I have this string:
a:3:{i:0;i:2;i:1;i:3;i:2;i:4;}
I want to get number between "a:" and ":{" that is "3".
I try to user substr and strpos but no success.
I'm newbie in regex , write this :
preg_match('/a:(.+?):{/', $v);
But its return me 1.
Thanks for any tips.
preg_match returns the number of matches, in your case 1 match.
To get the matches themselves, use the third parameter:
$matches = array();
preg_match(/'a:(\d+?):{/', $v, $matches);
That said, I think the string looks like a serialized array which you could deserialize with unserialize and then use count on the actual array (i.e. $a = count(unserialize($v));). Be careful with userprovided serialized strings though …
If you know that a: is always at the beginning of the string, the easiest way is:
$array = explode( ':', $string, 3 );
$number = $array[1];
You can use sscanfDocs to obtain the number from the string:
# Input:
$str = 'a:3:{i:0;i:2;i:1;i:3;i:2;i:4;}';
# Code:
sscanf($str, 'a:%d:', $number);
# Output:
echo $number; # 3
This is often more simple than using preg_match when you'd like to obtain a specific value from a string that follows a pattern.
preg_match() returns the number of times it finds a match, that's why. you need to add a third param. $matches in which it will store the matches.
You were not too far away with strpos() and substr()
$pos_start = strpos($str,'a:')+2;
$pos_end = strpos($str,':{')-2;
$result = substr($str,$pos_start,$pos_end);
preg_match only checks for appearance, it doesn't return any string.
Related
sorry if my question was stupid, please someone help me to fix this issue.
i have string like
$str_value = "http://99.99.99.99/var/test/src/158-of-box.html/9/";
this $str_value is dynamic , it will change each page. now i need to replace 9 in this string as 10. add integer 1 and replace
for example if the $str_value = "http://99.99.99.99/var/test/src/158-of-box.html/251/"
then output should be
http://99.99.99.99/var/test/src/158-of-box.html/252/
i tried to replace using preg_match but i m getting wrong please somesone help me
$str = preg_replace('/[\/\d+\/]/', '10',$str_value );
$str = preg_replace('/[\/\d+\/]/', '[\/\d+\/]+1',$str_value );
Thank's for the answer, #Calimero! You've been faster than me, but I would like to post my answer, too ;-)
Another possibilty is to fetch the integer by using a group. So you don't need to trim $matches[0] to remove the slashes.
$str_value = "http://99.99.99.99/var/test/src/158-of-box.html/9/";
$str = preg_replace_callback('/\/([\d+])\//', function($matches) {
return '/'.($matches[1]+1).'/';
}, $str_value);
echo $str;
You need to use a callback to increment the value, it cannot be done directly in the regular expression itself, like so :
$lnk= "http://99.99.99.99/var/test/src/158-of-box.html/9/";
$lnk= preg_replace_callback("#/\\d+/#",function($matches){return "/".(trim($matches[0],"/")+1)."/";},$lnk); // http://99.99.99.99/var/test/src/158-of-box.html/10/
Basically, the regexp will capture a pure integer number enclosed by slashes, pass it along to the callback function which will purge the integer value, increment it, then return it for replacement with padded slashes on each side.
I'd suggest also another approach based on explode and implode instead of doing any regexp stuff. In my opinion this is more readable.
$str_value = "http://99.99.99.99/var/test/src/158-of-box.html/11/";
// explode the initial value by '/'
$explodedArray = explode('/', $str_value);
// get the position of the page number
$targetIndex = count($explodedArray) - 2;
// increment the value
$explodedArray[$targetIndex]++;
// implode back the original string
$new_str_value = implode('/', $explodedArray);
For example, 3 string are the following :
##7##
##563##
##120058##
How can I get those number like this :
echo first number is 7
echo second number is 563
echo third number is 120058
Thank you very much!
$numberAsString = trim($string, '##')
Is probably the easiest and fastest in this case. The output is still a string in this case, but in most cases that doesn't really matter. If it does in your case, you can use (int), (float) or the like to get it to the correct type.
Of course, regex would also be possible, e.g.:
$didMatch = preg_match('/#+([^#]+)#+/', $string, $matches);
Another possibility still is first extract the remaining part after the initial 2 # and then cast to a number, which seems to be always int in this case:
$number = (int)substr($string, 2);
Still another possibility would be to go by the count of the characters and just use substr like:
$numberAsString = substr($string, 2, -2);
Or you could be creative and use something like explode + implode + array functions:
$numberAsString = array_slice(explode('#', implode('', array_slice(explode('#', $string), 2))), 0, -2);
Of course, this last one is purely to show that it can be done in various ways, as it's very inefficient and impractical, but there are surely dozens of other ways.
In case you use this in a tight loop or somewhere where performance really matters, I would benchmark different possibilities - on a guess, I'd say that either the trim or the pure substring solution would be the fastest.
$str = "##563##";
preg_match("|\d+|", $str, $res);
print_r($res);
Just call the filter_var() function it will return the number only.
Whatever the input is, it will only filter the number for you!
filter_var("##120058##", FILTER_SANITIZE_NUMBER_INT) // return 120058
filter_var("*##20kkk", FILTER_SANITIZE_NUMBER_INT) // return 20
I have the following point: a xls file contains one column with codes. The codes have a prefix and a unique code like this:
- VIP-AX757
- VIP-QBHE6
- CODE-IUEF7
- CODE-QDGF3
- VIP-KJQFB
- ...
How can I get equal parts of strings or an array? perfect would be if I get an array like this:
- $result[VIP] = 3;
- $result[CODE] = 2;
An array with the found prefix and the sum of cells with that prefix. But the result is not so important at the moment.
I couldn't find a soloution how to get equal parts of two strings: how to compare this "VIP-AX757" and "VIP-QBHE6" and get a result that says: "VIP-" is the same prefix/part in this two strings?
Hope someone has an idea.
thx!
-drum roll- Time for a one-liner!
$result = array_count_values(array_map(function($v) {list($a) = explode("-",$v); return $a;},$input));
(Assumes $input is your array of codes)
If you are using PHP 5.4 or newer (you should be), then:
$result = array_count_values(array_map(function($v) {return explode("-",$v)[0];},$input));
Tested in PHP CLI:
If the prefix is always followed by a '-' then you can do something like this:-
foreach ($codes as $code) {
$tmp = explode("-",$code);
$result[$tmp[0]] += 1;
}
print_r($result);
Depends on the variability of the data, but something like:
preg_match_all('/^([^-]+)/m', $string, $matches);
$result = array_count_values($matches[1]);
print_r($result);
If you don't know that there is an - after the prefix but the prefix is always letters then:
preg_match_all('/^([A-Z]+)/im', $string, $matches);
$result = array_count_values($matches[1]);
Otherwise you'll have to define exactly what the prefix can contain if it's not the delimiter.
Since you stated via comment to Niet that you don't have a reliable delimiter, then we can only write a pattern that identifies your targeted substrings based on their location in each line.
I recommend preg_match_all() with no capture group, a start of the line anchor, and a multi-line pattern modifier (m).
I've written a preg_split() alternative, but the pattern is a little "clunkier" because of the way I'm handling the line returns.
Code: (Demo)
$string = 'VIP-AX757
VIP-QBHE6
CODE-IUEF7
CODE-QDGF3
VIP-KJQFB';
var_export(array_count_values(preg_match_all('~^[A-Z]+~m', $string, $out) ? $out[0] : []));
echo "\n\n";
var_export(array_count_values(preg_split('~[^A-Z][^\r\n]+\R?~', $string, -1, PREG_SPLIT_NO_EMPTY)));
Output:
array (
'VIP' => 3,
'CODE' => 2,
)
array (
'VIP' => 3,
'CODE' => 2,
)
I am going to parse a log file and I wonder how I can convert such a string:
[5189192e][game]: kill killer='0:Tee' victim='1:nameless tee' weapon=5 special=0
into some kind of array:
$log['5189192e']['game']['killer'] = '0:Tee';
$log['5189192e']['game']['victim'] = '1:nameless tee';
$log['5189192e']['game']['weapon'] = '5';
$log['5189192e']['game']['special'] = '0';
The best way is to use function preg_match_all() and regular expressions.
For example to get 5189192e you need to use expression
/[0-9]{7}e/
This says that the first 7 characters are digits last character is e you can change it to fits any letter
/[0-9]{7}[a-z]+/
it is almost the same but fits every letter in the end
more advanced example with subpatterns and whole details
<?php
$matches = array();
preg_match_all('\[[0-9]{7}e\]\[game]: kill killer=\'([0-9]+):([a-zA-z]+)\' victim=\'([0-9]+):([a-zA-Z ]+)\' weapon=([0-9]+) special=([0-9])+\', $str, $matches);
print_r($matches);
?>
$str is string to be parsed
$matches contains the whole data you needed to be pared like killer id, weapon, name etc.
Using the function preg_match_all() and a regex you will be able to generate an array, which you then just have to organize into your multi-dimensional array:
here's the code:
$log_string = "[5189192e][game]: kill killer='0:Tee' victim='1:nameless tee' weapon=5 special=0";
preg_match_all("/^\[([0-9a-z]*)\]\[([a-z]*)\]: kill (.*)='(.*)' (.*)='(.*)' (.*)=([0-9]*) (.*)=([0-9]*)$/", $log_string, $result);
$log[$result[1][0]][$result[2][0]][$result[3][0]] = $result[4][0];
$log[$result[1][0]][$result[2][0]][$result[5][0]] = $result[6][0];
$log[$result[1][0]][$result[2][0]][$result[7][0]] = $result[8][0];
$log[$result[1][0]][$result[2][0]][$result[9][0]] = $result[10][0];
// $log is your formatted array
You definitely need a regex. Here is the pertaining PHP function and here is a regex syntax reference.
I have strings like:
t_est1_1
test213_4
tes_tsdfsdf_9
The common part of every string is the LAST underscore _ character.
I need to get the string before this character.
t_est1_12 --> test1
test213_4 --> test213
tes_tsdfsdf_9343 --> testsdfsdf
How can i achieve this in PHP?
Using the basic string functions strpos and substr.
http://fr.php.net/manual/fr/function.explode.php
$a = "abcdef_12345"
$b = array();
// $b[0] = "abcdef";
$b[0] = explode('_',$a,'1');
you can use preg_match function available in php
you need to write regular expression for that...
for example
to get this test1_12 ->> test1
$string='test1_12';
preg_match('((.+?)\_(.*))',$string,$match);
echo $match[1];
What you want is a simple explode, array_slice and implode, also using explode and end, you can get the "id" that is the common part too:
$description = implode('', array_slice(explode('_', $data), 0, -1));
$id = end(explode('_', $data));
As many _ you will have, you'll still be able to expode on them and retrieve the last item containing your id and the first items (0 to -1) will contain your description...