I have this:
str = "some html code [img]......[/img] some html code [img]......[/img]"
and I want to get this:
开发者_StackOverflow["[img]......[/img]","[img]......[/img]"]
Please don't use BBCode. It's evil.
BBCode came to life when developers were too lazy to parse HTML correctly and decided to invent their own markup language. As with all products of laziness, the result is completely inconsistent, unstandardized, and widely adopted.
Try to use a user-friendlier markup language, like Markdown (that's what Stack Overflow uses) or Textile. Both of them have parsers for Ruby:
- Maruku for Markdown
- RedCloth for Textile
If you still don't want to heed to my advice and choose to go with BBCode, don't reinvent the wheel and use a BBCode parser. To answer your question directly, there is the least desirable option: use regex.
/\[img\].*?\[\/img\]/
As seen on rubular. Although I would use /\[img\](.*?)\[\/img\]/
, so it will extract the contents inside the img
tags. Note that this is fairly fragile and will break if there are nested img
tags. Hence, the advice to use a parser.
irb(main):001:0> str = "some html code [img]......[/img] some html \
code [img]......[/img]"
"some html code [img]......[/img] some html code [img]......[/img]"
irb(main):002:0> str.scan(/\[img\].*?\[\/img\]/)
["[img]......[/img]", "[img]......[/img]"]
Keep in mind that this is a very specific answer that is based on your exact question. Change str
by, say, adding an image tag within an image tag, and all Hell will break loose.
There is a ruby BBCODE parser at Google Code.
Don't use regex for this.
str = "some html code [img]......[/img] some html code [img]......[/img]"
p str.split("[/img]").each{|x|x.sub!(/.*\[img\]/,"")}
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