PCRE 函数
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preg_match

(PHP 4, PHP 5)

preg_match执行一个正则表达式匹配

说明

int preg_match ( string $pattern , string $subject [, array &$matches [, int $flags = 0 [, int $offset = 0 ]]] )

搜索subjectpattern给定的正则表达式的一个匹配.

参数

pattern

要搜索的模式, 字符串类型.

subject

输入字符串.

matches

如果提供了参数matches, 它讲被填充为搜索结果. $matches[0]将包含完整模式匹配到的文本, $matches[1] 将包含第一个捕获子组匹配到的文本, 以此类推.

flags

flags可以被设置为以下标记值:

PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE
如果传递了这个标记, 对于每一个出现的匹配返回时会附加字符串偏移量(相对于目标字符串的). 注意: 这会改变填充到matches参数的数组, 使其每个元素成为一个由 第0个元素是匹配到的字符串, 第1个元素是该匹配字符串 在目标字符串subject中的偏移量.

offset

通常, 搜索从目标字符串的开始未知开始.可选参数offset用于 指定从目标字符串的某个未知开始搜索(单位是字节).

Note:

使用offset参数不同于向preg_match() 传递按照位置通过substr($subject, $offset)截取目标字符串结果, 因为pattern可以包含断言比如^, $ 或者(?<=x). 比较:

<?php
$subject 
"abcdef";
$pattern '/^def/';
preg_match($pattern$subject$matchesPREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE3);
print_r($matches);
?>

以上例程会输出:

Array
(
)

当这个示例使用截取后传递时

<?php
$subject 
"abcdef";
$pattern '/^def/';
preg_match($patternsubstr($subject,3), $matchesPREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE);
print_r($matches);
?>

将会产生匹配

Array
(
    [0] => Array
        (
            [0] => def
            [1] => 0
        )

)

返回值

preg_match()返回pattern的匹配次数. 它的值将是0次(不匹配)或1次, 因为preg_match()在第一次匹配后 将会停止搜索.preg_match_all()不同于此, 它会一直搜索subject 直到到达结尾. 如果发生错误preg_match()返回FALSE.

更新日志

版本 说明
5.2.2 命名子组可以接受(?<name>), (?'name') 以及(?P<name>)语法. 之前版本仅接受(?P<name>)语法.
4.3.3 增加了参数offset.
4.3.0 增加了标记PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE.
4.3.0 增加了参数flags.

范例

Example #1 查找文本字符串"php"

<?php
//模式分隔符后的"i"标记这是一个大小写不敏感的搜索
if (preg_match("/php/i""PHP is the web scripting language of choice.")) {
    echo 
"A match was found.";
} else {
    echo 
"A match was not found.";
}
?>

Example #2 查找单词"word"

<?php
/* 模式中的\b标记一个单词边界, 所以只有独立的单词"web"会被匹配, 而不会匹配
 * 单词的部分内容比如"webbing" 或 "cobweb" */
if (preg_match("/\bweb\b/i""PHP is the web scripting language of choice.")) {
    echo 
"A match was found.";
} else {
    echo 
"A match was not found.";
}

if (
preg_match("/\bweb\b/i""PHP is the website scripting language of choice.")) {
    echo 
"A match was found.";
} else {
    echo 
"A match was not found.";
}
?>

Example #3 获取URL中的域名

<?php
//从URL中获取主机名称
preg_match('@^(?:http://)?([^/]+)@i',
    
"http://www.php.net/index.html"$matches);
$host $matches[1];

//获取主机名称的后面两部分
preg_match('/[^.]+\.[^.]+$/'$host$matches);
echo 
"domain name is: {$matches[0]}\n";
?>

以上例程会输出:

domain name is: php.net

Example #4 使用命名子组

<?php

$str 
'foobar: 2008';

preg_match('/(?P<name>\w+): (?P<digit>\d+)/'$str$matches);

/* 下面例子在php 5.2.2(pcre 7.0)或更新版本下工作, 然而, 为了后向兼容, 上面的方式是推荐写法. */
// preg_match('/(?<name>\w+): (?<digit>\d+)/', $str, $matches);

print_r($matches);

?>

以上例程会输出:

Array
(
    [0] => foobar: 2008
    [name] => foobar
    [1] => foobar
    [digit] => 2008
    [2] => 2008
)

注释

Tip

如果你仅仅想要检查一个字符串是否包含另外一个字符串, 不要使用preg_match(). 使用strpos()strstr()替代完成工作会更快.

参见


PCRE 函数
在线手册:中文 英文
PHP手册
PHP手册 - N: 执行一个正则表达式匹配

用户评论:

ulli dot luftpumpe at murkymind dot de (08-Apr-2012 06:32)

Matching a backslash character can be confusing, because double escaping is needed in the pattern: first for PHP, second for the regex engine
<?php
//match newline control character:
preg_match('/\n/','\n');   //pattern matches and is stored as control character 0x0A in the pattern string
preg_match('/\\\n/','\n'); //very same match, but is stored escaped as 0x5C,0x6E in the pattern string

//trying to match "\'" (2 characters) in a text file, '\\\'' as PHP string:
$subject = file_get_contents('myfile.txt');
preg_match('/\\\'/',$subject);    //DOESN'T MATCH!!! stored as 0x5C,0x27 (escaped apostrophe), this only matches apostrophe
preg_match('/\\\\\'/',$subject);  //matches, stored as 0x5C,0x5C,0x27 (escaped backslash and unescaped apostrophe)
preg_match('/\\\\\\\/',$subject); //also matches, stored as 0x5C,0x5C,0x5C,0x27 (escaped backslash and escaped apostrophe)

//matching "\n" (2 characters):
preg_match('/\\\\n/','\\n');
preg_match('/\\\n/','\\n'); //same match - 3 backslashes are interpreted as 2 in PHP, if the following character is not escapeable
?>

Validate PAN Number (30-Mar-2012 06:13)

Validate PAN Number.
[5 Alpha][4 Number][1 Alpha]
AAAAA1111A

function isValidPAN($num){
    return preg_match("/^[A-Z]{5}[0-9]{4}[A-Z]{1}$/", $num);
}

Anonymous (30-Mar-2012 09:14)

In response to "kevin 08-Jan-2012 06:11".
Eval is dangerous and your comparison text better be sanitized before you even consider running it.
PCRE Syntax allows for named groups, which will yield associative results.

For instance
<?php
$str
= "something";
$expr = "/some(?P<capturedname>[a-z]+)/";

$results = array();

preg_match($expr, $str, $results);

var_dump($results);
?>

You'll get a result set like this:
[0] => 'something'; // this is the entire string contents that matched
[1] => 'thing'; // this is what the subgroup 1 found
[capturedname] => 'thing'; // this is what the named subgroup found.
[capturedname] = 'thing'; // notice the matched index?

aer0s (17-Mar-2012 05:15)

Simple function to return a sub-string following the preg convention. Kind of expensive, and some might say lazy but it has saved me time.

# preg_substr($pattern,$subject,[$offset]) function
# @author   aer0s
#  return a specific sub-string in a string using
#   a regular expression
# @param   $pattern   regular expression pattern to match
# @param   $subject   string to search
# @param   [$offset]   zero based match occurrence to return
#                            
# [$offset] is 0 by default which returns the first occurrence,
# if [$offset] is -1 it will return the last occurrence

function preg_substr($pattern,$subject,$offset=0){
    preg_match_all($pattern,$subject,$matches,PREG_PATTERN_ORDER);
    return $offset==-1?array_pop($matches[0]):$matches[0][$offset];
}

example:

             $pattern = "/model(\s|-)[a-z0-9]/i";
             $subject = "Is there something wrong with model 654, Model 732, and model 43xl or is Model aj45B the preferred choice?";

             echo preg_substr($pattern,$subject);
             echo preg_substr($pattern,$subject,1);
             echo preg_substr($pattern,$subject,-1);

Returns something like:

             model 654
             Model 732
             Model aj45B

Nimja (10-Feb-2012 07:12)

When using a 'bad words reject string' filter, preg_match is MUCH faster than strpos / stripos. Because in the other cases, you would need to do a foreach for each word. With efficient programming, the foreach is ONLY faster when the first word in the ban-list is found.

(for 12 words, 100,000 iterations, no word found)
stripos - Taken 1.4876 seconds.
strpos - Taken 1.4207 seconds.
preg_match - Taken 0.189 seconds.

Interesting fact:
With long words ('averylongwordtospitepreg'), the difference is only much less. Only about a 2/3rd of the time instead of 1/6th

<?php

$words
= array('word1', 'word2', 'word3', 'word4', 'word5', 'word6', 'word7', 'word8', 'word9', 'word10', 'word11', 'word12' );
$teststring = 'ThIs Is A tEsTsTrInG fOr TeStInG.';
$count = 100000;
$find = 0;

$start = microtime(TRUE);
for (
$i = 0; $i < $count; $i++) {
    foreach (
$words as $word) {
        if (
stripos($teststring, $word) !== FALSE) {
           
$find++;
            break;
        }
    }
}
echo
'stripos - Taken ' . round(microtime(TRUE) - $start, 4) . ' seconds.' . PHP_EOL;

$start = microtime(TRUE);
for (
$i = 0; $i < $count; $i++) {
    foreach (
$words as $word) {
        if (
strpos($teststring, $word) !== FALSE) {
           
$find++;
            break;
        }
    }
}
echo
'strpos - Taken ' . round(microtime(TRUE) - $start, 4) . ' seconds.' . PHP_EOL;

$start = microtime(TRUE);
$pattern = '/';
$div = '';
foreach (
$words as $word) {
   
$pattern .= $div . preg_quote($word);
   
$div = '|';
}
$pattern .= '/i';
//Pattern could easily be done somewhere else if words are static.
for ($i = 0; $i < $count; $i++) {
    if (
preg_match($pattern, $teststring)) {
       
$find++;
    }
}
$end = microtime(TRUE);
echo
'preg_match - Taken ' . round($end - $start, 4) . ' seconds.' . PHP_EOL;
?>

kevin (08-Jan-2012 02:11)

here is a little function to get an associative array instead of the numeric one.

<?php
function preg_match_assoc($pattern, $subject, $assoc, $flags = 0, $offset = 0) {
   
$matches = array();
    eval(
'preg_match($pattern, $subject, $matches, $flags, $offset);');
   
$n = 0;
    foreach(
$matches as $result) {
       
$array[$assoc[$n]] = $result;
       
$n++;
    }
    return
$array;
}
?>

example of use

<?php

$assocs
= array(
   
'all',
   
'a-1',
   
'i-1',
   
'a-2',
   
'ia-1',
   
'ia-2'
);

$test = preg_match_assoc('#([a-z]+)([0-9]+)([a-z]+)\-([a-z|0-9]+)\-([a-z|0-9]+)#', 'az45rt-df36qz-fg89ih', $assocs);

// $test will contain :
//
// array
//   'all' => string 'az45rt-df36qz-fg89ih' (length=20)
//   'a-1' => string 'az' (length=2)
//   'i-1' => string '45' (length=2)
//   'a-2' => string 'rt' (length=2)
//   'ia-1' => string 'df36qz' (length=6)
//
// Instead of :
//
// array
//   0 => string 'az45rt-df36qz-fg89ih' (length=20)
//   1 => string 'az' (length=2)
//   2 => string '45' (length=2)
//   2 => string 'rt' (length=2)
//   4 => string 'df36qz' (length=6)
//   5 => string 'fg89ih' (length=6)

?>

Jonny 5 (07-Dec-2011 05:55)

Workaround for getting the offset in UTF-8
(in some cases mb_strpos might be an option as well)

<?php
if(preg_match($pattern,$haystack,$out,PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE)) {
   
$offset = strlen(utf8_decode(substr($haystack,0,$out[0][1])));
}
?>

force at md-t dot org (26-Sep-2011 07:38)

Simple regex

Regex quick reference
[abc]     A single character: a, b or c
[^abc]     Any single character but a, b, or c
[a-z]     Any single character in the range a-z
[a-zA-Z]     Any single character in the range a-z or A-Z
^     Start of line
$     End of line
\A     Start of string
\z     End of string
.     Any single character
\s     Any whitespace character
\S     Any non-whitespace character
\d     Any digit
\D     Any non-digit
\w     Any word character (letter, number, underscore)
\W     Any non-word character
\b     Any word boundary character
(...)     Capture everything enclosed
(a|b)     a or b
a?     Zero or one of a
a*     Zero or more of a
a+     One or more of a
a{3}     Exactly 3 of a
a{3,}     3 or more of a
a{3,6}     Between 3 and 6 of a

options: i case insensitive m make dot match newlines x ignore whitespace in regex o perform #{...} substitutions only once

cmallabon at homesfactory dot com (31-Aug-2011 06:28)

Just an interesting note. Was just updating code to replace ereg() with strpos() and preg_match and the thought occured that preg_match() could be optimized to quit early when only searching if a string begins with something, for example
<?php
if(preg_match("/^http/", $url))
{
 
//do something
}
?>

 vs

<?php
if(strpos($url, "http") === 0)
{
//do something
}
?>

As I guessed, strpos() is always faster (about 2x) for short strings like a URL but for very long strings of several paragraphs (e.g. a block of XML) when the string doesn't start with the needle preg_match as twice as fast as strpos() as it doesn't scan the entire string.

So, if you are searching long strings and expect it to normally be true (e.g. validating XML), strpos() is a much faster BUT if you expect if to often fail, preg_match is the better choice.

ayman2243 at gmail dot com (31-Aug-2011 12:55)

highlight Search Words

<?php
function highlight($word, $subject) {
   
   
$split_subject = explode(" ", $subject);
   
$split_word = explode(" ", $word);

    foreach (
$split_subject as $k => $v){
           foreach (
$split_word as $k2 => $v2){
               if(
$v2 == $v){
                  
                  
$split_subject[$k] = "<span class='highlight'>".$v."</span>";
              
               }
           }
      }
     
      return
implode(' ', $split_subject);
}
?>

Khalid_Moharram at hotmail dot com (25-Aug-2011 09:36)

Well for anyone looking for email validation, according to the RFC specifications (ONLY FOR ((ENGLISH ASCII)) E-Mails).

<?php
function email_valid($temp_email) {
######## Three functions to HELP ########
       
function valid_dot_pos($email) {
           
$str_len = strlen($email);
            for(
$i=0; $i<$str_len; $i++) {
               
$current_element = $email[$i];
                if(
$current_element == "." && ($email[$i+1] == ".")) {
                    return
false;
                    break;
                }
                else {

                }
            }
            return
true;
        }
        function
valid_local_part($local_part) {
            if(
preg_match("/[^a-zA-Z0-9-_@.!#$%&'*\/+=?^`{\|}~]/", $local_part)) {
                return
false;
            }
            else {
                return
true;
            }
        }
        function
valid_domain_part($domain_part) {
            if(
preg_match("/[^a-zA-Z0-9@#\[\].]/", $domain_part)) {
                return
false;
            }
            elseif(
preg_match("/[@]/", $domain_part) && preg_match("/[#]/", $domain_part)) {
                return
false;
            }
            elseif(
preg_match("/[\[]/", $domain_part) || preg_match("/[\]]/", $domain_part)) {
               
$dot_pos = strrpos($domain_part, ".");
                if((
$dot_pos < strrpos($domain_part, "]")) || (strrpos($domain_part, "]") < strrpos($domain_part, "["))) {
                    return
true;
                }
                elseif(
preg_match("/[^0-9.]/", $domain_part)) {
                    return
false;
                }
                else {
                    return
false;
                }
            }
            else {
                return
true;
            }
        }
       
// trim() the entered E-Mail
       
$str_trimmed = trim($temp_email);
       
// find the @ position
       
$at_pos = strrpos($str_trimmed, "@");
       
// find the . position
       
$dot_pos = strrpos($str_trimmed, ".");
       
// this will cut the local part and return it in $local_part
       
$local_part = substr($str_trimmed, 0, $at_pos);
       
// this will cut the domain part and return it in $domain_part
       
$domain_part = substr($str_trimmed, $at_pos);
        if(!isset(
$str_trimmed) || is_null($str_trimmed) || empty($str_trimmed) || $str_trimmed == "") {
           
$this->email_status = "You must insert something";
            return
false;
        }
        elseif(!
valid_local_part($local_part)) {
           
$this->email_status = "Invalid E-Mail Address";
            return
false;
        }
        elseif(!
valid_domain_part($domain_part)) {
           
$this->email_status = "Invalid E-Mail Address";
            return
false;
        }
        elseif(
$at_pos > $dot_pos) {
           
$this->email_status = "Invalid E-Mail Address";
            return
false;
        }
        elseif(!
valid_local_part($local_part)) {
           
$this->email_status = "Invalid E-Mail Address";
            return
false;
        }
        elseif((
$str_trimmed[$at_pos + 1]) == ".") {
           
$this->email_status = "Invalid E-Mail Address";
            return
false;
        }
        elseif(!
preg_match("/[(@)]/", $str_trimmed) || !preg_match("/[(.)]/", $str_trimmed)) {
           
$this->email_status = "Invalid E-Mail Address";
            return
false;
        }
        else {
           
$this->email_status = "";
            return
true;
        }
}
?>

workhorse at op dot pl (11-Aug-2011 08:53)

Preg_match returns empty result trying to validate $subject with carriege returns (/n/r).
To solve it one need to use /s modifier in $pattern string.
<?php
$pattern
='/.*/s';
$valid=preg_match($pattern, $subject, $match);
?>

itworkarounds at gmail dot com (09-Aug-2011 05:08)

You can use the following code to detect non-latin (Cyrilic, Arabic, Greek...) characters:

<?php
preg_match
("/^[a-zA-Z\p{Cyrillic}0-9\s\-]+$/u", "ABC abc 1234 АБВ абв");
?>

mohammad40g at gmail dot com (02-Aug-2011 05:23)

This sample is for checking persian character:

<?php
   preg_match
("/[\x{0600}-\x{06FF}\x]{1,32}/u", '????');
?>

sun at drupal dot org (24-Jun-2011 01:56)

Basic test for invalid UTF-8 that can hi-jack IE:

<?php
$valid
= (preg_match('/^./us', $text) == 1);
?>
See http://api.drupal.org/api/drupal/includes--bootstrap.inc/function/drupal_validate_utf8/7 for details.

---

Test for valid UTF-8 and XML/XHTML character range compatibility:

<?php
$invalid
= preg_match('@[^\x9\xA\xD\x20-\x{D7FF}\x{E000}-\x{FFFD}\x{10000}-\x{10FFFF}]@u', $text)
?>
Ref: http://www.w3.org/TR/2000/REC-xml-20001006#charsets

juanmadss at gmail dot com (25-May-2011 12:00)

Testing the speed of preg_match against stripos doing insensitive case search in strings:

<?php
$string
= "Hey, how are you? I'm a string.";

// PCRE
$start = microtime(true);
for (
$i = 1; $i < 10000000; $i++) {
   
$bool = preg_match('/you/i', $string);
}
$end = microtime(true);
$pcre_lasted = $end - $start; // 8.3078360557556

// Stripos, we believe in you
$start = microtime(true);
for (
$i = 1; $i < 10000000; $i++) {
   
$bool = stripos($string, 'you') !== false;
}
$end = microtime(true);
$stripos_lasted = $end - $start; // 6.0306038856506

echo "Preg_match lasted: {$pcre_lasted}<br />Stripos lasted: {$stripos_lasted}";
?>

So unless you really need to test a string against a regular expression, always use strpos / stripos and other string functions to find characters and strings within other strings.

mulllhausen (16-May-2011 09:57)

i do a fair bit of html scraping in conjunction with curl. i always need to know if i have reached the right page or if the curl request failed. the main problem i have encountered is html tags having unexpected spaces or other characters (especially the &nbsp; character sequence) between them. for example when requesting a page with a certain manner set of post or get variables the response might be

<a href='blah'><span>data data data</span></a>

but requesting the same page with different post/get variables might give the following result:

<a href='blah'>
         &nbsp;<span>data data data</span>
</a>

to match both of these tag sequences with the same pattern i use the [\S\s]*? wildcard which basically means 'match anything at all...but not if you can help it'

so the pattern for the above sequence would be:

<?php

$page1
= "........<a href='blah'><span>data data data</span></a>.........";

$page2 = "........<a href='blah'>
         &nbsp;<span>data data data</span>
</a>
........"
;

$w = "[\s\S]*?"; //ungreedy wildcard
$pattern = "/\<a href='blah'\>$w\<span\>data data data\<\/span\>$w\<\/a\>/";

if(
preg_match($pattern, $page1, $matches)) echo "got to page 1. match: [".print_r($matches, true)."]\n";
else echo
"did not get to page 1\n";

if(
preg_match($pattern, $page2, $matches)) echo "got to page 2. match: [".print_r($matches, true)."]\n";
else echo
"did not get to page 2\n";

?>

MrBull (20-Mar-2011 03:32)

Sometimes its useful to negate a string. The first method which comes to mind to do this is: [^(string)] but this of course won't work. There is a solution, but it is not very well known. This is the simple piece of code on how a negation of a string is done:

(?:(?!string).)

?: makes a subpattern (see http://www.php.net/manual/en/regexp.reference.subpatterns.php) and ?! is a negative look ahead. You put the negative look ahead in front of the dot because you want the regex engine to first check if there is an occurrence of the string you are negating. Only if it is not there, you want to match an arbitrary character.

Hope this helps some ppl.

arash dot hemmat at gmail dot com (03-Feb-2011 03:15)

For those who search for a unicode regular expression example using preg_match here it is:

Check for Persian digits
preg_match( "/[^\x{06F0}-\x{06F9}\x]+/u" , '??????????' );

Frank (26-Jan-2011 08:12)

If someone is from a country that accepts decimal numbers in format 9.00 and 9,00 (point or comma), number validation would be like that:
<?php
$number_check
= "9,99";
if (
preg_match( '/^[\-+]?[0-9]*\.*\,?[0-9]+$/', $number_check)) {
    return
TRUE;
}
?>

However, if the number will be written in the database, most probably this comma needs to be replaced with a dot.
This can be done with use of str_replace, i.e :
<?php
$number_database
= str_replace("," , "." , $number_check);
?>

sainnr at gmail dot com (30-Dec-2010 02:12)

This sample regexp may be useful if you are working with DB field types.

(?P<type>\w+)($|\((?P<length>(\d+|(.*)))\))

For example, if you are have a such type as "varchar(255)" or "text", the next fragment

<?php
   $type
= 'varchar(255)'// type of field
  
preg_match('/(?P<type>\w+)($|\((?P<length>(\d+|(.*)))\))/', $type, $field);
  
print_r($field);
?>

will output something like this:
Array ( [0] => varchar(255) [type] => varchar [1] => varchar [2] => (255) [length] => 255 [3] => 255 [4] => 255 )

ian_channing at hotmail dot com (27-Dec-2010 09:55)

When trying to check a file path that could be windows or unix it took me quite a few tries to get the escape characters right.

The Unix directory separator must be escaped once and the windows directory separator must be escaped twice.

This will match path/to/file and path\to\file.exe

preg_match('/^[a-z0-9_.\/\\\]*$/i', $file_string);

SoN9ne at gmail dot com (08-Jun-2010 06:10)

I have been working on a email system that will automatically generate a text email from a given HTML email by using strip_tags().
The only issue I ran into, for my needs, were that the anchors would not keep their links.
I search for a little while and could not find anything to strip the links from the tags so I generated my own little snippet.
I am posting it here in hopes that others may find it useful and for later reference.

A note to keep in mind:
I was primarily concerned with valid HTML so if attributes do no use ' or " to contain the values then this will need to be tweaked.
If you can edit this to work better, please let me know.
<?php
/**
 * Replaces anchor tags with text
 * - Will search string and replace all anchor tags with text (case insensitive)
 *
 * How it works:
 * - Searches string for an anchor tag, checks to make sure it matches the criteria
 *         Anchor search criteria:
 *             - 1 - <a (must have the start of the anchor tag )
 *             - 2 - Can have any number of spaces or other attributes before and after the href attribute
 *             - 3 - Must close the anchor tag
 *
 * - Once the check has passed it will then replace the anchor tag with the string replacement
 * - The string replacement can be customized
 *
 * Know issue:
 * - This will not work for anchors that do not use a ' or " to contain the attributes.
 *         (i.e.- <a href=http: //php.net>PHP.net</a> will not be replaced)
 */
function replaceAnchorsWithText($data) {
   
/**
     * Had to modify $regex so it could post to the site... so I broke it into 6 parts.
     */
   
$regex  = '/(<a\s*'; // Start of anchor tag
   
$regex .= '(.*?)\s*'; // Any attributes or spaces that may or may not exist
   
$regex .= 'href=[\'"]+?\s*(?P<link>\S+)\s*[\'"]+?'; // Grab the link
   
$regex .= '\s*(.*?)\s*>\s*'; // Any attributes or spaces that may or may not exist before closing tag
   
$regex .= '(?P<name>\S+)'; // Grab the name
   
$regex .= '\s*<\/a>)/i'; // Any number of spaces between the closing anchor tag (case insensitive)
   
   
if (is_array($data)) {
       
// This is what will replace the link (modify to you liking)
       
$data = "{$data['name']}({$data['link']})";
    }
    return
preg_replace_callback($regex, 'replaceAnchorsWithText', $data);
}

$input  = 'Test 1: <a href="http: //php.net1">PHP.NET1</a>.<br />';
$input .= 'Test 2: <A name="test" HREF=\'HTTP: //PHP.NET2\' target="_blank">PHP.NET2</A>.<BR />';
$input .= 'Test 3: <a hRef=http: //php.net3>php.net3</a><br />';
$input .= 'This last line had nothing to do with any of this';

echo
replaceAnchorsWithText($input).'<hr/>';
?>
Will output:
Test 1: PHP.NET1(http: //php.net1).
Test 2: PHP.NET2(HTTP: //PHP.NET2).
Test 3: php.net3 (is still an anchor)
This last line had nothing to do with any of this

Posting to this site is painful...
Had to break up the regex and had to break the test links since it was being flagged as spam...

teracci2002 (09-Apr-2010 05:00)

When you use preg_match() for security purpose or huge data processing,
mayby you should make consideration for backtrack_limit and recursion_limit.
http://www.php.net/manual/en/pcre.configuration.php

These limits may bring wrong matching result.
You can verify whether you hit these limits by checking preg_last_error().
http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.preg-last-error.php

Kae Cyphet (18-Mar-2010 02:29)

for those coming over from ereg, preg_match can be quite intimidating. to get started here is a migration tip.

<?php
if(ereg('[^0-9A-Za-z]',$test_string)) // will be true if characters arnt 0-9, A-Z or a-z.

if(preg_match('/[^0-9A-Za-z]/',$test_string)) // this is the preg_match version. the /'s are now required.
?>

plasma (22-Feb-2010 12:53)

To extract scheme, host, path, ect. simply use

<?php

  $url 
= 'http://name:pass@';
 
$url .= 'example.com:10000';
 
$url .= '/path/to/file.php?a=1&amp;b=2#anchor';

 
$url_data = parse_url ( $url );

 
print_r ( $url_data );

?>
___
prints out something like:

Array
(
    [scheme] => http
    [host] => wild.subdomain.orgy.domain.co.uk
    [port] => 10000
    [user] => name
    [pass] => pass
    [path] => /path/to/file.php
    [query] => a=1&b=2
    [fragment] => anchor
)

In my tests parse_url is up to 15x faster than preg_match(_all)!

Dr@ke (18-Feb-2010 03:58)

Hello,
There is a bug with somes new PCRE versions (like:7.9 2009-04-1),
In patterns:
\w+ !== [a-zA-Z0-9]+

But it's ok, if i replace \w+ by [a-z0-9]+ or [a-zA-Z0-9]+

saberdream at live dot fr (10-Feb-2010 11:53)

I made a function to circumvent the problem of length of a string... This verifies that the link is an image.

<?php
function verifiesimage($lien, $limite) {
    if(
preg_match('#^http:\/\/(.*)\.(gif|png|jpg)$#i', $lien) && strlen($lien) < $limite )
    {
       
$msg = TRUE; // link ok
   
}
    else
    {
       
$msg = FALSE; // the link isn't image
   
}
    return
$msg; // return TRUE or FALSE
}
?>

Example :

<?php
if(verifierimage($votrelien, 50) == TRUE)
{
   
// we display the content...
}
?>

Anonymous (06-Feb-2010 04:00)

The regular expression for breaking-down a URI reference into its components:

      ^(([^:/?#]+):)?(//([^/?#]*))?([^?#]*)(\?([^#]*))?(#(.*))?
       12            3  4          5       6  7        8 9

Source: ietf.org/rfc/rfc2396.txt

cebelab at gmail dot com (24-Jan-2010 06:43)

I noticed that in order to deal with UTF-8 texts, without having to recompile php with the PCRE UTF-8 flag enabled, you can just add the following sequence at the start of your pattern: (*UTF8)

for instance : '#(*UTF8)[[:alnum:]]#' will return TRUE for 'é' where '#[[:alnum:]]#' will return FALSE

found this very very useful tip after hours of research over the web directly in pcre website right here : http://www.pcre.org/pcre.txt
there are many further informations about UTF-8 support in the lib

hop that will help!

--
cedric

Stefan (17-Nov-2009 10:47)

I spent a while replacing all my ereg() calls to preg_match(), since ereg() is now deprecated and will not be supported as of v 6.0.

Just a warning regarding the conversion, the two functions behave very similarly, but not exactly alike. Obviously, you will need to delimit your pattern with '/' or '|' characters.

The difference that stumped me was that preg_replace overwrites the $matches array regardless if a match was found. If no match was found, $matches is simply empty.

ereg(), however, would leave $matches alone if a match was not found. In my code, I had repeated calls to ereg, and was populating $matches with each match. I was only interested in the last match. However, with preg_match, if the very last call to the function did not result in a match, the $matches array would be overwritten with a blank value.

Here is an example code snippet to illustrate:

<?php
$test
= array('yes','no','yes','no','yes','no');

foreach (
$test as $key=>$value) {
 
ereg("yes",$value,$matches1);
 
preg_match("|yes|",$value,$matches2);
}
  print
"ereg result: $matches1[0]<br>";
  print
"preg_match result: $matches2[0]<br>";
?>

The output is:
ereg result: yes
preg_match result:

($matches2[0] in this case is empty)

I believe the preg_match behavior is cleaner. I just thought I would report this to hopefully save others some time.

ruakuu at NOSPAM dot com (04-Nov-2009 05:32)

Was working on a site that needed japanese and alphabetic letters and needed to
validate input using preg_match, I tried using \p{script} but didn't work:

<?php
$pattern
='/^([-a-zA-Z0-9_\p{Katakana}\p{Hiragana}\p{Han}]*)$/u'; // Didn't work
?>

So I tried with ranges and it worked:

<?php
$pattern
='/^[-a-zA-Z0-9_\x{30A0}-\x{30FF}'
        
.'\x{3040}-\x{309F}\x{4E00}-\x{9FBF}\s]*$/u';
$match_string = '印刷最安 ニキビ迹除去 ゲームボーイ';

if (
preg_match($pattern, $match_string)) {
    echo
"Found - pattern $pattern";
} else {
    echo
"Not found - pattern $pattern";
}
?>

U+4E00–U+9FBF Kanji
U+3040–U+309F Hiragana
U+30A0–U+30FF Katakana

Hope its useful, it took me several hours to figure it out.

Anonymous (12-Oct-2009 10:24)

If your regular expression does not match with long input text when you think it should, you might have hit the PCRE backtrack default limit of 100000. See http://php.net/pcre.backtrack-limit.

splattermania at freenet dot de (01-Oct-2009 01:01)

As I wasted lots of time finding a REAL regex for URLs and resulted in building it on my own, I now have found one, that seems to work for all kinds of urls:

<?php
    $regex
= "((https?|ftp)\:\/\/)?"; // SCHEME
   
$regex .= "([a-z0-9+!*(),;?&=\$_.-]+(\:[a-z0-9+!*(),;?&=\$_.-]+)?@)?"; // User and Pass
   
$regex .= "([a-z0-9-.]*)\.([a-z]{2,3})"; // Host or IP
   
$regex .= "(\:[0-9]{2,5})?"; // Port
   
$regex .= "(\/([a-z0-9+\$_-]\.?)+)*\/?"; // Path
   
$regex .= "(\?[a-z+&\$_.-][a-z0-9;:@&%=+\/\$_.-]*)?"; // GET Query
   
$regex .= "(#[a-z_.-][a-z0-9+\$_.-]*)?"; // Anchor
?>

Then, the correct way to check against the regex ist as follows:

<?php
      
if(preg_match("/^$regex$/", $url))
       {
               return
true;
       }
?>

luc _ santeramo at t yahoo dot com (03-Sep-2009 03:46)

If you want to validate an email in one line, use filter_var() function !
http://fr.php.net/manual/en/function.filter-var.php

easy use, as described in the document example :
var_dump(filter_var('bob@example.com', FILTER_VALIDATE_EMAIL));

marcosc at tekar dot net (27-Aug-2009 05:31)

When using accented characters and "?" (áéíóú?), preg_match does not work. It is a charset problem, use utf8_decode/decode to fix.

ian_channing at hotmail dot com (20-Aug-2009 02:13)

This is a function that uses regular expressions to match against the various VAT formats required across the EU.

<?php
/**
 * @param integer $country Country name
 * @param integer $vat_number VAT number to test e.g. GB123 4567 89
 * @return integer -1 if country not included OR 1 if the VAT Num matches for the country OR 0 if no match
*/
function checkVatNumber( $country, $vat_number ) {
    switch(
$country) {
        case
'Austria':
           
$regex = '/^(AT){0,1}U[0-9]{8}$/i';
            break;
        case
'Belgium':
           
$regex = '/^(BE){0,1}[0]{0,1}[0-9]{9}$/i';
            break;
        case
'Bulgaria':
           
$regex = '/^(BG){0,1}[0-9]{9,10}$/i';
            break;
        case
'Cyprus':
           
$regex = '/^(CY){0,1}[0-9]{8}[A-Z]$/i';
            break;
        case
'Czech Republic':
           
$regex = '/^(CZ){0,1}[0-9]{8,10}$/i';
            break;
        case
'Denmark':
           
$regex = '/^(DK){0,1}([0-9]{2}[\ ]{0,1}){3}[0-9]{2}$/i';
            break;
        case
'Estonia':
        case
'Germany':
        case
'Greece':
        case
'Portugal':
           
$regex = '/^(EE|EL|DE|PT){0,1}[0-9]{9}$/i';
            break;
        case
'France':
           
$regex = '/^(FR){0,1}[0-9A-Z]{2}[\ ]{0,1}[0-9]{9}$/i';
            break;
        case
'Finland':
        case
'Hungary':
        case
'Luxembourg':
        case
'Malta':
        case
'Slovenia':
           
$regex = '/^(FI|HU|LU|MT|SI){0,1}[0-9]{8}$/i';
            break;
        case
'Ireland':
           
$regex = '/^(IE){0,1}[0-9][0-9A-Z\+\*][0-9]{5}[A-Z]$/i';
            break;
        case
'Italy':
        case
'Latvia':
           
$regex = '/^(IT|LV){0,1}[0-9]{11}$/i';
            break;
        case
'Lithuania':
           
$regex = '/^(LT){0,1}([0-9]{9}|[0-9]{12})$/i';
            break;
        case
'Netherlands':
           
$regex = '/^(NL){0,1}[0-9]{9}B[0-9]{2}$/i';
            break;
        case
'Poland':
        case
'Slovakia':
           
$regex = '/^(PL|SK){0,1}[0-9]{10}$/i';
            break;
        case
'Romania':
           
$regex = '/^(RO){0,1}[0-9]{2,10}$/i';
            break;
        case
'Sweden':
           
$regex = '/^(SE){0,1}[0-9]{12}$/i';
            break;
        case
'Spain':
           
$regex = '/^(ES){0,1}([0-9A-Z][0-9]{7}[A-Z])|([A-Z][0-9]{7}[0-9A-Z])$/i';
            break;
        case
'United Kingdom':
           
$regex = '/^(GB){0,1}([1-9][0-9]{2}[\ ]{0,1}[0-9]{4}[\ ]{0,1}[0-9]{2})|([1-9][0-9]{2}[\ ]{0,1}[0-9]{4}[\ ]{0,1}[0-9]{2}[\ ]{0,1}[0-9]{3})|((GD|HA)[0-9]{3})$/i';
            break;
        default:
            return -
1;
            break;
    }
   
    return
preg_match($regex, $vat_number);
}
?>

Rob (19-Aug-2009 08:03)

The following function works well for validating ip addresses

<?php
function valid_ip($ip) {
    return
preg_match("/^([1-9]|[1-9][0-9]|1[0-9][0-9]|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])" .
           
"(\.([0-9]|[1-9][0-9]|1[0-9][0-9]|2[0-4][0-9]|25[0-5])){3}$/", $ip);
}
?>

KOmaSHOOTER at gmx dot de (09-Aug-2009 02:12)

reading files from a dir without "." or ".."
<?php
$handle
= opendir('content/pages/');
$pages = array();
while (
false !== ($file = readdir($handle))) {
     
$case=preg_match("/^[.]/",$file,$out, PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE);
     
//echo($case);
     
if(!$case){
       echo(
"$file<br />");
      
array_push($pages,$file);
       }
}
echo(
count($pages));
?>

matt (08-May-2009 09:07)

To support large Unicode ranges (ie: [\x{E000}-\x{FFFD}] or \x{10FFFFF}) you must use the modifier '/u' at the end of your expression.

daniel dot chcouri at gmail dot com (03-May-2009 02:09)

Html tags delete using regular expression

<?php
function removeHtmlTagsWithExceptions($html, $exceptions = null){
    if(
is_array($exceptions) && !empty($exceptions))
    {
        foreach(
$exceptions as $exception)
        {
           
$openTagPattern  = '/<(' . $exception . ')(\s.*?)?>/msi';
           
$closeTagPattern = '/<\/(' . $exception . ')>/msi';

           
$html = preg_replace(
                array(
$openTagPattern, $closeTagPattern),
                array(
'||l|\1\2|r||', '||l|/\1|r||'),
               
$html
           
);
        }
    }

   
$html = preg_replace('/<.*?>/msi', '', $html);

    if(
is_array($exceptions))
    {
       
$html = str_replace('||l|', '<', $html);
       
$html = str_replace('|r||', '>', $html);
    }

    return
$html;
}

// example:
print removeHtmlTagsWithExceptions(<<<EOF
<h1>Whatsup?!</h1>
Enjoy <span style="text-color:blue;">that</span> script<br />
<br />
EOF
, array(
'br'));
?>

corey [works at] effim [delete] .com (25-Apr-2009 04:52)

I see a lot of people trying to put together phone regex's and struggling (hey, no worries...they're complicated). Here's one that we use that's pretty nifty. It's not perfect, but it should work for most non-idealists.

*** Note: Only matches U.S. phone numbers. ***

<?php

// all on one line...
$regex = '/^(?:1(?:[. -])?)?(?:\((?=\d{3}\)))?([2-9]\d{2})(?:(?<=\(\d{3})\))? ?(?:(?<=\d{3})[.-])?([2-9]\d{2})[. -]?(\d{4})(?: (?i:ext)\.? ?(\d{1,5}))?$/';

// or broken up
$regex = '/^(?:1(?:[. -])?)?(?:\((?=\d{3}\)))?([2-9]\d{2})'
       
.'(?:(?<=\(\d{3})\))? ?(?:(?<=\d{3})[.-])?([2-9]\d{2})'
       
.'[. -]?(\d{4})(?: (?i:ext)\.? ?(\d{1,5}))?$/';

?>

If you're wondering why all the non-capturing subpatterns (which look like this "(?:", it's so that we can do this:

<?php

$formatted
= preg_replace($regex, '($1) $2-$3 ext. $4', $phoneNumber);

// or, provided you use the $matches argument in preg_match

$formatted = "($matches[1]) $matches[2]-$matches[3]";
if (
$matches[4]) $formatted .= " $matches[4]";

?>

*** Results: ***
520-555-5542 :: MATCH
520.555.5542 :: MATCH
5205555542 :: MATCH
520 555 5542 :: MATCH
520) 555-5542 :: FAIL
(520 555-5542 :: FAIL
(520)555-5542 :: MATCH
(520) 555-5542 :: MATCH
(520) 555 5542 :: MATCH
520-555.5542 :: MATCH
520 555-0555 :: MATCH
(520)5555542 :: MATCH
520.555-4523 :: MATCH
19991114444 :: FAIL
19995554444 :: MATCH
514 555 1231 :: MATCH
1 555 555 5555 :: MATCH
1.555.555.5555 :: MATCH
1-555-555-5555 :: MATCH
520-555-5542 ext.123 :: MATCH
520.555.5542 EXT 123 :: MATCH
5205555542 Ext. 7712 :: MATCH
520 555 5542 ext 5 :: MATCH
520) 555-5542 :: FAIL
(520 555-5542 :: FAIL
(520)555-5542 ext .4 :: FAIL
(512) 555-1234 ext. 123 :: MATCH
1(555)555-5555 :: MATCH

daevid at daevid dot com (06-Mar-2009 11:18)

I just learned about named groups from a Python friend today and was curious if PHP supported them, guess what -- it does!!!

http://www.regular-expressions.info/named.html

<?php
   preg_match
("/(?P<foo>abc)(.*)(?P<bar>xyz)/",
                      
'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz',
                      
$matches);
  
print_r($matches);
?>

will produce:

Array
(
    [0] => abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
    [foo] => abc
    [1] => abc
    [2] => defghijklmnopqrstuvw
    [bar] => xyz
    [3] => xyz
)

Note that you actually get the named group as well as the numerical key
value too, so if you do use them, and you're counting array elements, be
aware that your array might be bigger than you initially expect it to be.

wjaspers4 [at] gmail [dot] com (27-Feb-2009 11:16)

I recently encountered a problem trying to capture multiple instances of named subpatterns from filenames.
Therefore, I came up with this function.

The function allows you to pass through flags (in this version it applies to all expressions tested), and generates an array of search results.

Enjoy!

<?php

/**
 * Allows multiple expressions to be tested on one string.
 * This will return a boolean, however you may want to alter this.
 *
 * @author William Jaspers, IV <wjaspers4@gmail.com>
 * @created 2009-02-27 17:00:00 +6:00:00 GMT
 * @access public
 *
 * @param array $patterns An array of expressions to be tested.
 * @param String $subject The data to test.
 * @param array $findings Optional argument to store our results.
 * @param mixed $flags Pass-thru argument to allow normal flags to apply to all tested expressions.
 * @param array $errors A storage bin for errors
 *
 * @returns bool Whether or not errors occurred.
 */
function preg_match_multiple(
  array
$patterns=array(),
 
$subject=null,
  &
$findings=array(),
 
$flags=false,
  &
$errors=array()
) {
  foreach(
$patterns as $name => $pattern )
  {
    if(
1 <= preg_match_all( $pattern, $subject, $found, $flags ) )
    {
     
$findings[$name] = $found;
    } else
    {
      if(
PREG_NO_ERROR !== ( $code = preg_last_error() ))
      {
       
$errors[$name] = $code;
      } else
$findings[$name] = array();
    }
  }
  return (
0===sizeof($errors));
}
?>

skds1433 at hotmail dot com (19-Feb-2009 02:41)

here is a small tool for someone learning to use regular expressions. it's very basic, and allows you to try different patterns and combinations. I made it to help me, because I like to try different things, to get a good understanding of how things work.

<?php
$search
= isset($_POST['search'])?$_POST['search']:"//";
$match = isset($_POST['match'])?$_POST['match']:"<>";

echo
'<form method="post">';
echo
's: <input style="width:400px;" name="search" type="text" value="'.$search.'" /><br />';
echo
'm:<input style="width:400px;" name="match" type="text" value="'.$match.'" /><input type="submit" value="go" /></form><br />';
if (
preg_match($search, $match)){echo "matches";}else{echo "no match";}
?>

akniep at rayo dot info (30-Jan-2009 11:05)

Bugs of preg_match (PHP-version 5.2.5)

In most cases, the following example will show one of two PHP-bugs discovered with preg_match depending on your PHP-version and configuration.

<?php

$text
= "test=";
// creates a rather long text
for ($i = 0; $i++ < 100000;)
   
$text .= "%AB";

// a typical URL_query validity-checker (the pattern's function does not matter for this example)
$pattern    = '/^(?:[;\/?:@&=+$,]|(?:[^\W_]|[-_.!~*\()\[\] ])|(?:%[\da-fA-F]{2}))*$/';
   
var_dump( preg_match( $pattern, $text ) );

?>

Possible bug (1):
=============
On one of our Linux-Servers the above example crashes PHP-execution with a C(?) Segmentation Fault(!). This seems to be a known bug (see http://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=40909), but I don't know if it has been fixed, yet.
If you are looking for a work-around, the following code-snippet is what I found helpful. It wraps the possibly crashing preg_match call by decreasing the PCRE recursion limit in order to result in a Reg-Exp error instead of a PHP-crash.

<?php
[...]

// decrease the PCRE recursion limit for the (possibly dangerous) preg_match call
$former_recursion_limit = ini_set( "pcre.recursion_limit", 10000 );

// the wrapped preg_match call
$result = preg_match( $pattern, $text );

// reset the PCRE recursion limit to its original value
ini_set( "pcre.recursion_limit", $former_recursion_limit );

// if the reg-exp fails due to the decreased recursion limit we may not make any statement, but PHP-execution continues
if ( PREG_RECURSION_LIMIT_ERROR === preg_last_error() )
{
   
// react on the failed regular expression here
   
$result = [...];
   
   
// do logging or email-sending here
   
[...]
}
//if

?>

Possible bug (2):
=============
On one of our Windows-Servers the above example does not crash PHP, but (directly) hits the recursion-limit. Here, the problem is that preg_match does not return boolean(false) as expected by the description / manual of above.
In short, preg_match seems to return an int(0) instead of the expected boolean(false) if the regular expression could not be executed due to the PCRE recursion-limit. So, if preg_match results in int(0) you seem to have to check preg_last_error() if maybe an error occurred.

Alex Zinchenko (11-Dec-2008 02:15)

If you need to check whether string is a serialized representation of variable(sic!) you can use this :

<?php

$string
= "a:0:{}";
if(
preg_match("/(a|O|s|b)\x3a[0-9]*?
((\x3a((\x7b?(.+)\x7d)|(\x22(.+)\x22\x3b)))|(\x3b))/"
, $string))
{
echo
"Serialized.";
}
else
{
echo
"Not serialized.";
}

?>

But don't forget, string in serialized representation could be VERY big,
so match work can be slow, even with fast preg_* functions.

phil dot taylor at gmail dot com (23-Oct-2008 01:01)

If you need to check for .com.br and .com.au and .uk and all the other crazy domain endings i found the following expression works well if you want to validate an email address. Its quite generous in what it will allow

<?php

        $email_address
= "phil.taylor@a_domain.tv";

    if (
preg_match("/^[^@]*@[^@]*\.[^@]*$/", $email_address)) {
        return
"E-mail address";       
    }
       
?>

Steve Todorov (03-Oct-2008 02:23)

While I was reading the preg_match documentation I didn't found how to match an IP..
Let's say you need to make a script that is working with ip/host and you want to show the hostname - not the IP.

Well this is the way to go:

<?php
/* This is an ip that is "GET"/"POST" from somewhere */
$ip = $_POST['ipOrHost'];

if(
preg_match('/(\d+).(\d+).(\d+).(\d+)/',$ip))
 
$host = gethostbyaddr($ip);
else
 
$host = gethostbyname($ip);

echo
$host;
?>

This is a really simple script made for beginners !
If you'd like you could add restriction to the numbers.
The code above will accept all kind of numbers and we know that IP address could be MAX 255.255.255.255 and the example accepts to 999.999.999.999.

Wish you luck!

Best wishes,
Steve

Ashus (12-Sep-2008 04:18)

If you need to match specific wildcards in IP address, you can use this regexp:

<?php

$ip
= '10.1.66.22';
$cmp = '10.1.??.*';

$cnt = preg_match('/^'
    
.str_replace(
     array(
'\*','\?'),
     array(
'(.*?)','[0-9]'),
    
preg_quote($cmp)).'$/',
    
$ip);

echo
$cnt;

?>

where '?' is exactly one digit and '*' is any number of any characters. $cmp mask can be provided wild by user, $cnt equals (int) 1 on match or 0.

wjaspers4[at]gmail[dot]com (28-Aug-2008 03:55)

I found this rather useful for testing mutliple strings when developing a regex pattern.
<?php
/**
 * Runs preg_match on an array of strings and returns a result set.
 * @author wjaspers4[at]gmail[dot]com
 * @param String $expr The expression to match against
 * @param Array $batch The array of strings to test.
 * @return Array
 */
function preg_match_batch( $expr, $batch=array() )
{
// create a placeholder for our results
   
$returnMe = array();

// for every string in our batch ...
   
foreach( $batch as $str )
    {
// test it, and dump our findings into $found
       
preg_match($expr, $str, $found);

// append our findings to the placeholder
       
$returnMe[$str] = $found;
    }

    return
$returnMe;
}
?>

Dino Korah AT webroot DOT com (09-Jul-2008 12:11)

preg_match and preg_replace_callback doesnt match up in the structure of the array that they fill-up for a match.
preg_match, as the example shows, supports named patterns, whereas preg_replace_callback doesnt seem to support it at all. It seem to ignore any named pattern matched.

jonathan dot lydall at gmail dot removethispart dot com (26-May-2008 08:50)

Because making a truly correct email validation function is harder than one may think, consider using this one which comes with PHP through the filter_var function (http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.filter-var.php):

<?php
$email
= "someone@domain .local";

if(!
filter_var($email, FILTER_VALIDATE_EMAIL)) {
    echo
"E-mail is not valid";
} else {
    echo
"E-mail is valid";
}
?>