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PHP regular-expression matching:
In php, regular expressions are strings delimited by a special character (usually
echo preg_match( '/abcd/', 'abcd' ); echo preg_match( '/abcd/', 'azcd' ); // false echo preg_match( '/a..d/', 'azcd' ); // . matches any single character (besides newline, null) echo preg_match( '/ab*cd/', 'abbbbcd' ); // b* matches 0-or-more-b's. echo preg_match( '/ab*cd/', 'abcd' ); echo preg_match( '/ab*cd/', 'acd' ); echo preg_match( '/ab+cd/', 'abbbbcd' ); // b+ matches 1-or-more-b's. echo preg_match( '/ab+cd/', 'abcd' ); echo preg_match( '/ab+cd/', 'acd' ); // false echo preg_match( '/ab.*cd/', 'abcd' ); echo preg_match( '/ab.*cd/', 'abXd' ); // .* and .+ are a common patterns. echo preg_match( '/ab.*cd/', 'abBlahBlahBlahcd' ); echo preg_match( '/ab.+cd/', 'abcd' ); // false echo preg_match( '/ab.+cd/', 'abXcd' ); echo preg_match( '/ab.+cd/', 'abBlahBlahBlahcd' ); // false echo preg_match( '/ab?cd/', 'acd' ); // b? matches 0-or-1 b echo preg_match( '/ab?cd/', 'abcd' ); echo preg_match( '/ab?cd/', 'abbbbcd' ); // false echo preg_match( '/(ab)*cd/', 'ababababcd' ); // parens do grouping echo preg_match( '/(ab)*cd/', 'abbbbcd' ); // false // WARNING: preg_match looks to see if the string *contains* a match! echo preg_match( '/row/', 'How now, brown cow?' ); // true echo preg_match( '/.ow/', 'How now, brown cow?' ); // true // Use "^" to specify the start-of-string, and "$" to specify end-of-string. echo preg_match( '/^.ow$/', 'How now, brown cow?' ); // false echo preg_match( '/^.ow$/', 'Zow' ); echo preg_match( '/^.ow/', 'Zowee' ); echo preg_match( '/w.e$/', 'Wowee Zowee' ); echo preg_match( '/[WZ]ow/', 'Wowee Zowee' ); // square-brackets match any one character from the set echo preg_match( '/[WZ]ow/', 'Yow' ); // false echo preg_match( '/[W-Z]ow/', 'Yowee' ); // square-brackets can contain a *range* echo preg_match( '/ab[0-9]+de/', 'ab789de' ); echo preg_match( '/[0-9]*/', '00047' ); // Beware: matching just a * expression (w/o ^,$)! |
Your task: What is a regular expression to match...
NOTE:
No trailing “
(There are other trailing modifiers however —
e.g. i for case-insensitive,
and more.)
Warning:
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©2012, Ian Barland, Radford University Last modified 2012.Sep.24 (Mon) |
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