Right now i'm trying to get this:
Array
(
[0] => hello
[1] =>
[2] => goodbye
)
Where index 1 is the empty string.
$toBeSplit= 'hello,,goodbye';
$textSplitted = preg_split('/[,]+/', $toBeSplit, -1);
$textSplitted looks like this:
Array
(
[0] => hello
[1] => goodbye
)
I'm using PHP 5.3.2
[,]+ means one or more comma characters while as much as possible is matched. Use just /,/ and it works:
$textSplitted = preg_split('/,/', $toBeSplit, -1);
But you don’t even need regular expression:
$textSplitted = explode(',', $toBeSplit);
How about this:
$textSplitted = preg_split('/,/', $toBeSplit, -1);
Your split regex was grabbing all the commas, not just one.
Your pattern splits the text using a sequence of commas as separator (its syntax also isn't perfect, as you're using a character class for no reason), so two (or two hundred) commas count just as one.
Anyway, since your just using a literal character as separator, use explode():
$str = 'hello,,goodbye';
print_r(explode(',', $str));
output:
Array
(
[0] => hello
[1] =>
[2] => goodbye
)
Related
I'm looking for a way to explode a string. For example, I have the following string: (we don't count the beginning - 0x)
0xa9059xbb000000000000000000000000fc7a5f48a1a1b3f48e7dcb1f23a1ea24199af4d00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000054368
which is actually an ETH transaction input. I need to explode this string into 3 parts. Imagine 1 bunch of zeros is actually a single space and these spaces define the gates where the string should be exploded.
How can I do that?
preg_split()
This function uses a regular expression to split a string.
So in this example at two or more 0 in a row:
$arr = preg_split('/[0]{2,}/', $string);
print_r($arr);
echo PHP_EOL;
This will output the following:
Array
(
[0] => a9059xbb
[1] => fc7a5f48a1a1b3f48e7dcb1f23a1ea24199af4d
[2] => 54368
)
Be aware that you will have problems if a message itself has a 00 in it. Assuming it is used as a null-byte for "end of string", this will not happen, though.
preg_match()
This is an example using regular expressions. You can split at arbitrary points.
$string = 'a9059xbb000000000000000000000000fc7a5f48a1a1b3f48e7dcb1f23a1ea24199af4d00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000054368';
print_r($string);
echo PHP_EOL;
$res = preg_match('/(.{4})(.{32})(.{32})/', $string, $matches);
print_r($matches);
echo PHP_EOL;
This outputs:
a9059xbb000000000000000000000000fc7a5f48a1a1b3f48e7dcb1f23a1ea24199af4d00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000054368
Array
(
[0] => a9059xbb000000000000000000000000fc7a5f48a1a1b3f48e7dcb1f23a1ea24199a
[1] => a905
[2] => 9xbb000000000000000000000000fc7a
[3] => 5f48a1a1b3f48e7dcb1f23a1ea24199a
)
As you can see /(.{4})(.{32})(.{32})/ will find 4 bytes, then 32 and after that 32 again. Capturing groups are made with () around what you want to find. They appear in the $matches array (0 is always the whole string found).
In case you want to ignore certain parts you can express that as well:
/(.{4})9x(.{32}).{4}(.{32})/
This changes the found string:
Array
(
[0] => a9059xbb000000000000000000000000fc7a5f48a1a1b3f48e7dcb1f23a1ea24199af4d000
[1] => a905
[2] => bb000000000000000000000000fc7a5f
[3] => a1b3f48e7dcb1f23a1ea24199af4d000
)
Links
PHP documentation for the mentioned functions:
https://www.php.net/manual/en/function.preg-split.php
https://www.php.net/manual/en/book.pcre.php
Play around with the second regular expression using this demo:
https://regex101.com/r/pfZtH8/1
If you will always explode them at the same points (4 bytes(8 hexadecimal digits), 32 bytes(64 hexadecimal digits), 32 bytes(64 hexadecimal digits)), you could use substr().
$input = "0xa9059xbb000000000000000000000000fc7a5f48a1a1b3f48e7dcb1f23a1ea24199af4d00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000054368";
$first = substr($input,2,8);
$second = substr($input,10,64);
$third = substr($input,74,64);
print_r($first);
print "<br>";
print_r($second);
print "<br>";
print_r($third);
print "<br>";
this outputs:
a9059xbb
000000000000000000000000fc7a5f48a1a1b3f48e7dcb1f23a1ea24199af4d0
0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000054368
After instructing clients to input only
number comma number comma number
(no set length, but generally < 10), the results of their input have been, erm, unpredictable.
Given the following example input:
3,6 ,bannana,5,,*,
How could I most simply, and reliably end up with:
3,6,5
So far I am trying a combination:
$test= trim($test,","); //Remove any leading or trailing commas
$test= preg_replace('/\s+/', '', $test);; //Remove any whitespace
$test= preg_replace("/[^0-9]/", ",", $test); //Replace any non-number with a comma
But before I keep throwing things at it...is there an elegant way, probably from a regex boffin!
In a purely abstract sense this is what I'd do:
$test = array_filter(array_map('trim',explode(",",$test)),'is_numeric')
Example:
http://sandbox.onlinephpfunctions.com/code/753f4a833e8ff07cd9c7bd780708f7aafd20d01d
<?php
$str = '3,6 ,bannana,5,,*,';
$str = explode(',', $str);
$newArray = array_map(function($val){
return is_numeric(trim($val)) ? trim($val) : '';
}, $str);
print_r(array_filter($newArray)); // <-- this will give you array
echo implode(',',array_filter($newArray)); // <--- this give you string
?>
Here's an example using regex,
$string = '3,6 ,bannana,5,-6,*,';
preg_match_all('#(-?[0-9]+)#',$string,$matches);
print_r($matches);
will output
Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[0] => 3
[1] => 6
[2] => 5
[3] => -6
)
[1] => Array
(
[0] => 3
[1] => 6
[2] => 5
[3] => -6
)
)
Use $matches[0] and you should be on your way.
If you don't need negative numbers just remove the first bit in the in the regex rule.
Im trying to split string in PHP. I should split string using two delimiters: new line and comma. My code is:
$array = preg_split("/\n|,/", $str)
But i get string split using comma, but not using \n. Why is that? Also , do I have to take into account "\r\n" symbol?
I can think of two possible reasons that this is happening.
1. You are using a single quoted string:
$array = preg_split("/\n|,/", 'foo,bar\nbaz');
print_r($array);
Array
(
[0] => foo
[1] => bar\nbaz
)
If so, use double quotes " instead ...
$array = preg_split("/\n|,/", "foo,bar\nbaz");
print_r($array);
Array
(
[0] => foo
[1] => bar
[2] => baz
)
2. You have multiple newline sequences and I would recommend using \R if so. This matches any Unicode newline sequence that is in the ASCII range.
$array = preg_split('/\R|,/', "foo,bar\nbaz\r\nquz");
print_r($array);
Array
(
[0] => foo
[1] => bar
[2] => baz
[3] => quz
)
I'm trying to do something that must be really simple, but I'm fairly new to PHP and I'm struggling with this one. What I want is to split a string containing 0, 1 or more delimiters (braces), while keeping the delimiters AND the string between AND the string outside.
ex: 'Hello {F}{N}, how are you?' would output :
Array ( [0] => Hello
[1] => {F}
[2] => {N}
[3] => , how are you? )
Here's my code so far:
$value = 'Hello {F}{N}, how are you?';
$array= preg_split('/[\{\}]/', $value,-1, PREG_SPLIT_DELIM_CAPTURE | PREG_SPLIT_NO_EMPTY);
print_r($array);
which outputs (missing braces) :
Array ( [0] => Hello
[1] => F
[2] => N
[3] => , how are you? )
I also tried :
preg_match_all('/\{[^}]+\}/', $myValue, $array);
Which outputs (braces are there, but the text outside is flushed) :
Array ( [0] => {F}
[1] => {N} )
I'm pretty sure I'm on the good track with preg_split, but with the wrong regex. Can anyone help me with this? Or tell me if I'm way off?
You aren't capturing the delimiters. Add them to a capturing group:
/(\{.*?\})/
You need parentheses around the part of the expression to be captured:
preg_split('/(\{[^}]+\})/', $myValue, -1, PREG_SPLIT_DELIM_CAPTURE);
See the documentation for preg_split().
I get a string that looks like this
<br>
ACCEPT:YES
<br>
SMMD:tv240245ce
<br>
is contained in a variable $_session['result']
I am trying to parse through this string and get the following either in an array or as separate variables
ACCEPT:YES
tv240245ce
I first tried
to explode the string using as the delimiter, and that did not work
then I already tried
$yes = explode(":", strip_tags($_SESSION['result']));
echo print_r($yes);
which gives me an array like so
Array ( [0] => ACCEPT [1] => YESSEED [2] => tv240245ce ) 1
which gives me one of my answers.
Please what would be a great way of trying to achieve what I am trying to achieve?
is there a way to get rid of the first and last?
then use the remaining one as a delimiter to explode the string ?
or what's the best way to go about this ?
This will do it:
$data=preg_split('/\s?<br>\s?/', str_replace('SMMD:','',$data), NULL, PREG_SPLIT_NO_EMPTY);
See example here:
CodePad
You can also skip caring about the spurious <br> and treat the whole string as key:value format with a simple regex like:
preg_match_all('/^(\w+):(.*)/', $text, $result, PREG_SET_ORDER);
This requires that you really have line breaks in it though. Gives you a $result list which is easy to convert into an associative array afterwards:
[0] => Array
(
[0] => ACCEPT:YES
[1] => ACCEPT
[2] => YES
)
[1] => Array
(
[0] => SMMD:tv240245ce
[1] => SMMD
[2] => tv240245ce
)
First, do a str_replace to remove all instances of "SMMD:". Then, Explode on "< b r >\n". Sorry for weird spaced, it was encoding the line break.
Include the new line character and you should get the array you want:
$mystr = str_replace( 'SMMD:', '', $mystr );
$res_array = explode( "<br>\n", $mystr );