I have to check csv files live and match some expression to get data.
These files can have different type of message so different matching expression.
The message can be something like that
GuiPrinter.ProcessPrint of 116806 25374 K356 S Black Face.png 229 at 1
table
And I want to get 116806 25374 K356 S Black Face.png
. So the regex associate to this kind of file would be something like (GuiPrinter.ProcessPrint of )(.*)([.][png|jpg|jpeg|PNG|JPG|JPEG]*) and I can return $result[2]
But the message and the regex can change, so I need a common function that can return the string that I want based on the regex, the function would have message and regex parameters. Maybe for another file the string that I want would be on first position so my $result[2] won't work.
How can I ensure to always return the string that I want to match ?
Use
\preg_match('/GuiPrinter.ProcessPrint of(.*?)\.(gif|png|bmp|jpe?g)/', $str, $match);
print_r($match[1]);
You could match the text GuiPrinter.ProcessPrint and then use \K to reset the starting point of the reported match.
Match any character zero or more times non greedy .*?, then match a dot \. and any of the image extensions in a non capturing group (?:gif|png|bmp|jpe?g) followed by a word boundary \b
GuiPrinter\.ProcessPrint of \K.*?\.(?:gif|png|bmp|jpe?g)\b
Note that to match the dot literally you have to escape it \.
For example to return 1 match using preg_match:
$str = 'GuiPrinter.ProcessPrint of 116806 25374 K356 S Black Face.png 229 at 1 table';
$re = '/GuiPrinter\.ProcessPrint of \K.*?\.(?:gif|png|bmp|jpe?g)\b/';
function findMatch($message, $regex) {
preg_match($regex, $message, $matches);
return array_shift($matches);
}
$result = findMatch($str, $re);
if ($result) {
echo "Found: $result";
} else {
echo "No match.";
}
Demo
Related
According to PHP manual "If matches is provided, then it is filled with the results of search. $matches[0] will contain the text that matched the full pattern, $matches[1] will have the text that matched the first captured parenthesized subpattern, and so on."
How can I return a value from a string with only knowing the first few characters?
The string is dynamic and will always change whats inside, but the first four character will always be the same.
For example how could I return "Car" from this string "TmpsCar". The string will always have "Tmps" followed by something else.
From what I understand I can return using something like this
preg_match('/(Tmps+)/', $fieldName, $matches);
echo($matches[1]);
Should return "Car".
Your regex is flawed. Use this:
preg_match('/^Tmps(.+)$/', $fieldName, $matches);
echo($matches[1]);
$matches = []; // Initialize the matches array first
if (preg_match('/^Tmps(.+)/', $fieldName, $matches)) {
// if the regex matched the input string, echo the first captured group
echo($matches[1]);
}
Note that this task could easily be accomplished without regex at all (with better performance): See startsWith() and endsWith() functions in PHP.
"The string will always have "Tmps" followed by something else."
You don't need a regular expression, in that case.
$result = substr($fieldName, 4);
If the first four characters are always the same, just take the portion of the string after that.
An alternative way is using the explode function
$fieldName= "TmpsCar";
$matches = explode("Tmps", $fieldName);
if(isset($matches[1])){
echo $matches[1]; // return "Car"
}
Given that the text you are looking in, contains more than just a string, starting with Tmps, you might look for the \w+ pattern, which matches any "word" char.
This would result in such an regular expression:
/Tmps(\w+)/
and altogether in php
$text = "This TmpsCars is a test";
if (preg_match('/Tmps(\w+)/', $text, $m)) {
echo "Found:" . $m[1]; // this would return Cars
}
I am getting a result as a return of a laravel console command like
Some text as: 'Nerad'
Now i tried
$regex = '/(?<=\bSome text as:\s)(?:[\w-]+)/is';
preg_match_all( $regex, $d, $matches );
but its returning empty.
my guess is something is wrong with single quotes, for this i need to change the regex..
Any guess?
Note that you get no match because the ' before Nerad is not matched, nor checked with the lookbehind.
If you need to check the context, but avoid including it into the match, in PHP regex, it can be done with a \K match reset operator:
$regex = '/\bSome text as:\s*'\K[\w-]+/i';
See the regex demo
The output array structure will be cleaner than when using a capturing group and you may check for unknown width context (lookbehind patterns are fixed width in PHP PCRE regex):
$re = '/\bSome text as:\s*\'\K[\w-]+/i';
$str = "Some text as: 'Nerad'";
if (preg_match($re, $str, $match)) {
echo $match[0];
} // => Nerad
See the PHP demo
Just come from the back and capture the word in a group. The Group 1, will have the required string.
/:\s*'(\w+)'$/
i'm not very firm with regular Expressions, so i have to ask you:
How to find out with PHP if a string contains a word starting with # ??
e.g. i have a string like "This is for #codeworxx" ???
I'm so sorry, but i have NO starting point for that :(
Hope you can help.
Thanks,
Sascha
okay thanks for the results - but i did a mistake - how to implement in eregi_replace ???
$text = eregi_replace('/\B#[^\B]+/','\\1', $text);
does not work??!?
why? do i not have to enter the same expression as pattern?
Match anything with has some whitespace in front of a # followed by something else than whitespace:
$ cat 1812901.php
<?php
echo preg_match("/\B#[^\B]+/", "This should #match it");
echo preg_match("/\B#[^\B]+/", "This should not# match");
echo preg_match("/\B#[^\B]+/", "This should match nothing and return 0");
echo "\n";
?>
$ php 1812901.php
100
break your string up like this:
$string = 'simple sentence with five words';
$words = explode(' ', $string );
Then you can loop trough the array and check if the first character of each word equals "#":
if ($stringInTheArray[0] == "#")
Assuming you define a word a sequence of letters with no white spaces between them, then this should be a good starting point for you:
$subject = "This is for #codeworxx";
$pattern = '/\s*#(.+?)\s/';
preg_match($pattern, $subject, $matches);
print_r($matches);
Explanation:
\s*#(.+?)\s - look for anything starting with #, group all the following letters, numbers, and anything which is not a whitespace (space, tab, newline), till the closest whitespace.
See the output of the $matches array for accessing the inner groups and the regex results.
#OP, no need regex. Just PHP string methods
$mystr='This is for #codeworxx';
$str = explode(" ",$mystr);
foreach($str as $k=>$word){
if(substr($word,0,1)=="#"){
print $word;
}
}
Just incase this is helpful to someone in the future
/((?<!\S)#\w+(?!\S))/
This will match any word containing alphanumeric characters, starting with "#." It will not match words with "#" anywhere but the start of the word.
Matching cases:
#username
foo #username bar
foo #username1 bar #username2
Failing cases:
foo#username
#username$
##username
i am using php Regular expressions but i can't retrieve values that i group using ()
this is my input
<img src="http://www.example.com/image.jpg" title="title" />
i need only src value , this is my regex '"<img src=\"(.*?)\".*?\/>"'
if i can retrieve First group just like java patterns my problem is sloved
preg_match_all('"<img src=\"(.*?)\".*?\/>"', $source, $re);
print_r($re);
and it return full image tag like this <img src="http://www.example.com/image.jpg" title="title" />
To match a single string, preg_match function is enough. You don't need to go for preg_matchall function. If you want to match more number of strings then you could use preg_matchall function. And also first try to match the exact string through the pattern rather than to go for grouping. If it's impossible to match a particular string then go for grouping.
In the below, matching the exact value of src attribute is done.
You could get the value of src in two ways,
1. positive lookbehind
Regex:
(?<=src=\")[^\"]*
PHP code:(Through match_all)
<?php
$string = "<img src=\"http://www.example.com/image.jpg\" title=\"title\" />";
$regex = '~(?<=src=\")[^\"]*~';
preg_match_all($regex, $string, $matches);
print_r($matches);
?>
PHP code:(Through match)
<?php
$string = "<img src=\"http://www.example.com/image.jpg\" title=\"title\" />";
$regex = '~(?<=src=\")[^\"]*~';
if (preg_match($regex, $string, $m)) {
$yourmatch = $m[0];
echo $yourmatch;
}
?> //=> http://www.example.com/image.jpg
Explanation:
(?<=src=\") Positive look-behind is used here. So the regex engine puts the match marker just after to the src=".
[^\"]* Now it starts matching any character zero or more times but not of ". When it finds a ", it stops matching characters.
2. Using \K
Regex:
src=\"\K[^\"]*
PHP code (through match)
<?php
$string = "<img src=\"http://www.example.com/image.jpg\" title=\"title\" />";
$regex = '~src=\"\K[^\"]*~';
if (preg_match($regex, $string, $m)) {
$yourmatch = $m[0];
echo $yourmatch;
}
?> //=> http://www.example.com/image.jpg
Explanation:
\K resets the starting point of the reported match. Any previously consumed characters are no longer included in the final match.
src=\"\K So it discards the previously matched src=".
[^\"]* Matches any character zero or more times but not of "
You're using preg_match_all so that you need to pass index as well, use print_r($re[1]); to get results.
I Got It Accidently !
we can Code Like this for first Grouped
print_r($re[1]);
I am trying to make sense of handling regular expression with php. So far my code is:
PHP code:
$string = "This is a 1 2 3 test.";
$pattern = '/^[a-zA-Z0-9\. ]$/';
$match = preg_match($pattern, $string);
echo "string: " . $string . " regex response: " , $match;
Why is $match always returning 0 when I think it should be returning a 1?
[a-zA-Z0-9\. ] means one character which is alphanumeric or "." or " ". You will want to repeat this pattern:
$pattern = '/^[a-zA-Z0-9. ]+$/';
^
"one or more"
Note: you don't need to escape . inside a character group.
Here's what you're pattern is saying:
'/: Start the expressions
^: Beginning of the string
[a-zA-Z0-9\. ]: Any one alphanumeric character, period or space (you should actually be using \s for spaces if your intention is to match any whitespace character).
$: End of the string
/': End the expression
So, an example of a string that would yield a match result is:
$string = 'a'
Of other note, if you're actually trying to get the matches from the result, you'll want to use the third parameter of preg_match:
$numResults = preg_match($pattern, $string, $matches);
You need a quantifier on the end of your character class, such as +, which means match 1 or more times.
Ideone.