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(PHP Extension) Regular Expression with Multiple Matches and Capture GroupsSee more Regular Expressions ExamplesDemonstrates a regular expression with multiple matches and capture groups for each match.Note: This example requires Chilkat v11.1.0 or greater.
<?php include("chilkat.php"); $success = false; $pattern = 'Name:\\s+(\\w+)\\s+(\\w+),\\s+Email:\\s+(\\S+)'; $sb = new CkStringBuilder(); $crlf = true; $sb->AppendLine('Name: John Smith, Email: john.smith@example.com',$crlf); $sb->AppendLine('Name: Jack Johnson, Email: jack.johnson@example.com',$crlf); $sb->AppendLine('Name: Mary Adams, Email: mary.adams@example.com',$crlf); print $sb->getAsString() . "\n"; // We have the following string: // Name: John Smith, Email: john.smith@example.com // Name: Jack Johnson, Email: jack.johnson@example.com // Name: Mary Adams, Email: mary.adams@example.com $json = new CkJsonObject(); $json->put_EmitCompact(false); $timeoutMs = 2000; $numMatches = $sb->RegexMatch($pattern,$json,$timeoutMs); if ($numMatches < 0) { // Probably an error in the regular expression. // Suggestion: Use AI to help create and/or diagnose regular expressions. print $sb->lastErrorText() . "\n"; exit; } // Examine the matches: print $json->emit() . "\n"; // This is the JSON with the match information. // See the JSON parsing code below to get the matched capture group values. // { // "match": [ // { // "group": [ // { // "cap": "Name: John Smith, Email: john.smith@example.com", // "idx": 0, // "len": 47 // }, // { // "cap": "John", // "idx": 6, // "len": 4 // }, // { // "cap": "Smith", // "idx": 11, // "len": 5 // }, // { // "cap": "john.smith@example.com", // "idx": 25, // "len": 22 // } // ] // }, // { // "group": [ // { // "cap": "Name: Jack Johnson, Email: jack.johnson@example.com", // "idx": 49, // "len": 51 // }, // { // "cap": "Jack", // "idx": 55, // "len": 4 // }, // { // "cap": "Johnson", // "idx": 60, // "len": 7 // }, // { // "cap": "jack.johnson@example.com", // "idx": 76, // "len": 24 // } // ] // }, // { // "group": [ // { // "cap": "Name: Mary Adams, Email: mary.adams@example.com", // "idx": 102, // "len": 47 // }, // { // "cap": "Mary", // "idx": 108, // "len": 4 // }, // { // "cap": "Adams", // "idx": 113, // "len": 5 // }, // { // "cap": "mary.adams@example.com", // "idx": 127, // "len": 22 // } // ] // } // ] // } // Important: Capture group 0 always contains the entire match — that is, the portion of the input string that matches the full regular expression. $i = 0; $matchCount = $json->SizeOfArray('match'); while ($i < $matchCount) { print 'Match ' . ($i + 1) . ':' . "\n"; $json->put_I($i); $j = 0; $numCaptureGroups = $json->SizeOfArray('match[i].group'); while ($j < $numCaptureGroups) { $json->put_J($j); $cap = $json->stringOf('match[i].group[j].cap'); print $j . ': ' . $cap . "\n"; $j = $j + 1; } $i = $i + 1; } // Capture group 0 always contains the entire match — that is, the portion of the input string that matches the full regular expression. // Output // Match 1: // 0: Name: John Smith, Email: john.smith@example.com // 1: John // 2: Smith // 3: john.smith@example.com // Match 2: // 0: Name: Jack Johnson, Email: jack.johnson@example.com // 1: Jack // 2: Johnson // 3: jack.johnson@example.com // Match 3: // 0: Name: Mary Adams, Email: mary.adams@example.com // 1: Mary // 2: Adams // 3: mary.adams@example.co ?> |
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