On 5 November 2011 05:39, Negin Nickparsa wrote:
> your welcome my Friend,I used it myself.
>
> On 11/4/11, drive view wrote:
> > Thanks alot Negin for the prompt reply. This is most useful.
> >
> > Regards
> >
> > Best Toni
> >
> > On Sat, Nov 5, 2011 at 6:30 AM, Negin Nickparsa
> wrote:
> >
your welcome my Friend,I used it myself.
On 11/4/11, drive view wrote:
> Thanks alot Negin for the prompt reply. This is most useful.
>
> Regards
>
> Best Toni
>
> On Sat, Nov 5, 2011 at 6:30 AM, Negin Nickparsa wrote:
>
>> http://weblogtoolscollection.com/regex/regex.php
>>
>> On 11/4/11, driv
Thanks alot Negin for the prompt reply. This is most useful.
Regards
Best Toni
On Sat, Nov 5, 2011 at 6:30 AM, Negin Nickparsa wrote:
> http://weblogtoolscollection.com/regex/regex.php
>
> On 11/4/11, drive view wrote:
> > Hi
> >
> > I'm new to PHP. I'm currently trying understand how to ap
http://weblogtoolscollection.com/regex/regex.php
On 11/4/11, drive view wrote:
> Hi
>
> I'm new to PHP. I'm currently trying understand how to apply the patterns
> for the preg* commands and I am having difficulty finding a good source
> explaining in detail how to build a filter. I would appre
On 30 June 2010 15:12, Gaurav Kumar wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> Need help in resolving the below problem-
>
>
> I would like to get the whole comma separated string into an array value-
>
> 1. $postText = "chapters 5, 6, 7, 8";
> OR
> 2. $postText = "chapters 5, 6;
> OR
> 3. $postText = "chapters 5, 6, 7
On Mon, 2010-06-07 at 22:54 +0300, Tanel Tammik wrote:
> "Peter Lind" wrote in message
> news:aanlktilqkz8dnc0zacfv70tctf2wqkgpzojccqtuw...@mail.gmail.com...
> > On 1 June 2010 17:33, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
> >> On Tue, 2010-06-01 at 16:31 +0100, Richard Quadling wrote:
> >>
> >>> $re1 = '/^[a-
"Peter Lind" wrote in message
news:aanlktilqkz8dnc0zacfv70tctf2wqkgpzojccqtuw...@mail.gmail.com...
> On 1 June 2010 17:33, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
>> On Tue, 2010-06-01 at 16:31 +0100, Richard Quadling wrote:
>>
>>> $re1 = '/^[a-z]++$/i';
>>> $re2 = '/^[a-z ]++$/i';
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> -
On 2 June 2010 16:35, Jan G.B. wrote:
> 2010/6/1 Peter Lind :
>> On 1 June 2010 17:33, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
>>> On Tue, 2010-06-01 at 16:31 +0100, Richard Quadling wrote:
>>>
$re1 = '/^[a-z]++$/i';
$re2 = '/^[a-z ]++$/i';
--
-
Richard Quadling
"S
2010/6/1 Peter Lind :
> On 1 June 2010 17:33, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
>> On Tue, 2010-06-01 at 16:31 +0100, Richard Quadling wrote:
>>
>>> $re1 = '/^[a-z]++$/i';
>>> $re2 = '/^[a-z ]++$/i';
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> -
>>> Richard Quadling
>>> "Standing on the shoulders of some very clever giants!"
On 2 June 2010 06:12, Peter wrote:
> Hi Tanel,
>
> 1. only letters
>
> $str = 'helloworld';
>
> if(preg_match("/^[a-zA-Z]*$/",$str))
> echo "only letters";
> else
> echo "failed";
>
> 2. only letters and spaces
>
> $str = 'hello world';
>
> if(preg_match("/^[a-zA-Z\s]*$/",$str))
> echo "only lett
Hi Tanel,
1. only letters
$str = 'helloworld';
if(preg_match("/^[a-zA-Z]*$/",$str))
echo "only letters";
else
echo "failed";
2. only letters and spaces
$str = 'hello world';
if(preg_match("/^[a-zA-Z\s]*$/",$str))
echo "only letters and spaces";
else
echo "failed";
Regards
Peter.M
Tanel T
On Tue, 2010-06-01 at 17:32 +0100, Richard Quadling wrote:
> On 1 June 2010 16:38, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
> > Ah, I ought to have guessed as it's you! ;)
>
> What are you insinuating?
>
> --
> -
> Richard Quadling
> "Standing on the shoulders of some very clever giants!"
> EE : http://www.e
On 1 June 2010 16:38, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
> Ah, I ought to have guessed as it's you! ;)
What are you insinuating?
--
-
Richard Quadling
"Standing on the shoulders of some very clever giants!"
EE : http://www.experts-exchange.com/M_248814.html
EE4Free : http://www.experts-exchange.com/beco
On Tue, 2010-06-01 at 16:35 +0100, Richard Quadling wrote:
> On 1 June 2010 16:33, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
> >
> > On Tue, 2010-06-01 at 16:31 +0100, Richard Quadling wrote:
> >
> > $re1 = '/^[a-z]++$/i';
> > $re2 = '/^[a-z ]++$/i';
> >
> >
> >
> > --
> > -
> > Richard Quadling
> > "Standing o
On 1 June 2010 17:33, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
> On Tue, 2010-06-01 at 16:31 +0100, Richard Quadling wrote:
>
>> $re1 = '/^[a-z]++$/i';
>> $re2 = '/^[a-z ]++$/i';
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> -
>> Richard Quadling
>> "Standing on the shoulders of some very clever giants!"
>> EE : http://www.experts-exchang
On 1 June 2010 16:33, Ashley Sheridan wrote:
>
> On Tue, 2010-06-01 at 16:31 +0100, Richard Quadling wrote:
>
> $re1 = '/^[a-z]++$/i';
> $re2 = '/^[a-z ]++$/i';
>
>
>
> --
> -
> Richard Quadling
> "Standing on the shoulders of some very clever giants!"
> EE : http://www.experts-exchange.com/M_
On 1 June 2010 16:31, Richard Quadling wrote:
> $re1 = '/^[a-z]++$/i';
^[a-z]++$
Options: case insensitive; ^ and $ match at line breaks
Assert position at the beginning of a line (at beginning of the string
or after a line break character) «^»
Match a single character in the range between “a
On Tue, 2010-06-01 at 16:31 +0100, Richard Quadling wrote:
> $re1 = '/^[a-z]++$/i';
> $re2 = '/^[a-z ]++$/i';
>
>
>
> --
> -
> Richard Quadling
> "Standing on the shoulders of some very clever giants!"
> EE : http://www.experts-exchange.com/M_248814.html
> EE4Free : http://www.experts-exch
$re1 = '/^[a-z]++$/i';
$re2 = '/^[a-z ]++$/i';
--
-
Richard Quadling
"Standing on the shoulders of some very clever giants!"
EE : http://www.experts-exchange.com/M_248814.html
EE4Free : http://www.experts-exchange.com/becomeAnExpert.jsp
Zend Certified Engineer : http://zend.com/zce.php?c=ZE
On Tue, 2010-06-01 at 18:19 +0300, Tanel Tammik wrote:
> How to check with regular expression (preg) if string has:
>
> 1. only letters
> 2. only letters and spaces
>
> Br
> Tanel
>
>
>
Use preg_match() to find an expression within a string. You can use
something like this to grab check if
On Tue, Jun 1, 2010 at 11:19 AM, Tanel Tammik wrote:
> How to check with regular expression (preg) if string has:
>
> 1. only letters
> 2. only letters and spaces
>
> Br
> Tanel
>
>
>
> --
> PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
> To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
>
>
$
On Thu, 2009-02-26 at 10:09 -0500, Alice Wei wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have two lines here as follows:
>
> 1 -0.123701962557954E+03 0.460967618024691E+02
> -0.12354765900E+03 0.46259109000E+02
>
> What I am trying to do here is to only have
>
> 1 -0.123701962557954E+0
Hi,
I have two lines here as follows:
1 -0.123701962557954E+03 0.460967618024691E+02
-0.12354765900E+03 0.46259109000E+02
What I am trying to do here is to only have
1 -0.123701962557954E+03 0.460967618024691E+02 be the output so I
can do further processin
Alice Wei wrote:
Hi,
I have two lines here as follows:
1 -0.123701962557954E+03 0.460967618024691E+02
-0.12354765900E+03 0.46259109000E+02
What I am trying to do here is to only have
1 -0.123701962557954E+03 0.460967618024691E+02 be the output so I
On 9/27/08, Richard Lynch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Not sure what you think the (?P is doing, but it looks very suspicious to
> me...
>
> I'm no PCRE expert though...
>
> Try this:
>
> '|\\s*charge\\s*\\s*\\s*([0-9]*)\\s*|'
>
> \\s allows for whitespace
>
> If you only want ones that HAVE
Not sure what you think the (?P is doing, but it looks very suspicious to me...
I'm no PCRE expert though...
Try this:
'|\\s*charge\\s*\\s*\\s*([0-9]*)\\s*|'
\\s allows for whitespace
If you only want ones that HAVE to have numbers, and no blanks, change * after
the 0-9] bit into +
_
Ewen Cumming schreef:
Actually bummer - testing on wrong version.
The U modifier is causing problems too - only matching the first character
instead of the whole string.
hmm, missed that, that might require adding ?U to relevant sub-assertion ...
I'm wondering if your regexp is not 'wrong' (b
Actually bummer - testing on wrong version.
The U modifier is causing problems too - only matching the first character
instead of the whole string.
2008/9/12 Ewen Cumming <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Hi Jochem,
>
> Replacing the 's' modifier with 'm' fixed it this instance but broke other
> parts on
Hi Jochem,
Replacing the 's' modifier with 'm' fixed it this instance but broke other
parts on the site (the same result as removing 's').
But the other regex ( $pattern = "/
]+)([^>]*)>(.*?)|
]+)([^>]*)>/Ui";) is working perfectly.
I will continue to test and see if it throws up any other probl
Jochem Maas schreef:
Ewen Cumming schreef:
Hi everybody,
...
BUT I may have work around for you, try this regexp (replaces s modifer
with m modifier):
$pattern = "/ ]+)([^>]*)>(.*?)| ]+)([^>]*)>/mi";
the following pattern also seems to do what you want:
$pattern = "/ ]+)([^>]*)>(.*
Ewen Cumming schreef:
Hi everybody,
...
]+)([^>]*)>(.*?)| ]+)([^>]*)>/si";
preg_match_all( $pattern, $string, $matches );
echo phpversion();
var_dump($matches);
?>
Input.inc contains the string that is giving the different results - its
probably to long to include so you can find it at
h
I don't know how to use the POSIX classes, but if you use preg_replace:
preg_replace("/[^$params]/", '', $string);
I think this will work.
Thank you,
Micah Gersten
onShore Networks
Internal Developer
http://www.onshore.com
Alberto García Gómez wrote:
> Fellows:
>
> If I use ereg_replace($param
On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 1:08 PM, Shelley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi Richard,
>
> Not exactly actually.
>
> What I mean is:
> Before: hi Richard>, & good morning<
> After: hi Richard>, & good morning<
>
> I hope it's clear now.
>
> On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 7:53 PM, Richard Heyes <[EMAIL PROTE
> Before: hi Richard>, & good morning<
> After: hi Richard>, & good morning<
By the sounds of it negative look ahead assertions may be of some
help. Or look behind assertions.
--
Richard Heyes
http://www.phpguru.org
--
PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
To unsubscribe, visit: htt
Are you talking about looking at blogs in a mobile phone browser or
actually downloading the blog into another format?
Thank you,
Micah Gersten
onShore Networks
Internal Developer
http://www.onshore.com
Shelley wrote:
> Ok, let me tell you what i want to achieve.
> I want to transfer users' b
Ok, let me tell you what i want to achieve.
I want to transfer users' blog onto mobile phone, so I should convert
characters such as >, <, & (but not &, or >, or <, etc) into xml
compatible ones, >, < &.
Maybe there is some problem in my expression?
Waiting for your response...
On Sat, Jul 26, 2
Are you trying to make it xml compatible or XHTML compatible? '&' is
not valid HTML or XHTML as it has special meaning. If you want it to
adhere to the standard and display correctly, you must use '&'
Thank you,
Micah Gersten
onShore Networks
Internal Developer
http://www.onshore.com
Shelley w
Hi Richard,
Not exactly actually.
What I mean is:
Before: hi Richard>, & good morning<
After: hi Richard>, & good morning<
I hope it's clear now.
On Fri, Jul 25, 2008 at 7:53 PM, Richard Heyes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> > How can I make a string with & (NOT &, >, < or "), <, >
> xml
> > co
> How can I make a string with & (NOT &, >, < or "), <, > xml
> compatible?
> What is the expression to use?
Not entirely sure what you're after (try posting some before and after
snippets), but by the sounds of it you don't need a regular expression
- strtr() will work for you. Or str_replace().
The server recieve email from mobile phone.
I would like to retrieve the text of body of mobile phone, which recieve
email from mobile phone email.
Of cource, server run php and is able to use regular expression.
But the email, which is recieved by mobile phone, retrieve text body
on server.
Reg
I'm confused.
PHP runs on the server, so it shouldn't be a problem at all to run regex
search/reaplce/match/whatever on mobile phone internet, maybe you are
talking on JS regex?
Nitsan
On 11/06/2008, Yui Hiroaki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Doese any know how to find text in mobile using Regul
On Wed, Jun 11, 2008 at 9:43 AM, Yui Hiroaki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Ooops!
> It it mobile mobile phone!
>
> Regards,
> Yui
>
> 2008/6/11 Richard Heyes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> >> Doese any know how to find text in mobile using Regular Expression?
> >> I am using php.
> >
> > Mobile what?
> >
>
Ooops!
It it mobile mobile phone!
Regards,
Yui
2008/6/11 Richard Heyes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>> Doese any know how to find text in mobile using Regular Expression?
>> I am using php.
>
> Mobile what?
>
> --
> Richard Heyes
>
>Employ me:
> http://www.phpguru.org/cv
>
> +
Doese any know how to find text in mobile using Regular Expression?
I am using php.
Mobile what?
--
Richard Heyes
Employ me:
http://www.phpguru.org/cv
++
| Access SSH with a Windows mapped drive |
|http://www.phpguru.org/sftpdrive|
+
But how? The +[a-z]{2,} seems to allow at least two a-z clusters, but it
doesn't include a period. /ml
Almost correct. The plus belongs to whatever comes before it, not after.
So what you're referring to as matching two or more characters but not
the period, is this:
[a-z]{2,}
And this will
Matthew Lasar wrote:
> At 11:32 AM 8/31/2007, Per Jessen wrote:
>>Matthew Lasar wrote:
>>
>> > But I don't understand why the second half of the regular
>> > expression works. I'm talking about this part:
>> >
>> > @([-a-z0-9]+\.)+[a-z]{2,}/";
>> >
>> > why is it able to detect repeated sections o
At 11:32 AM 8/31/2007, Per Jessen wrote:
Matthew Lasar wrote:
> But I don't understand why the second half of the regular expression
> works. I'm talking about this part:
>
> @([-a-z0-9]+\.)+[a-z]{2,}/";
>
> why is it able to detect repeated sections of the email address after
> "@" that are sep
Matthew Lasar wrote:
> But I don't understand why the second half of the regular expression
> works. I'm talking about this part:
>
> @([-a-z0-9]+\.)+[a-z]{2,}/";
>
> why is it able to detect repeated sections of the email address after
> "@" that are separated by periods? like "@email.alaska.co
nk is created
> correct.
>
> Is there a way to avoid the first situation... so the link is created
> correct?
>
> Thanks again,
> Wagner.
>
>
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Jim Lucas [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: segunda-feira, 27 de agosto d
Wagner Garcia Campagner wrote:
Thanks again Jim,
That's what i really need.
I'm testing this function...
If i put a URL like www.example.com, then it works fine and turns it to
http://www.example.com
But if i put a URL like http://www.example.com, then it also put another
header so it turns t
xample.com
I also tried with the strstr function, but receive the same response.
Thanks in advance,
Wagner.
-Original Message-
From: Jim Lucas [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: terça-feira, 28 de agosto de 2007 18:35
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: PHP General
Subject: Re: [PHP] Regular expres
Wagner Garcia Campagner wrote:
Thanks Jim,
Your sugestion worked perfect for me!!
I have another question:
After i validate this URL i want to put a link with this URL in my page.
The problem is that if the URL is like (www.aol.com), when i create the
link, this URL is appended with the URL o
... so the link is created
> correct?
>
> Thanks again,
> Wagner.
>
>
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Jim Lucas [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: segunda-feira, 27 de agosto de 2007 17:36
> To: PHP General; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: [PHP] Regular expre
-feira, 27 de agosto de 2007 17:36
To: PHP General; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [PHP] Regular expression - URL validator
Wagner Garcia Campagner wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I found this regular expression on a web site.
> It is basicaly an URL validator.
>
> I'm trying to i
Wagner Garcia Campagner wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I found this regular expression on a web site.
> It is basicaly an URL validator.
>
> I'm trying to implement this in my web site, but i receive errors.
>
> I think this is a PERL REGEX so what should i do to make it work in php?
>
>
> $valid =
> (preg_m
[snip]
I am no regex expert but wouldn't
preg_match_all( "/'([^']+)'/Ui", $theString, $matches);
Be more flexible?
[/snip]
Thanks all, I completely forgot about greedy/ungreedy. That is what you
get for being rusty!
--
PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
To unsubscribe, visit: http://
I am no regex expert but wouldn't
preg_match_all( "/'([^']+)'/Ui", $theString, $matches);
Be more flexible?
On 8/17/07, Thijs Lensselink <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> If it's only real words this will do:
>
> $theString = "'foo''bar''glorp'";
> preg_match_all( "/'([a-z]+)'/Ui", $theString, $ma
On Fri, 2007-08-17 at 12:00 -0500, Jay Blanchard wrote:
> Given the string 'foo''bar''glorp' (all quotes are single quotes)I had
> hoped to find a regular expression using preg_match that would return an
> array containing just those words without having to go through
> additional gyrations, like e
Jay Blanchard wrote:
> Given the string 'foo''bar''glorp' (all quotes are single quotes)I had
> hoped to find a regular expression using preg_match that would return an
> array containing just those words without having to go through
> additional gyrations, like exploding a string to get an array.
Nicolas Quirin wrote:
Hi,
i'm french, i'm using regular expressions in php in order to rewrite
hyperlink tags in a specific way before apache output is beeing sent to
client.
Purpose is to replace href attribute of any A html tag by a javascript
function calling an ajax loader.
Currently
Nicolas Quirin wrote:
Hi,
i'm french, i'm using regular expressions in php in order to rewrite
hyperlink tags in a specific way before apache output is beeing sent to
client.
Purpose is to replace href attribute of any A html tag by a javascript
function calling an ajax loader.
Currently
Nicolas Quirin wrote:
Hi,
i'm french, i'm using regular expressions in php in order to rewrite hyperlink
tags in a specific way before apache output is beeing sent to client.
Purpose is to replace href attribute of any A html tag by a javascript function
calling an ajax loader.
Currently I h
5 feb 2007 kl. 22.12 skrev H.T:
Do you know good regular expression editor or something simialar?
--
PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
Regex online: www.regextester.com
//frank
--
PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
On Mon, February 5, 2007 3:12 pm, H.T wrote:
> Do you know good regular expression editor or something simialar?
"The Regex Coach"
Helps you figure things out piece by piece with fancy color
highlighting of what matches what, and a tree graph and everything.
--
Some people have a "gift" link he
Roman Neuhauser wrote:
> # [EMAIL PROTECTED] / 2007-01-24 23:55:27 +0100:
>> Roman Neuhauser wrote:
>>> Are you doing this to learn regular expressions or are you actually
>>> trying to do work? Because you're going the wrong way.
>>> It's XML, why do you treat it as text?
>> not everyone shares th
Richard Luckhurst wrote:
> Hi Jochem,
>
> JM>
> JM> you be needing an ungreedy modifier on yer regex.
> JM>
>
> JM> see here:
> JM> http://php.net/manual/en/reference.pcre.pattern.modifiers.php
>
> Thanks very much. That solved my problem and I my now getting exactly what I
> want. I h
You want to add a 'U' after you closing # so that matches are
"Ungreedy" -- I.e., they do NOT grab as much text as the can to
fulfill the pattern (greedy) but they grab as LITTLE text as they can
to fulfill the pattern (ungreedy)
On Wed, January 24, 2007 4:27 pm, Richard Luckhurst wrote:
> Hi List
At 1/24/2007 02:27 PM, Richard Luckhurst wrote:
What I am trying to do is extract the first chunk.
...
preg_match('##', $xml_string,$matches);
$tempstr = $matches[0];
What I actually get in $tempstr is everything from the first through to
the last (second)
I would have expected preg_match
# [EMAIL PROTECTED] / 2007-01-25 09:27:59 +1100:
>
> addInfPrice="0.0">
>
>
>
>
>
> addInfPrice="0.0">
>
>
>
# [EMAIL PROTECTED] / 2007-01-24 23:55:27 +0100:
> Roman Neuhauser wrote:
> > Are you doing this to learn regular expressions or are you actually
> > trying to do work? Because you're going the wrong way.
> > It's XML, why do you treat it as text?
>
> not everyone shares that sentiment. in terms o
Roman Neuhauser wrote:
> # [EMAIL PROTECTED] / 2007-01-25 09:27:59 +1100:
>> I must be dumb as I have been battling my way through regular expression
>> examples for a while and I can not work out why the following does not work
>> properly. I am the first to admit that regular expressions confuse
# [EMAIL PROTECTED] / 2007-01-25 09:27:59 +1100:
> I must be dumb as I have been battling my way through regular expression
> examples for a while and I can not work out why the following does not work
> properly. I am the first to admit that regular expressions confuse me greatly.
>
> The string
(Haven't received William's email yet => scavenging Jochem's reply.)
# [EMAIL PROTECTED] / 2007-01-18 18:01:19 +0100:
> William Stokes wrote:
> > "Roman Neuhauser" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> kirjoitti
> >> This passes with 5.2:
> >>
> >> class ImgSrcTest extends Tence_TestCase
> >> {
> >>private $sr
William Stokes wrote:
> Hello Roman,
>
> Could you specify the functionality of your script a bit please. (How it
> works)
it's a hint as to how you might use simpleXML to extract the values of a src
attribute from the definition of an img tag.
>
> I forgot to mention that this part:
>
> ',
>
Hello Roman,
Could you specify the functionality of your script a bit please. (How it
works)
I forgot to mention that this part:
',
is not always the same. The image properties can vary.
Thanks
-Will
"Roman Neuhauser" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> kirjoitti
viestissä:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
># [EMAIL PR
# [EMAIL PROTECTED] / 2007-01-18 12:34:36 +0200:
> I need to strip all characters from the following text string exept the
> image path...
>
> " src=\"../../images/new/thumps/4123141112007590373240.jpg\" />"...and then
> store the path to DB. Image path lengh can vary so I guess that I need to
Arpad Ray wrote:
> Note that $ allows a trailing newline, but \z doesn't.
I had to test that before believing you:
php -r
'var_dump(preg_match("#^[a-z]+\$#","abc"),preg_match("#^[a-z]+\$#","abc\n"),preg_match("#^[a-z]+\z#","abc\n"));'
you are right, that could consitute a nice big gotcha in som
Note that $ allows a trailing newline, but \z doesn't.
Arpad
Stut wrote:
Chris Boget wrote:
echo 'Is String: [' . ( is_string( 'a1b2c3' ) && preg_match(
'/[A-Za-z]+/', 'a1b2c3' )) . ']';
echo 'Is Numeric: [' . ( is_numeric( 'a1b2c3' ) && preg_match(
'/[0-9]+/', 'a1b2c3' )) . ']';
echo 'Is St
Chris Boget wrote:
echo 'Is String: [' . ( is_string( 'a1b2c3' ) && preg_match(
'/[A-Za-z]+/', 'a1b2c3' )) . ']';
echo 'Is Numeric: [' . ( is_numeric( 'a1b2c3' ) && preg_match(
'/[0-9]+/', 'a1b2c3' )) . ']';
echo 'Is String: [' . ( is_string( 'abcdef' ) && preg_match(
'/[A-Za-z]+/', 'abcdef' )
Those patterns aren't anchored to the ends of the string, so as long as
the string contains one matching character, the succeeds.
^ anchors the pattern to the beginning, \z to the end, so you want:
/^[A-Za-z]+\z/
Or test the opposite case to see if it fails:
/[^A-Za-z]/
Arpad
Chris Boget wrote
Richard, Adam, Barry, Dave, David,
Thank you all for your helpful advice regarding expressions.
I was able to combine all your advice, and made some additional
discoveries along the way.
The winning expression is:
"#^(.*)\s#iU"
First, I discovered that sometimes the source text had an unexpe
On Tue, August 8, 2006 4:21 am, Dave M G wrote:
> Shouldn't this regular expression select everything from the start of
> the string to the first space character:
>
> $firstWord = preg_match('#^*(.*) #iU', $word);
>
> It doesn't, so clearly I'm wrong, but here's why I thought it would:
>
> The encl
On 08/08/06, Dave M G <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
PHP,
Shouldn't this regular expression select everything from the start of
the string to the first space character:
$firstWord = preg_match('#^*(.*) #iU', $word);
It doesn't, so clearly I'm wrong, but here's why I thought it would:
. stands fo
Dave M G wrote:
> PHP,
>
> Shouldn't this regular expression select everything from the start of
> the string to the first space character:
>
> $firstWord = preg_match('#^*(.*) #iU', $word);
>
> It doesn't, so clearly I'm wrong, but here's why I thought it would:
>
> The enclosing has marks, "#
Ill probably get attacked viciously for this with pitchforks and machetes,
but I get sick and tired of trying to figure out regular expressions a lot
of times, so I use the following functions... getSingleMatch(),
getMultiMatch(), getSingleMatchBackwards()
function getSingleMatch($start,$end,$co
On 7/14/06, Steve Turnbull <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I have a string similar to the following;
cn=emailadmin,ou=services,dc=domain,dc=net
I want to extract whatever falls between the 'cn=' and the following
comma - in this case 'emailadmin'.
$pattern= "/[^=]+=([^,]+)/";
preg_match($pattern,
I believe someone gave the regex code for it already, but if you wanted to do
it the clumsy way (for those of us who are regex challenged still) here's an
alternative:
$str = "cn=emailadmin,ou=services,dc=domain,dc=net";
$argsarray = explode(",", $str);
foreach ($argsarray as $argstr) {
list
On 14/07/06, Steve Turnbull <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hey folks
I don't want to "just get you to do the work", but I have so far tried
in vain to achieve something...
I have a string similar to the following;
cn=emailadmin,ou=services,dc=domain,dc=net
I want to extract whatever falls betwee
ject: Re: [PHP] Regular expression
Weber Sites LTD wrote:
> Check out some Regular Expression code examples To learn more :
>
> http://www.weberdev.com/AdvancedSearch.php?searchtype=category&categor
> y=Rege
> xps
>
> Sincerely
>
> berber
>
ZONG!
->
No r
Weber Sites LTD wrote:
Check out some Regular Expression code examples
To learn more :
http://www.weberdev.com/AdvancedSearch.php?searchtype=category&category=Rege
xps
Sincerely
berber
ZONG!
->
No results were found.
* Run this seach again but include PHP Functions in the resul
Check out some Regular Expression code examples
To learn more :
http://www.weberdev.com/AdvancedSearch.php?searchtype=category&category=Rege
xps
Sincerely
berber
Visit the Weber Sites Today,
To see where PHP might take you tomorrow.
Uptime Monitor : http://uptime.weberdev.com
SEO Data M
On 2/14/06, Patrick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am trying to validate a password, but havent figured out the pattern for
> it yet.
> The password must contain atleast 6 characters
> a-zA-Z0-9_
> must start with a
> a-zA-Z
> and must have atleast one of the following characters
> !#%&$£
On Tue, Feb 14, 2006 at 10:53:17PM +0100, Patrick wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am trying to validate a password, but havent figured out the pattern for
> it yet.
> The password must contain atleast 6 characters
> a-zA-Z0-9_
> must start with a
> a-zA-Z
> and must have atleast one of the following character
Patrick,
http://regexlib.com/ is a really good site to find examples of regular
expressions.
http://regexlib.com/Search.aspx?k=password should get you a bunch of
results.
Also anything else besides letters and numbers is considered bad
password form.
D
On Feb 14, 2006, at 3:53 PM, Patric
EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 03 February 2006 23:34
To: Barry
Cc: php-general@lists.php.net
Subject: Re: [PHP] Regular expression
$last_comma = strrpos($string, ",");
$string = substr($string, 0, $last_comma) . ' and ' . substr($string,
$last_comma);
I probably have a one-off error in th
$last_comma = strrpos($string, ",");
$string = substr($string, 0, $last_comma) . ' and ' . substr($string,
$last_comma);
I probably have a one-off error in there somewhere, or swapped the
order of args in strrpos, but you get the idea.
http://php.net/strrpos
On Mon, January 30, 2006 8:09 am, Barr
Barry wrote:
Simple reg help please
i want to match the last "," in "a,b,c,d" and replace it with " and "
Without using a regexp, you could do:
$string = 'a,b,c,d';
$letters = explode(',', $string);
$last_letter = array_pop($letters);
$final_string = implode(',', $letters) . ' and '
Chris wrote:
preg_replace('/(?
Ohhhregex-fu black belt. ;)
--
John C. Nichel IV
Programmer/System Admin (ÜberGeek)
Dot Com Holdings of Buffalo
716.856.9675
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Chris Boget wrote:
I've been beating my head against the wall for a while trying to come up
with the RE I need to use. I have a camel case word - let's use
JimJoeBobBriggs. I need to come up with a RE that will fine all the
upper case characters and insert an underscore prior to those character
Chris Boget wrote:
I've been beating my head against the wall for a while trying to come up
with the RE I need to use. I have a camel case word - let's use
JimJoeBobBriggs. I need to come up with a RE that will fine all the
upper case characters and insert an underscore prior to those characte
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