php - Remove All Strings Starting From The First Specific Character - php

I have this kind of string:
DURATION : 00:23:55.060000000
I want to convert it to this:
00:23:55.060000000
Please note that after DURATION, it has many spaces.
EDIT:
It seems that I made you upset, guys. :D
I did this and not working:
preg_replace('/^Duration,\s+/', '', $result[20])
How to do it with php?

Your regex is messed up. You are looking for something in uppercase and your regex is in lowercase. And there is a comma laying around.
So if you rewrite that like:
preg_replace('/^Duration\s+: /i', '', $result[20])
(the i modifier after the regular expression says its case insenstive)
or:
preg_replace('/^DURATION\s+: /', '', $result[20])
It'll work.
But mostly, it seems that you want to catch the timestamp, and disregard the rest. For me, the code would be much clearer if your regex reflected that.
E.g.:
if (preg_match("|(?<timestamp>\d\d:\d\d\:\d\d\.\d{9})|", $string, $matches)) {
echo $matches['timestamp'];
}

Solution :
$duration = substr($duration, strpos($duration, (":")) + 2);

I hope this can be useful for others who need it:
preg_replace('/duration|^(.*?):|\s/i', '', $result[20]);
code explanation:
first, strip the duration, and then the first colon : lastly all spaces.
put i at the end to the regex to declare that the search is incase-sensitive.

Related

preg_replace on everything prior to character

I am trying to remove parts of a string which has an ID and : before it. So for example:
2846:ZE1,2847:ZE2,2848:ZE3,713:DY10,412:CF10
But I want it to look like this:
ZE1,ZE2,ZE3,DY10,CF10
I have tried the following preg_replace:
$remove = preg_replace('/[0-9]\:+/', '', $postcodes_id);
But this only removes the last digit and not all of it:
284ZE1,284ZE2,284ZE3,71DY10,41CF10
any help would be great?
A non regex solution
parse_str(str_replace(array(':',','),array('=','&'),$str1),$str1);
Demo
Try this:
$remove = preg_replace('/[0-9]+\:/', '', $postcodes_id);
Adding the + means "one or more digit" instead of your code which is "just one".
I'm pretty sure you don't need the \ before the :...
You have the + in the wrong place, it should be:
preg_replace('/[0-9]+:/', '', $postcodes_id);
You also don't need to escape :, it has no special meaning in regular expressions.

Regex for PHP seems simple but is killing me

I'm trying to make a replace in a string with a regex, and I really hope the community can help me.
I have this string :
031,02a,009,a,aaa,AZ,AZE,02B,975,135
And my goal is to remove the opposite of this regex
[09][0-9]{2}|[09][0-9][A-Za-z]
i.e.
a,aaa,AZ,AZE,135
(to see it in action : http://regexr.com?3795f )
My final goal is to preg_replace the first string to only get
031,02a,009,02B,975
(to see it in action : http://regexr.com?3795f )
I'm open to all solution, but I admit that I really like to make this work with a preg_replace if it's possible (It became something like a personnal challenge)
Thanks for all help !
As #Taemyr pointed out in comments, my previous solution (using a lookbehind assertion) was incorrect, as it would consume 3 characters at a time even while substrings weren't always 3 characters.
Let's use a lookahead assertion instead to get around this:
'/(^|,)(?![09][0-9]{2}|[09][0-9][A-Za-z])[^,]*/'
The above matches the beginning of the string or a comma, then checks that what follows does not match one of the two forms you've specified to keep, and given that this condition passes, matches as many non-comma characters as possible.
However, this is identical to #anubhava's solution, meaning it has the same weakness, in that it can leave a leading comma in some cases. See this Ideone demo.
ltriming the comma is the clean way to go there, but then again, if you were looking for the "clean way to go," you wouldn't be trying to use a single preg_replace to begin with, right? Your question is whether it's possible to do this without using any other PHP functions.
The anwer is yes. We can take
'/(^|,)foo/'
and distribute the alternation,
'/^foo|,foo/'
so that we can tack on the extra comma we wish to capture only in the first case, i.e.
'/^foo,|,foo/'
That's going to be one hairy expression when we substitute foo with our actual regex, isn't it. Thankfully, PHP supports recursive patterns, so that we can rewrite the above as
'/^(foo),|,(?1)/'
And there you have it. Substituting foo for what it is, we get
'/^((?![09][0-9]{2}|[09][0-9][A-Za-z])[^,]*),|,(?1)/'
which indeed works, as shown in this second Ideone demo.
Let's take some time here to simplify your expression, though. [0-9] is equivalent to \d, and you can use case-insensitive matching by adding /i, like so:
'/^((?![09]\d{2}|[09]\d[a-z])[^,]*),|,(?1)/i'
You might even compact the inner alternation:
'/^((?![09]\d(\d|[a-z]))[^,]*),|,(?1)/i'
Try it in more steps:
$newList = array();
foreach (explode(',', $list) as $element) {
if (!preg_match('/[09][0-9]{2}|[09][0-9][A-Za-z]/', $element) {
$newList[] = $element;
}
}
$list = implode(',', $newList);
You still have your regex, see! Personnal challenge completed.
Try matching what you want to keep and then joining it with commas:
preg_match_all('/[09][0-9]{2}|[09][0-9][A-Za-z]/', $input, $matches);
$result = implode(',', $matches);
The problem you'll be facing with preg_replace is the extra-commas you'll have to strip, cause you don't just want to remove aaa, you actually want to remove aaa, or ,aaa. Now what when you have things to remove both at the beginning and at the end of the string? You can't just say "I'll just strip the comma before", because that might lead to an extra comma at the beginning of the string, and vice-versa. So basically, unless you want to mess with lookaheads and/or lookbehinds, you'd better do this in two steps.
This should work for you:
$s = '031,02a,009,a,aaa,AZ,AZE,02B,975,135';
echo ltrim(preg_replace('/(^|,)(?![09][0-9]{2}|[09][0-9][A-Za-z])[^,]+/', '', $s), ',');
OUTPUT:
031,02a,009,02B,975
Try this:
preg_replace('/(^|,)[1-8a-z][^,]*/i', '', $string);
this will remove all substrings starting with the start of the string or a comma, followed by a non allowed first character, up to but excluding the following comma.
As per #GeoffreyBachelet suggestion, to remove residual commas, you should do:
trim(preg_replace('/(^|,)[1-8a-z][^,]*/i', '', $string), ',');

regex to clean up url

I am looking for a way to get a valid url out of a string like:
$string = 'http://somesite.com/directory//sites/9/my_forms/3-895a3e/somefilename.jpg|:||:||:||:|19845';
My original solution was:
preg_match('#^[^:|]*#', str_replace('//', '/', $string), $modifiedPath);
But obviously its going to remove a slash from the http:// instead of the one in the middle of the string.
My expected output that I want from the original is:
http://somesite.com/directory/sites/9/my_forms/3-895a3e/somefilename.jpg
I could always break off the http part of the string first but would like a more elegant solution in the form of regex if possible. Thanks.
This will do exactly what you are asking:
<?php
$string = 'http://somesite.com/directory//sites/9/my_forms/3-895a3e/somefilename.jpg|:||:||:||:|19845';
preg_match('/^([^|]+)/', $string, $m); // get everything up to and NOT including the first pipe (|)
$string = $m[1];
$string = preg_replace('/(?<!:)\/\//', '/' ,$string); // replace all occurrences of // as long as they are not preceded by :
echo $string; // outputs: http://somesite.com/directory/sites/9/my_forms/3-895a3e/somefilename.jpg
exit;
?>
EDIT:
(?<!X) in regular expressions is the syntax for what is called a lookbehind. The X is replaced with the character(s) we are testing for.
The following expression would match every instance of double slashes (/):
\/\/
But we need to make sure that the match we are looking for is NOT preceded by the : character so we need to 'lookbehind' our match to see if the : character is there. If it is then we don't want it to be counted as a match:
(?<!:)\/\/
The ! is what says NOT to match in our lookbehind. If we changed it to (?=:)\/\/ then it would only match the double slashes that did have the : preceding them.
Here is a Quick tutorial that can explain it all better than I can lookahead and lookbehind tutorial
Assuming all your strings are in the form given, you don't need any but the simplest of regexes to do this; if you want an elegant solution, then a regex is definitely not what you need. Also, double slashes are legal in a URL, just like in a Unix path, and mean the same thing a single slash does, so you don't really need to get rid of them at all.
Why not just
$url = array_shift(preg_split('/\|/', $string));
?
If you really, really care about getting rid of the double slashes in the URL, then you can follow this with
$url = preg_replace('/([^:])\/\//', '$1/', $url);
or even combine them into
$url = preg_replace('/([^:])\/\//', '$1/', array_shift(preg_split('/\|/', $string)));
although that last form gets a little bit hairy.
Since this is a quite strictly defined situation, I'd consider just one preg to be the most elegant solution.
From the top of my head:
$sanitizedURL = preg_replace('~((?<!:)/(?=/)|\\|.+)~', '', $rawURL);
Basically, what this does is look for any forward slash that IS NOT preceded by a colon (:), and IS followed bij another forward slash. It also searches for any pipe character and any character following it.
Anything found is removed from the result.
I can explain the RegEx in more detail if you like.

Problem using regex to remove number formatting in PHP

I'm having this issue with a regular expression in PHP that I can't seem to crack. I've spent hours searching to find out how to get it to work, but nothing seems to have the desired effect.
I have a file that contains lines similar to the one below:
Total','"127','004"','"118','116"','"129','754"','"126','184"','"129','778"','"128','341"','"127','477"','0','0','0','0','0','0
These lines are inserted into INSERT queries. The problem is that values like "127','004" are actually supposed to be 127,004, or without any formatting: 127004. The latter is the actual value I need to insert into the database table, so I figured I'd use preg_replace() to detect values like "127','004" and replace them with 127004.
I played around with a Regular Expression designer and found that I could use the following to get my desired results:
Regular Expression
"(\d+)','(\d{3})"
Replace Expression
$1$2
The line on the top of this post would end up like this: (which is what I am after)
Total','127004','118116','129754','126184','129778','128341','127477','0','0','0','0','0','0
This, however, does not work in PHP. Nothing is being replaced at all.
The code I am using is:
$line = preg_replace("\"(\d+)','(\d{3})\"", '$1$2', $line);
Any help would be greatly appreciated!
There are no delimiters in your regex. Delimiters are required in order for PHP to know what is the pattern to match and what is a pattern modifier (e.g. i - case-insensitive, U - ungreedy, ...). Use a character that doesn't occur in your pattern, typically you'll see a slash '/' used.
Try this:
$line = preg_replace("/\"(\d+)','(\d{3})\"/", '$1$2', $line);
You forgot to wrap your regular expression in front-slashes. Try this instead:
"/\"(\d+)','(\d{3})\"/"
use preg_replace("#\"(\d+)','(\d+)\"#", '$1$2', $s); instead of yours

PHP: Preg replace string with nothing

I'm new to preg_replace() and I've been trying to get this to work, I couldn't so StackOverflow is my last chance.
I have a string with a few of these:
('pm_IDHERE', 'NameHere');">
I want it to be replaced with nothing, so it would require 2 wildcards for NameHere and pm_IDHERE.
But I've tried it and failed myself, so could someone give me the right code please, and thanks :)
Update:
You are almost there, you just have to make the replacement an empty string and escape the parenthesis properly, otherwise they will be treated as capture group (which you don't need btw):
$str = preg_replace("#\('pm_.+?', '.*?'\);#si", "", $str);
You probably also don't need the modifiers s and i but that is up to you.
Old answer:
Probably str_replace() is sufficient:
$str = "Some string that contains pm_IDHERE and NameHere";
$str = str_replace(array('pm_IDHERE', 'NameHere'), '', $str);
If this is not what you mean and pm_IDHERE is actually something like pm_1564 then yes, you probably need regular expressions for that. But if NameHere has no actual pattern or structure, you cannot replace it with regular expression.
And you definitely have to explain better what kind of string you have and what kind of string you have want to replace.

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