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+ Techno World Inc - The Best Technical Encyclopedia Online! » Forum » THE TECHNO CLUB [ TECHNOWORLDINC.COM ] » Techno Articles » Webmaster » Web Development
 Introduction To Regular Expressions In PHP
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Introduction To Regular Expressions In PHP
« Posted: July 28, 2007, 11:35:25 AM »


In Linux and Unix, the syntax that is commonly used by many applications for specifying text patterns is known as regular expressions or in short form - regex. Regex is a very powerful technique to describe patterns and many programs use them to describe sequences of characters to be matched. Search programs such as 'grep' rely heavily on regex. Basically regex forms the core in the linux world. Many scripting languages such as perl, ruby, php...etc has build in regex functions as well. So you can see, learning regular expression is important because they are used alot in many places and probably more so in the future.

Regex can be scary at first but if you can get the basics, it is really not too hard to understand. In this article, we are going to look at how regex comes into the picture when writing php applications.

To do a quick summary so far, a regular expression is a sequence of literal characters, wildcards, modifiers and anchors.

Literal Characters

Literal characters are letters, digits and special characters that match only themselves. Examples are abc, 123, ~@ and so on (some characters are reserved though).

- An inclusion range [m-n] matches one of any character included in the range from m to n.

Example '[a-z]' will match any alpha character that falls within the a to z range.

- An exclusion range [^m-n] matches one of any character not included in the range from m to n. Example '[^0-9]' will match any non-digit character.

- A period "." matches any character. It is also known as the wildcard. Example 'a.c' will match 'aec', 'acc', 'a@a' and so on.

- The escape character '' enable interpretation of special characters. Example 'a.c' will match 'ac' only. Remember that '.' is a reserved character to represent a wildcard? Therefore to match a period, ie '.', we need to escape it like so '.'

- The expression [:alnum:] will match all alpha-numeric characters. It is a shortcut to [A-Za-z0-9]. As you can see, it is not really a shortcut. The expression [:alnum:] might be easier to remember for some people.

- The expression [:alpha:] will match all alpha characters. It is a shortcut to [A-Za-z].

- The expression [:blank:] will match a space or tab.

- The expression [:digit:] will match a numeric digit. It is a shortcut to [0-9].

- The expression [:lower:] will match all lowercase letters. It is a shortcut to [a-z].

- The expression [:upper:] will match all uppercase letters. It is a shortcut to [A-Z].

- The expression [ unct:] will match all printable characters, excluding spaces and alphanumerics.

- The expression [:space:] will match a whitespace character.

Modifiers

A modifier alters the meaning of the immediately preceding pattern character.

- An asterisk ('*') matches 0 or more of the preceding term. Example 'a*' will match '', 'a', 'aa', 'aaaaa' and so on (Note the use of ''. It simply means that the expression matches nothing as well).

- A question mark ('?') matches 0 or 1 of the preceding term. Example 'a?' will match '' and 'a' only.

- A plus sign ('+') matches 1 or more of the preceding term. Example 'a+' will match 'a', 'aaaaaaa' and so on. It will not match ''.

- {m,n} matches between m and n occurences of the preceding term. Example 'a{1,3}' will match 'a', 'aa' and 'aaa' only.

- {n} matches exactly n occurences of the preceding term. Example 'a{2}' will match 'aa' only.

Anchors

Anchors establish the context for the pattern such as "the beginning of a word" or "end of word".

- The pike '^' marks the beginning of a line. Example '^http' will match any new line that starts with 'http'.

- The dollar sign '$' marks the end of a line. Example 'after$' will match any line that ends with 'after'. (Variables in php starts with $. Try not to confuse with it).

Grouping

Grouping ' )' allows modifiers to apply to groups of regex specifiers instead of only the immediately proceding specifier. Example ' aa | bb )' will match either 'aa' or 'bb'

Enough of boring stuff, it is time to put what the theory of regex into good use.

PHP Implementation

There are 2 main variants of regex, Perl-compatible regex (PCRE) and POSIX-Extended. PHP offers quite alot of functions to implement these 2 types of regex. In PHP, the most commonly used PCRE function is 'preg_match' and in POSIX-extended regex, 'ereg'. Both syntax are slightly different but equally powerful. The preference to use 'preg_match' or 'ereg' is entirely up to individual although Zend suggested that preg_match is slightly faster. I prefer to use 'eregi' simply because of my background in linux administration.

Example 1: Matching United States 5 or 9 digit zip codes

Zip codes in USA have the following format ##### or #####-#### where # is a digit. If you want to verify the zip code submitted say from an online form, you will need to use regex somewhere in your script to verify it. The matching POSIX-extended regex pattern will be:

[[:digit:]]{5}(-[[:digit:]]{4})?

Confused? Wait, let me explain why. This regex is split up into 2 parts: [[:digit:]]{5} and (-[[:digit:]]{4})?.

First Part: '[[:digit:]]' means the digit range and {5} means that the digit must occur 5 times.

Second Part: The bracket ' )' groups the '-[[:digit:]]{4}' together and the '?' means the expression ' -[[:digit:]]{4})' can either occur 0 or 1 time.

To implement the regex in PHP, we use the following code:

$zipCodes = 'xxxxx-xxxx';

$pattern = '[[:digit:]]{5}(-[[:digit:]]{4})?';

if (ereg($pattern,$zipCodes)) {

echo "matched found ";

}

else {

echo "match not found";

}

Example 2: Matching Dates

Say we want to verify the dates entered by the user. If we only accept dates like "YYYY-MM-DD" or "YYYY-M-D", the regex pattern will be

[0-9]{4}(-[0-9]{1,2})+

The '+' behind the term (-[0-9]{1,2}) means that the term must occur at least once. Note that I can also rewrite the regex as:

[[:digit:]]{4}(-[[:digit:]]{1,2})+

or

[0-9]{4}-[0-9]{1,2}-[0-9]{1,2}

As you can see, there can be many solutions to a problem...

Conclusion

Regex may be hard to digest at first but the logic is simple if you are able to practice more. Learning regex is as important as learning PHP. More examples can be seen at web-developer.sitecritic.net. Good luck.

Bernard Peh is a great passioner of web technologies and one of the co-founders of Sitecritic.net Site Reviews. He works with experienced web designers and developers for more than 5 years, developing and designing commercial and non-commercial websites. During his free time, he does website reviews, freelance SEO and PHP work. Visit his blog at Melbourne PHP

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