Here is the regex for you.
$company_domain = '\w+'; // replace with your own company domain pattern.
$user_name = '\w+'; // replace with your own username pattern
$email_domain = '\w+\.\w{2,4}'; // google for standard domain name
regex pattern and replace it.
$regexp =
"~({$company_domain}[
Op 3/15/10 1:54 AM, Ashley M. Kirchner schreef:
> I'm not a regexp person (wish I was though), and I'm hoping someone can give
> me a hand here. Consider the following strings:
>
>
>
> - domain\usern...@example.org
>
> - domain\username
>
> - the same as above but
I'm not a regexp person (wish I was though), and I'm hoping someone can give
me a hand here. Consider the following strings:
- domain\usern...@example.org
- domain\username
- the same as above but with / instead of \ (hey, it happens)
- usern...@example.
On Tue, 2010-01-05 at 14:26 +0100, Daniel Egeberg wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 5, 2010 at 14:13, Ashley Sheridan
> wrote:
> > (untested - I always forget the order of the params!)
>
> As a general rule, string functions are always haystack-needle and
> array functions are always needle-haystack. I can'
On Tue, Jan 5, 2010 at 14:13, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
> (untested - I always forget the order of the params!)
As a general rule, string functions are always haystack-needle and
array functions are always needle-haystack. I can't think of any
exceptions to that rule.
--
Daniel Egeberg
--
PHP Ge
On Tue, 2010-01-05 at 12:39 +, Ingleby, Les wrote:
> Hi all, first time I have posted here so please be nice.
>
> I am using PEAR HTTP_Upload to handle multiple file uploads. What I need to
> do is to take the file name which is output using the getProp() function and
> then remove the file
On Tue, Jan 5, 2010 at 13:39, Ingleby, Les wrote:
> Hi all, first time I have posted here so please be nice.
>
> I am using PEAR HTTP_Upload to handle multiple file uploads. What I need to
> do is to take the file name which is output using the getProp() function and
> then remove the file exten
Hi all, first time I have posted here so please be nice.
I am using PEAR HTTP_Upload to handle multiple file uploads. What I need to do
is to take the file name which is output using the getProp() function and then
remove the file extension from the end of the file for example:
Original name he
On Thursday 16 November 2006 01:38, Paul Novitski wrote:
> If you need to left-pad with zeroes, PHP comes to the rescue:
> http://php.net/str_pad
>
> However, if you're using the regular expression
> method then you might not need to pad the
> number. You can change the pattern from this:
>
>
On Thursday 16 November 2006 01:38, Paul Novitski wrote:
> At 11/15/2006 02:06 PM, Børge Holen wrote:
> >Oh this was good.
> >I added a while loop to insert extra strings "0"
> >in front of the number to add
> >if the string is less than 5 chars short.
> >
> >I forgot to mentinon that the string ac
On Thursday 16 November 2006 01:12, Robert Cummings wrote:
> On Thu, 2006-11-16 at 10:47 +1100, Chris wrote:
> > Børge Holen wrote:
> > > Oh this was good.
> > > I added a while loop to insert extra strings "0" in front of the number
> > > to add if the string is less than 5 chars short.
> >
> > sp
At 11/15/2006 02:06 PM, Børge Holen wrote:
Oh this was good.
I added a while loop to insert extra strings "0"
in front of the number to add
if the string is less than 5 chars short.
I forgot to mentinon that the string actually could be shorter (just found
out) and the code didn't work with fe
Robert Cummings wrote:
On Thu, 2006-11-16 at 10:47 +1100, Chris wrote:
Børge Holen wrote:
Oh this was good.
I added a while loop to insert extra strings "0" in front of the number to add
if the string is less than 5 chars short.
sprintf is your friend here, no need to use a loop.
sprintf('%0
On Thu, 2006-11-16 at 10:47 +1100, Chris wrote:
> Børge Holen wrote:
> > Oh this was good.
> > I added a while loop to insert extra strings "0" in front of the number to
> > add
> > if the string is less than 5 chars short.
>
> sprintf is your friend here, no need to use a loop.
>
> sprintf('%0
Børge Holen wrote:
Oh this was good.
I added a while loop to insert extra strings "0" in front of the number to add
if the string is less than 5 chars short.
sprintf is your friend here, no need to use a loop.
sprintf('%05d', '1234');
--
Postgresql & php tutorials
http://www.designmagick.com
Oh this was good.
I added a while loop to insert extra strings "0" in front of the number to add
if the string is less than 5 chars short.
I forgot to mentinon that the string actually could be shorter (just found
out) and the code didn't work with fewer than 5 char strings.
But now is rocks.
On Wednesday 15 November 2006 12:42, Robin Vickery wrote:
> On 15/11/06, Aaron Koning <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Assuming var1 and var2 only ever use the last four numbers (untested):
> >
> > $length = strlen($number); // get string length
> > $var1 = substr($number,0,$length-4); // get number
On Wednesday 15 November 2006 06:24, you wrote:
> At 11/14/2006 03:17 PM, Børge Holen wrote:
> >$number = 123456789
> >
> >should print as following:
> >var1: 12345 (and it is this lengt witch varies)
> >var2: 67
> >var3: 89.
>
> You can also do this with a regular expression:
>
> $iNumber = '123
On 15/11/06, Aaron Koning <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Assuming var1 and var2 only ever use the last four numbers (untested):
$length = strlen($number); // get string length
$var1 = substr($number,0,$length-4); // get number until only 4 numbers are
left
$var2 = substr($number,$length-4,2); // get
At 11/14/2006 03:17 PM, Børge Holen wrote:
$number = 123456789
should print as following:
var1: 12345 (and it is this lengt witch varies)
var2: 67
var3: 89.
You can also do this with a regular expression:
$iNumber = '123456789';
$sPattern = '/(\d+)(\d{2})(\d{2})$/';
preg_match($sPattern, $
Assuming var1 and var2 only ever use the last four numbers (untested):
$length = strlen($number); // get string length
$var1 = substr($number,0,$length-4); // get number until only 4 numbers are
left
$var2 = substr($number,$length-4,2); // get 3rd and 4th last numbers.
$var3 = substr($number,$len
What's the code?
-D
On Nov 14, 2006, at 4:17 PM, Børge Holen wrote:
This numer has dynamic lenght, witch is the root of my problems.
$number = 123456789
should print as following:
var1: 12345 (and it is this lengt witch varies)
var2: 67
var3: 89.
I've been using substr with negative numb
This numer has dynamic lenght, witch is the root of my problems.
$number = 123456789
should print as following:
var1: 12345 (and it is this lengt witch varies)
var2: 67
var3: 89.
I've been using substr with negative numbers to fetch the last two vars.
thereafter explode to get the first num
On Friday 30 July 2004 15:44, Brent Clements wrote:
> In PHP 5 there is a awesome function called str_split, is there an
> equivalent in PHP 4.x?
>
> I need to do the following:
>
> Split a 60 character string into 3 20 character array chunks.
>
> using str_split I could easily do it, but how do I
On Fri, 30 Jul 2004 02:44:19 -0500, Brent Clements
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> In PHP 5 there is a awesome function called str_split, is there an equivalent in PHP
> 4.x?
>
> I need to do the following:
>
> Split a 60 character string into 3 20 character array chunks.
>
> using str_split I cou
In PHP 5 there is a awesome function called str_split, is there an equivalent in PHP
4.x?
I need to do the following:
Split a 60 character string into 3 20 character array chunks.
using str_split I could easily do it, but how do I do it in PHP 4.x?
Thanks,
Brent
Hi,
David Rice <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> $str = "S12345";
> $str1 = ltrim($str,"S");
Good idea but you'd have problem if you have $str = "SS12345"; and you
only want to get rid of the first one...
- E
__
Do You Yahoo!?
Yahoo! BB is Broadba
-4379
-Original Message-
From: - Edwin [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, March 13, 2003 9:30 AM
To: Christopher J. Crane; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [PHP] Splitting a string
Hi,
"Christopher J. Crane" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[snip]
> If that number
Then split the variable where there is a "S". The problem showed up
when
there is another "S" in the field. I only want to split the first "S"
at the
beginning of the field. Isn't there an additional value to add to the
split
$line = 'S12345';
if ($line[0] == 'S') {
/* do stuff */
}
$st
On Thu, 13 Mar 2003 09:13:35 -0500, you wrote:
>Then split the variable where there is a "S". The problem showed up when
>there is another "S" in the field. I only want to split the first "S" at the
>beginning of the field. Isn't there an additional value to add to the split
$line = 'S12345';
if
Hi,
"Christopher J. Crane" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[snip]
> If that number start with a "S", I want to strip it off.
[/snip]
Why don't you just check whether the first character is an "S" then
return only the rest of the string if it is? Like:
Of course, there could be some other way...
I have a CSV file that has 7 fields. One of the fields has a number, and
some of the numbers start with a "S". If that number start with a "S", I
want to strip it off. I am not sure how to do that. I first wrote the script
to open the file, load each line into an array and split the array by field.
I wish to split my databased string in half to be shown on 2 seperate
columns, but also preserve whole words. Is there a function that does this
already? Maybe a quick fix? Hopefully something that doesn't include html
tags as part of the string to split. If it's not that specific then that's
okay
Try this:
first test to see if the query contain quotes, if it
does, go to a seperate routine that splits the string
into an array, first however, you must make sure there
is a space before the query and one after the query (
you add these) *then* split the string into an array,
explode on the qu
Ok, heres one for y'all
I have the user entering a free formed string (such as a search engine
query).. and i want to parse that string into an array of string elements...
If the user enters elements within double quotes, that would appear as one
entity.. for each word outside of containing q
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