Searches subject
for a match to the regular expression given in pattern
.
The pattern to search for, as a string.
The input string.
If matches
is provided, then it is filled with the results of search. $matches[0] will contain the text that matched the full pattern, $matches[1] will have the text that matched the first captured parenthesized subpattern, and so on.
flags
can be the following flag:
Normally, the search starts from the beginning of the subject string. The optional parameter offset
can be used to specify the alternate place from which to start the search (in bytes).
Note:
Using
offset
is not equivalent to passing substr($subject, $offset) to preg_match() in place of the subject string, becausepattern
can contain assertions such as ^, $ or (?<=x). Compare:<?php $subject = "abcdef"; $pattern = '/^def/'; preg_match($pattern, $subject, $matches, PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE, 3); print_r($matches); ?>The above example will output:
Array ( )while this example
<?php $subject = "abcdef"; $pattern = '/^def/'; preg_match($pattern, substr($subject,3), $matches, PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE); print_r($matches); ?>will produce
Array ( [0] => Array ( [0] => def [1] => 0 ) )
preg_match() returns 1 if the pattern
matches given subject
, 0 if it does not, or FALSE
if an error occurred.
This function may return Boolean FALSE
, but may also return a non-Boolean value which evaluates to FALSE
. Please read the section on Booleans for more information. Use the === operator for testing the return value of this function.
Returns FALSE
if offset
is higher than subject
length.
Named subpatterns now accept the syntax (?<name>) and (?'name') as well as (?P<name>). Previous versions accepted only (?P<name>).
Using offset
is not equivalent to passing substr($subject, $offset) to preg_match() in place of the subject string, because pattern
can contain assertions such as ^, $ or (?<=x). Compare:
<?php $subject = "abcdef"; $pattern = '/^def/'; preg_match($pattern, $subject, $matches, PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE, 3); print_r($matches); ?>
Array ( )
while this example
<?php $subject = "abcdef"; $pattern = '/^def/'; preg_match($pattern, substr($subject,3), $matches, PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE); print_r($matches); ?>
will produce
Array ( [0] => Array ( [0] => def [1] => 0 ) )
<?php // The "i" after the pattern delimiter indicates a case-insensitive search 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."; } ?>
<?php /* The \b in the pattern indicates a word boundary, so only the distinct * word "web" is matched, and not a word partial like "webbing" or "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."; } ?>
<?php // get host name from URL preg_match('@^(?:http://)?([^/]+)@i', "http://www.php.net/index.html", $matches); $host = $matches[1]; // get last two segments of host name preg_match('/[^.]+\.[^.]+$/', $host, $matches); echo "domain name is: {$matches[0]}\n"; ?>
The above example will output:
domain name is: php.net
<?php $str = 'foobar: 2008'; preg_match('/(?P<name>\w+): (?P<digit>\d+)/', $str, $matches); /* This also works in PHP 5.2.2 (PCRE 7.0) and later, however * the above form is recommended for backwards compatibility */ // preg_match('/(?<name>\w+): (?<digit>\d+)/', $str, $matches); print_r($matches); ?>
The above example will output:
Array ( [0] => foobar: 2008 [name] => foobar [1] => foobar [digit] => 2008 [2] => 2008 )
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