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PHP Preg_match match exact word

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-01-27 16:08 出处:网络
I have stored as |1|7|11| I need开发者_Go百科 to use preg_match to check |7| is there or |11| is there etc, How do I do this?Use \\b before and after the expression to match it as a whole word only:

I have stored as |1|7|11| I need开发者_Go百科 to use preg_match to check |7| is there or |11| is there etc, How do I do this?


Use \b before and after the expression to match it as a whole word only:

$str1 = 'foo bar';       // has matches (foo, bar)
$str2 = 'barman foobar'; // no matches

$test1 = preg_match('/\b(foo|bar)\b/', $str1);
$test2 = preg_match('/\b(foo|bar)\b/', $str2);

var_dump($test1); // 1
var_dump($test2); // 0

So in your example, it would be:

$str1 = '|1|77|111|';  // has matches (1)
$str2 = '|01|77|111|'; // no matches

$test1 = preg_match('/\b(1|7|11)\b/', $str1);
$test2 = preg_match('/\b(1|7|11)\b/', $str2);

var_dump($test1); // 1
var_dump($test2); // 0


Use the faster strpos if you only need to check for the existence of two numbers.

if(strpos($mystring, '|7|') !== FALSE AND strpos($mystring, '|11|') !== FALSE)
{
    // Found them
}

Or using slower regex to capture the number

preg_match('/\|(7|11)\|/', $mystring, $match);

Use regexpal to test regexes for free.


Assuming your string always starts and ends with an | :

strpos($string, '|'.$number.'|'));


If you really want to use preg_match (even though I recommend strpos, like on Xeoncross' answer), use this:

if (preg_match('/\|(7|11)\|/', $string))
{
    //found
}
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