(PHP 5 >= 5.3.0, PHP 7)
preg_filter — Perform a regular expression search and replace
$pattern
, mixed $replacement
, mixed $subject
[, int $limit
= -1
[, int &$count
]] ) : mixedpreg_filter() is identical to preg_replace() except it only returns the (possibly transformed) subjects where there was a match. For details about how this function works, read the preg_replace() documentation.
Returns an array if the subject
parameter is an array, or a string otherwise.
If no matches are found or an error occurred, an empty array
is returned when subject
is an array
or NULL
otherwise.
Example #1 Example comparing preg_filter() with preg_replace()
<?php
$subject = array('1', 'a', '2', 'b', '3', 'A', 'B', '4');
$pattern = array('/\d/', '/[a-z]/', '/[1a]/');
$replace = array('A:$0', 'B:$0', 'C:$0');
echo "preg_filter returns\n";
print_r(preg_filter($pattern, $replace, $subject));
echo "preg_replace returns\n";
print_r(preg_replace($pattern, $replace, $subject));
?>
The above example will output:
preg_filter returns Array ( [0] => A:C:1 [1] => B:C:a [2] => A:2 [3] => B:b [4] => A:3 [7] => A:4 ) preg_replace returns Array ( [0] => A:C:1 [1] => B:C:a [2] => A:2 [3] => B:b [4] => A:3 [5] => A [6] => B [7] => A:4 )