
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[email protected]
09-Mar-2002 05:40 |
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Sadly, the Posix regexp evaluator (PHP 4.1.2) does not seem to support
multi-character coallating sequences, even though such sequences are
included in the man-page documentation.
Specifically, the man-page
discusses the expression "[[.ch.]]*c" which matches the first
five characters of "chchcc". Running this expression in
ereg_replace generates the error "Warning: REG_ECOLLATE".
(Running an equivalent expression with only one character between the
periods does work, however.)
Multi-character coallating sequences
are not supported!
This is really, really too bad, because it would
have provided a simple way to exlude words from the target.
I'm
going to go learn PCRE, now. :-(
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[email protected]
22-Aug-2002 02:40 |
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Something that really got me: I'm used to using Perl's regexps, and so I
used \s to check for a whitespace character in a password on a website. My
PHP book (Wrox Press, Professional PHP Programming) agreed with me that
this is exactly the same as [ \r\n\t\f\v], but it's NOT. In fact, what it
did was keep anyone from joining the site if they put an 's' in their
password! So beware, check for subtle differences between what you're used
to and PHP.
[[:space:]] works fine, by the way.
I'm going to
use the pcre functions from now on... I like Perl :o)
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