This question already has answers here:
Warning: preg_replace(): Unknown modifier
(3 answers)
Closed 3 years ago.
I have this HTML tags :
<div class="title">Copy me if you can</div>
so I wanna use preg_match to take just "Copy me if you can"
I'm using this preg pattern :
$preg = "<div class=\"title\">(.+?)</div>";
So I wrote this code
$match = preg_match($preg,$content);
The browser outputs :
Warning: preg_match() [function.preg-match]: Unknown modifier '('
What
You forgot the delimiter
$preg = '~<div class="title">(.+?)</div>~';
The first letter in the pattern always defines the delimiter to use. In your case its <, so the ending delimiter is >. Everything after that is used as special modifier, that changes specific behaviours. ( is not a valid modifier. Thats what the error message wanted to tell you :)
Try : $preg = '/<div class="title">([^<]+)</div>/';
Personally, when HTML is involved I'd steer away from the defacto delimiter / and use # instead so you don't have to remember to escape any closing HTML tags.
$preg = '#<div class="title">([^<]+)</div>#';
You need to add delimites to your regex. Try this:
$preg = "/<div class=\"title\">(.+?)<\/div>/";
/ are delimiters which marks the start and stop of your regex. The reason for delimiters is so that you can add flags to your regex. Those flags are inserted after your regex. Example:
$preg = "/<div class=\"title\">(.+?)<\/div>/i";
I've added i as a modifier, marking the regex search as case insensitive.
I have the same problem and wonder if I could do the same, ex.:
Warning: preg_match() [function.preg-match]: Unknown modifier 't' in /home/08/public/www/wp-content/plugins/woocommerce-gateway-dibs-form/gateway-dibs.php on line 707
This is the code:
if ( preg_match($_SERVER["REQUEST_URI"], 'woocommerce/dibscancel') !== false) {
header("HTTP/1.1 200 Ok");
$callback = new WC_Gateway_Dibs;
$callback->cancel_order(stripslashes_deep($_REQUEST));
return;
}
Related
This question already has answers here:
Unknown modifier '/' in ...? what is it? [duplicate]
(4 answers)
Warning: preg_replace(): Unknown modifier
(3 answers)
Closed 9 years ago.
Regex PHP Code
// If url matches regex
$regex = "/^(/upload/temporary/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[A-Za-z0-9._ /-]+.[A-z]{2,4}$/";
if (preg_match($regex, $this->value)) {
$this->valid();
}
Error Message
Warning: preg_match() [<a href='function.preg-match'>function.preg-match</a>]: Unknown modifier 'p' in C:\Apache\www\profiletwist\lib\php\form\url.php on line 41
Call Stack
# Time Memory Function Location
1 0.0079 440016 {main}( ) ..\new.php:0
2 0.0964 667832 form->validate( ) ..\new.php:60
3 0.0968 668248 form_URL->validateUploadURL( ) ..\form.php:372
4 0.0969 668400 preg_match ( ) ..\url.php:41
Variables in local scope (#3)
$regex =
string '/^(/upload/temporary/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[A-Za-z0-9._ /-]+.[A-z]{2,4}$/' (length=79)
Question
How do I fix the regex for this "unknown modifier" error to not occur?
ultimately, I would like a regex that makes sure the text input matches:
"/upload/temporary/####_##_##_[A-z0-9 _-]+ "." [a-z]{3}
This is a filename target. The beginning does not change and the last part can be a random hash followed by an arbitrary extension. Further processing is done after the regex but this is the first test.
Thank you!
In a regex string you have to escape your delimiters. Or better: use a character which doesn't appear in the regex itself as delimiter:
other delimiter (recommended):
$regex = "#^(/upload/temporary/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[A-Za-z0-9._ /-]+.[A-z]{2,4}$#";
escaped delimiters:
$regex = "/^(\/upload\/temporary\/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[A-Za-z0-9._ \/-]+.[A-z]{2,4}$/";
You need to escape the front slashes or just use another delimiter (I've used ! in this case):
$regex = "!^(/upload/temporary/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[A-Za-z0-9._ /-]+.[A-z]{2,4}$!"
$regex = "~^(/upload/temporary/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[\w./-]+\.[a-z]{2,4}$~";
Change your delimiters to ~
When you use a delimiter for example /, you must escape all litteral / in your pattern otherwhise the regex engine believes that it is the end of the pattern.
Since u is a modifier and p isn't a modifier, you have this error because of the substring /^(/up....
This question already has answers here:
Unknown modifier '/' in ...? what is it? [duplicate]
(4 answers)
Warning: preg_replace(): Unknown modifier
(3 answers)
Closed 9 years ago.
Regex PHP Code
// If url matches regex
$regex = "/^(/upload/temporary/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[A-Za-z0-9._ /-]+.[A-z]{2,4}$/";
if (preg_match($regex, $this->value)) {
$this->valid();
}
Error Message
Warning: preg_match() [<a href='function.preg-match'>function.preg-match</a>]: Unknown modifier 'p' in C:\Apache\www\profiletwist\lib\php\form\url.php on line 41
Call Stack
# Time Memory Function Location
1 0.0079 440016 {main}( ) ..\new.php:0
2 0.0964 667832 form->validate( ) ..\new.php:60
3 0.0968 668248 form_URL->validateUploadURL( ) ..\form.php:372
4 0.0969 668400 preg_match ( ) ..\url.php:41
Variables in local scope (#3)
$regex =
string '/^(/upload/temporary/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[A-Za-z0-9._ /-]+.[A-z]{2,4}$/' (length=79)
Question
How do I fix the regex for this "unknown modifier" error to not occur?
ultimately, I would like a regex that makes sure the text input matches:
"/upload/temporary/####_##_##_[A-z0-9 _-]+ "." [a-z]{3}
This is a filename target. The beginning does not change and the last part can be a random hash followed by an arbitrary extension. Further processing is done after the regex but this is the first test.
Thank you!
In a regex string you have to escape your delimiters. Or better: use a character which doesn't appear in the regex itself as delimiter:
other delimiter (recommended):
$regex = "#^(/upload/temporary/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[A-Za-z0-9._ /-]+.[A-z]{2,4}$#";
escaped delimiters:
$regex = "/^(\/upload\/temporary\/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[A-Za-z0-9._ \/-]+.[A-z]{2,4}$/";
You need to escape the front slashes or just use another delimiter (I've used ! in this case):
$regex = "!^(/upload/temporary/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[A-Za-z0-9._ /-]+.[A-z]{2,4}$!"
$regex = "~^(/upload/temporary/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[\w./-]+\.[a-z]{2,4}$~";
Change your delimiters to ~
When you use a delimiter for example /, you must escape all litteral / in your pattern otherwhise the regex engine believes that it is the end of the pattern.
Since u is a modifier and p isn't a modifier, you have this error because of the substring /^(/up....
This question already has answers here:
Unknown modifier '/' in ...? what is it? [duplicate]
(4 answers)
Warning: preg_replace(): Unknown modifier
(3 answers)
Closed 9 years ago.
Regex PHP Code
// If url matches regex
$regex = "/^(/upload/temporary/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[A-Za-z0-9._ /-]+.[A-z]{2,4}$/";
if (preg_match($regex, $this->value)) {
$this->valid();
}
Error Message
Warning: preg_match() [<a href='function.preg-match'>function.preg-match</a>]: Unknown modifier 'p' in C:\Apache\www\profiletwist\lib\php\form\url.php on line 41
Call Stack
# Time Memory Function Location
1 0.0079 440016 {main}( ) ..\new.php:0
2 0.0964 667832 form->validate( ) ..\new.php:60
3 0.0968 668248 form_URL->validateUploadURL( ) ..\form.php:372
4 0.0969 668400 preg_match ( ) ..\url.php:41
Variables in local scope (#3)
$regex =
string '/^(/upload/temporary/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[A-Za-z0-9._ /-]+.[A-z]{2,4}$/' (length=79)
Question
How do I fix the regex for this "unknown modifier" error to not occur?
ultimately, I would like a regex that makes sure the text input matches:
"/upload/temporary/####_##_##_[A-z0-9 _-]+ "." [a-z]{3}
This is a filename target. The beginning does not change and the last part can be a random hash followed by an arbitrary extension. Further processing is done after the regex but this is the first test.
Thank you!
In a regex string you have to escape your delimiters. Or better: use a character which doesn't appear in the regex itself as delimiter:
other delimiter (recommended):
$regex = "#^(/upload/temporary/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[A-Za-z0-9._ /-]+.[A-z]{2,4}$#";
escaped delimiters:
$regex = "/^(\/upload\/temporary\/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[A-Za-z0-9._ \/-]+.[A-z]{2,4}$/";
You need to escape the front slashes or just use another delimiter (I've used ! in this case):
$regex = "!^(/upload/temporary/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[A-Za-z0-9._ /-]+.[A-z]{2,4}$!"
$regex = "~^(/upload/temporary/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[\w./-]+\.[a-z]{2,4}$~";
Change your delimiters to ~
When you use a delimiter for example /, you must escape all litteral / in your pattern otherwhise the regex engine believes that it is the end of the pattern.
Since u is a modifier and p isn't a modifier, you have this error because of the substring /^(/up....
This question already has answers here:
Unknown modifier '/' in ...? what is it? [duplicate]
(4 answers)
Warning: preg_replace(): Unknown modifier
(3 answers)
Closed 9 years ago.
Regex PHP Code
// If url matches regex
$regex = "/^(/upload/temporary/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[A-Za-z0-9._ /-]+.[A-z]{2,4}$/";
if (preg_match($regex, $this->value)) {
$this->valid();
}
Error Message
Warning: preg_match() [<a href='function.preg-match'>function.preg-match</a>]: Unknown modifier 'p' in C:\Apache\www\profiletwist\lib\php\form\url.php on line 41
Call Stack
# Time Memory Function Location
1 0.0079 440016 {main}( ) ..\new.php:0
2 0.0964 667832 form->validate( ) ..\new.php:60
3 0.0968 668248 form_URL->validateUploadURL( ) ..\form.php:372
4 0.0969 668400 preg_match ( ) ..\url.php:41
Variables in local scope (#3)
$regex =
string '/^(/upload/temporary/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[A-Za-z0-9._ /-]+.[A-z]{2,4}$/' (length=79)
Question
How do I fix the regex for this "unknown modifier" error to not occur?
ultimately, I would like a regex that makes sure the text input matches:
"/upload/temporary/####_##_##_[A-z0-9 _-]+ "." [a-z]{3}
This is a filename target. The beginning does not change and the last part can be a random hash followed by an arbitrary extension. Further processing is done after the regex but this is the first test.
Thank you!
In a regex string you have to escape your delimiters. Or better: use a character which doesn't appear in the regex itself as delimiter:
other delimiter (recommended):
$regex = "#^(/upload/temporary/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[A-Za-z0-9._ /-]+.[A-z]{2,4}$#";
escaped delimiters:
$regex = "/^(\/upload\/temporary\/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[A-Za-z0-9._ \/-]+.[A-z]{2,4}$/";
You need to escape the front slashes or just use another delimiter (I've used ! in this case):
$regex = "!^(/upload/temporary/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[A-Za-z0-9._ /-]+.[A-z]{2,4}$!"
$regex = "~^(/upload/temporary/)[0-9]{4}_[0-9]{2}_[0-9]{2}_[\w./-]+\.[a-z]{2,4}$~";
Change your delimiters to ~
When you use a delimiter for example /, you must escape all litteral / in your pattern otherwhise the regex engine believes that it is the end of the pattern.
Since u is a modifier and p isn't a modifier, you have this error because of the substring /^(/up....
This question already has answers here:
Warning: preg_replace(): Unknown modifier
(3 answers)
Closed 3 years ago.
I'm not very knowledgeable with regular expresions, so I don't understand why I'm getting this error.
I'm using the following code to match all the emails in the string $str and saving them in the array $match:
preg_match_all(
"/^[a-zA-Z0-9.!#$%&’*+/=?^_`{|}~-]+#[a-zA-Z0-9-]+(?:\.[a-zA-Z0-9-]+)*$/",
$str,
$match
);
Apparently there's a problem in the regex (which I got from here) because I'm getting this error:
Warning: preg_match_all() [function.preg-match-all]: Unknown modifier
'=' in C:\xampp\htdocs\project\Framework\Sanitizer.class.php on
line 38
Can someone tell me what's the problem?
Thanks
You have to escape the forward slash before that equals sign, e.g:
preg_match_all(
"/^[a-zA-Z0-9.!#$%&’*+\/=?^_`{|}~-]+#[a-zA-Z0-9-]+(?:\.[a-zA-Z0-9-]+)*$/",
$str,
$match
);
"/" is the delimiter for the whole expression, so it must be escaped in the regex itself
You need to escape many of the characters in that string with a backslash.
Some of those you want to escape is: /?^{|} .
I would have written it like this:
preg_match_all(
"/^[a-zA-Z0-9.!#$%&’*+\/=\?\^_`\{\|\}~-]+#[a-zA-Z0-9-]+(?:\.[a-zA-Z0-9-]+)*$/",
$str,
$match
);
I find this site quite useful when it comes to matching e-mail adresses:
http://www.regular-expressions.info/email.html