Can you use back references in the pattern part of a regular expression?
Is there a way to back reference in the regular expression pattern?
Example input string:
Here is "some quoted" text.
Say I want to pull out the quoted text, I could create the following expression:
"([^"]+)"
This regular expression would match some quoted
.
Say I want it to also support single quotes, I could change the expression to:
["']([^"']+)["']
But what if the inp开发者_高级运维ut string has a mixture of quotes say Here is 'some quoted" text.
I would not want the regex to match. Currently the regex in the second example would still match.
What I would like to be able to do is if the first quote is a double quote then the closing quote must be a double. And if the start quote is single quote then the closing quote must be single.
Can I use a back reference to achieve this?
My other related question: Getting text between quotes using regular expression
You can make use of the regex:
(["'])[^"']+\1
()
: used for grouping[..]
: is the char class. so["']
matches either"
or'
equivalent to"|'
[^..]
: char class with negation. It matches any char not listed after the^
+
: quantifier for one or more\1
: backreferencing the first group which is(["'])
In PHP
you'd use this as:
preg_match('#(["\'])[^"\']+\1#',$str)
preg_match('/(["\'])([^"\']+)\1/', 'Here is \'quoted text" some quoted text.');
Explanation: (["'])([^"']+)\1/
I placed the first quote in parentheses. Because this is the first grouping, it's back reference number is 1. Then, where the closing quote would be, I placed \1 which means whichever character was matched in group 1.
/"\(.*?\)".*?\1/
should work, but it depends on the regular expression engine
This is old. But you need to provide the $matches
variable in preg_match($pattern, $subject, &$matches)
Then you can use it var_dump($matches)
see https://www.php.net/manual/en/function.preg-match
精彩评论