Can someone explain me the meaning of this pattern.
preg_match(/'^(d{1,2}([a-z]+))(?:s*)S (?=200[0-9])/','21st March 2006','$matches);
So correct me if I'm wrong:
^ = beginning of the line
d{1,2} = digit with minimum 1 and maximum 2 digits
([a-z]+) = one or more letters fro开发者_JS百科m a-z
(?:s*)S = no idea...
(?= = no idea...
200[0-9] = a number, starting with 200 and ending with a number (0-9)
Can someone complete this list?
Here's a nice diagram courtesy of strfriend:
But I think you probably meant ^(\d{1,2}([a-z]+))(?:\s*)\S (?=200[0-9])
with the backslashes, which gives this diagram:
That is, this regexp matches the beginning of the string, followed by one or two digits, one or more lowercase letters, zero or more whitespace characters, one non-whitespace character and a space. Also, all this has to be followed by a number between 2000 and 2009, although that number is not actually matched by the regexp — it's only a look-ahead assertion. Also, the leading digits and letters are captures into $matches[1]
, and just the letters into $matches[2]
.
For more information on PHP's PCRE regexp syntax, see http://php.net/manual/en/pcre.pattern.php
regular-exressions.info is very helpful resource.
/'^(d{1,2}([a-z]+))(?:s*)S (?=200[0-9])/
(?:regex)
are non-capturing parentheses; They aren't very useful in your example, but could be used to expres things like (?:bar)+
, to mean 1 or more bar
s
(?=regex)
does a positive lookahead, but matches the position not the contents. So (?=200[0-9])
in your example makes the regex match only dates in the previous decade, without matching the year itself.
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