ereg
Regular expression match
&reftitle.description;
intereg
stringpattern
stringstring
arrayregs
Searches a string for matches to the regular
expression given in pattern in a case-sensitive
way.
&reftitle.parameters;
pattern
Case sensitive regular expression.
string
The input string.
regs
If matches are found for parenthesized substrings of
pattern and the function is called with the
third argument regs, the matches will be stored
in the elements of the array regs.
$regs[1] will contain the substring which starts at the first left
parenthesis; $regs[2] will contain the substring starting at the
second, and so on. $regs[0] will contain a copy of the complete string
matched.
&reftitle.returnvalues;
Returns the length of the matched string if a match for
pattern was found in string,
or &false; if no matches were found or an error occurred.
If the optional parameter regs was not passed or
the length of the matched string is 0, this function returns 1.
&reftitle.examples;
ereg example
The following code snippet takes a date in ISO format (YYYY-MM-DD) and
prints it in DD.MM.YYYY format:
]]>
&reftitle.notes;
preg_match, which uses a Perl-compatible
regular expression syntax, is often a faster alternative to
ereg.
Up to (and including) PHP 4.1.0 $regs will be
filled with exactly ten elements, even though more or fewer than
ten parenthesized substrings may actually have matched. This has
no effect on ereg's ability to match more
substrings. If no matches are found, $regs
will not be altered by ereg.
&reftitle.seealso;
eregi
ereg_replace
eregi_replace
preg_match
strpos
strstr
quotemeta