Kim Madsen wrote:
which is exactly what I said...-----Original Message----- From: M. Sokolewicz [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, April 04, 2005 3:08 PM
Putting the ^ _inside_ [] means NOT, so if any of the chars a-z0-9 is in
the string itīs NOT matched.
actually, that's not entirely correct. The regexp basically means that if there is any character in the string which is NOT alphanumeric, then it is matched. So basically it returns true if there is a non-alphanumeric char, and false otherwise. However, AFAIK the regexp should be delimited, since if it isn't it behaves "differently"... I just can't remember how differently it is exactly =/
It _is_ correct. [^] means that whatever is in the [] must not be in the checked var to be true! Look in "mastering regular expressions" if Youīre in doubt. Thereīs an example [^1-6] meaning if a digit between 1 and 6 is not in the value checked, itīs true:
I just wasn't too sure about absence of the regexp-delimiter...
$var1 = "123"; $var2 = "789";
if(ereg("[^1-6]", $var1)) print "$var1 is true"; else print "$var1 is false";
returns false
if(ereg("[^1-6]", $var2)) print "$var2 is true"; else print "$var2 is false";
returns true
Itīs untested though :-)
-- Med venlig hilsen / best regards ComX Networks A/S Kim Madsen Systemudvikler/systemdeveloper
-- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php