|
|
ereg_replace (PHP 3, PHP 4, PHP 5) ereg_replace -- Replace regular expression Descriptionstring ereg_replace ( string pattern, string replacement, string string )
This function scans string for matches to
pattern, then replaces the matched text
with replacement.
The modified string is returned. (Which may mean that the
original string is returned if there are no matches to be
replaced.)
If pattern contains parenthesized
substrings, replacement may contain
substrings of the form
\\digit, which will
be replaced by the text matching the digit'th parenthesized
substring; \\0 will produce the entire
contents of string. Up to nine substrings may be used.
Parentheses may be nested, in which case they are counted by the
opening parenthesis.
If no matches are found in string, then
string will be returned unchanged.
For example, the following code snippet prints "This was a test"
three times:
Пример 1. ereg_replace() example |
<?php
$string = "This is a test";
echo str_replace(" is", " was", $string);
echo ereg_replace("( )is", "\\1was", $string);
echo ereg_replace("(( )is)", "\\2was", $string);
?>
|
|
One thing to take note of is that if you use an integer value as
the replacement parameter, you may not get
the results you expect. This is because
ereg_replace() will interpret the number as
the ordinal value of a character, and apply that. For instance:
Пример 2. ereg_replace() example |
<?php
$num = 4;
$string = "This string has four words.";
$string = ereg_replace('four', $num, $string);
echo $string; $num = '4';
$string = "This string has four words.";
$string = ereg_replace('four', $num, $string);
echo $string; ?>
|
|
Пример 3. Replace URLs with links |
<?php
$text = ereg_replace("[[:alpha:]]+://[^<>[:space:]]+[[:alnum:]/]",
"<a href=\"\\0\">\\0</a>", $text);
?>
|
|
Подсказка:
preg_replace(), which uses a Perl-compatible
regular expression syntax, is often a faster alternative to
ereg_replace().
See also ereg(), eregi(),
eregi_replace(), str_replace(), and
preg_match().
bjwarshaw2 at yahoo dot com
29-Sep-2007 06:27
It's worth mentioning for ultimate clarity that you're safest using double quotes when matching a pattern, since without them, metacharacters will be interpreted as a backslash plus another character.
Granted, this is part of the language syntax for the string type, but it might not be quite so obvious when dealing with patterns in this function, which is taking the pattern as a parameter.
So if you find that '[\n]' is taking the 'n' out of your string and leaving the new lines alone, switch to doubles before changing anything else.
jarfil at jarfil dot net
26-Aug-2007 02:42
For simple patterns like "[a-z]", preg_replace is up to 6 times faster than ereg_replace.
mephissto at gmail dot com
30-May-2007 06:40
Your right but you just need to replace by :
<?php
function hyperlink(&$text)
{
$text = ereg_replace("[a-zA-Z]+://([.]?[a-zA-Z0-9_/-])*", "<a href=\"\\0\">\\0</a>", $text);
$text = ereg_replace("(^| |.)(www([.]?[a-zA-Z0-9_/-])*)", "\\1<a href=\"http://\\2\">\\2</a>", $text);
}
?>
hoffaboffa (at) hotmail dott com
15-May-2007 06:03
cristiklein's hyperlink function is nice but works incorrect with a www-string like this
\r\nwww.google.se
then it does not become a hyperlink
bmcswee at gmail dot com dot invalid
06-Apr-2007 09:33
Function to strip an HTML tag out of a string. I use this in part for parsing XML documents.
<?php
function stripTags($tag, $string) {
$regExp = "<" . "$tag" . "[^>]*>";
$string = str_replace("</$tag>", "", $string);
$string = ereg_replace($regExp, "", $string);
return $string;
}
?>
Joachim Kruyswijk
25-May-2006 12:59
Use mb_ereg_replace() instead of ereg_replace() when working with multi-byte strings!
chrish at shield dot on dot ca
12-Feb-2006 05:43
I was having problems with Microsoft Outlook viewing forms within email. I was only able to see the first word of the text box after I used the following code.
If I entered words into the text box and used the enter key to give me a CRLF I could see in the returned data the %0D%0A string, so I assumed if I just used the ereg-replace as below it would just replace the %0D%0A with a single space...
function remove_extra_linebreaks($string) {
$new_string=ereg_replace("%0D%0A", " ", $string);
return $new_string;
}
But the form as displayed by Outlook only showed the text upto the first replaced string, then it was blank!
I could view the source of the email and it would show all of the text I expected.
The following will show the correct data in the form
function remove_extra_linebreaks($string) {
$new_string=ereg_replace("%0D%0A", '+', $string);
return $new_string;
}
Chris
20-Jan-2006 11:43
I've updated the function a little that was posted below. I use it to make database field names readable when making a header row. I needed it to quit putting a space in "GPA" and to put a space in between numbers and letters.
<?php
function innerCapsToReadableText($text) {
$text = ereg_replace("([A-Z]) ", "\\1",ucwords(strtolower(ereg_replace("[A-Z]"," \\0",$text))));
return ereg_replace("([A-Za-z])([0-9])", "\\1 \\2", $text);
}
?>
codergeek42 at users dot sourceforge.net
21-Dec-2005 09:15
In response to "php dot net at lenix dot de," a cleaner (easier to read) method would be to type-cast the integer as a string by quoting it. For example:
<?php
$foo = 42;
echo ereg_replace ( "bar", "$foo" , "foobar" ); ?>
benlanc at ster dot me dot uk
22-Aug-2005 03:49
Quite how I managed to get my previous post so wrong, I don't know. Correction follows:
<?php
function deInterCaps($var){
return ucfirst(strtolower(ereg_replace("[A-Z]"," \\0",$var)));
}
$interCapsString = "aLoadOfNonsenseToDemonstrateTheFunction";
echo deInterCaps($interCapsString);
?>
php dot net at lenix dot de
07-Jul-2005 03:26
One thing to take note of is that if you use an integer value as the replacement parameter, you may not get the results you expect. This is because ereg_replace() will interpret the number as the ordinal value of a character, and apply that.
If you're ever having trouble with this one there's an easy workarround:
instead of
<?php
$foo = 23;
echo ereg_replace ( "bar", $foo , "foobar" );
?>
just do
<?php
$foo = 23;
echo ereg_replace ( "bar", "" . $foo , "foobar" );
?>
to replace "bar" inside "foobar" with the string "23".
zaczek at gmail dot com
05-Jul-2005 04:09
If you want the function to process query strings, such as:
http://www.php.net/index.php?id=10%32&wp=test
modify the function as follows:
function hyperlink(&$text)
{
// match protocol://address/path/
$text = ereg_replace("[a-zA-Z]+://([-]*[.]?[a-zA-Z0-9_/-?&%])*", "<a href=\"\\0\">\\0</a>", $text);
// match www.something
$text = ereg_replace("(^| )(www([-]*[.]?[a-zA-Z0-9_/-?&%])*)", "\\1<a href=\"http://\\2\">\\2</a>", $text);
}
cristiklein at yahoo dot com
09-Apr-2005 02:50
Sometimes, you would like to match both styles of URL links that are common in chat windows:
http://www.yahoo.com
www.yahoo.com
You can do this by using the following code:
<?php
function hyperlink(&$text)
{
$text = ereg_replace("[a-zA-Z]+://([.]?[a-zA-Z0-9_/-])*", "<a href=\"\\0\">\\0</a>", $text);
$text = ereg_replace("(^| )(www([.]?[a-zA-Z0-9_/-])*)", "\\1<a href=\"http://\\2\">\\2</a>", $text);
}
?>
You can use this function like this:
<?php
$line = "Check the links: www.yahoo.com http://www.php.net";
hyperlink($line);
?>
bgoodman at osogrande dot com
02-Mar-2005 02:25
When you are dealing with databases you can end up with quite a few \" to deal with. To ereg_replace all these with something else it requires you to \ the \ and \ the " so you end up with:
$var1 = '\"';
$var2 = ereg_replace('\\\"','1234',$var1);
print $var2; //this should print 1234
eerie at gmx dot net
27-Feb-2005 11:44
<?php $path = ereg_replace("\\", "/", $path); ?>
as posted from mmtach at yahoo dot com causes an error because you have to escape the backslash twice, once for the quotation marks and a second time due the posix syntax.
<?php $path = ereg_replace("\\\\", "/", $path); ?>
or
<?php $path = ereg_replace('\\', "/", $path); ?>
should both work as expected. since you don't have to escape the backslash in brackets (posix syntax) his alternative works also.
|