Thanks for the suggestion, I didnt know that about XPath. Doubling the
braces didn't work for me Im afraid.

On May 25, 4:16 am, "b logica" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Just a guess: Set uses XPath expressions, which require doubling the
> braces: {{4}}
>
> On Sat, May 24, 2008 at 4:50 PM, ianh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > I came across the new Set::matches method. Its just genius so kudos to
> > whoever came up with that. Obviously there aren't many examples around
> > - mostly in the Containable test so Im a bit stuck on just how good it
> > can be.
>
> > One of the examples shows that Set::matches('/Comment[text=/cakephp/
> > i', $data) will match $data['Comment']['text'] = cakephp; but what
> > other regexps can be done?
>
> > For example, playing around, I couldnt do Set::matches('/Comment[text=/
> > [a-z]{4}/i', $data) because the method kept spitting out Unexpected
> > PHP error [preg_match() [<a href='http://php.net/function.preg-
> > match'>function.preg-match</a>]: No ending delimiter '/' found]
> > severity errors.
>
> > Am I missing something on how to do this or can it simply not be done
> > at the moment?
>
> > Cheers. ianh
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