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Regex to match keyword if not enclosed by curly braces

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-03-07 11:36 出处:网络
In a PHP variable I have some text that contains some keywords. These keywords are currently capitalised. I would like them to remain capitalised and be wrapped in curly brackets but once only. I am t

In a PHP variable I have some text that contains some keywords. These keywords are currently capitalised. I would like them to remain capitalised and be wrapped in curly brackets but once only. I am trying to write upgrade code but each time it runs it wraps the keywords in another set of curly brackets.

What REGEX do I need to use to match the keyword alone without also matching it if it is {KEYWORD}.

For example, the text variable is:

$string = "BLOGNAME has posted COUNT new item(s),

TABLE

POSTTIME AUTHORNAME

You received this e-mail because you asked to be notified when new updates are posted.
Best regards,
MYNAME
EMAIL";

And my upgrade code is:

$keywords = array('BLOGNAME', 'BLOGLINK', 'TITLE', 'POST', 'POSTTIME', 'TABLE', 'TABLELINKS', 'PERMALINK', 'TINYLINK', 'DATE', 'TIME', 'MYNAME', 'EMAIL', 'AUTHORNAME', 'LINK', 'CATS', 'TAGS', 'COUNT', 'ACTION');
foreach ($keywords as $keyword) {
    $regex = '|(^\{){0,1}(\b' . $keyword . '\b)(^\}){0,1}|';
    $replace = '{' . $keyword . '}';
    $string = preg_replace($regex, $replace开发者_运维问答, $string);
}

My REGEX is currently not working well at all, it is stripping some spaces and also on each run placing more curly brackets around most (but not all) keywords. What am I doing wrong? Can someone correct my regex?


You are looking for negative assertions. They are not written using the ^ syntax as in character classes but as (?<!...) and (?!...). In your case:

'|(?<!\{)(\b' . $keyword . '\b)(?!\})|';


  • It will work if keyword does not contain special char.
  • (A1) rows can be removed from regex, if source text can not contain {keyword} or necessary to leave '{}' symbols around keywords in result text (was {keyword} need {{keyword}} for formatting as example)

$text = <<<EOF
BLOGNAME has posted COUNT new item(s),

TABLE

POSTTIME AUTHORNAME

You received this e-mail because you asked to be notified when new updates are posted.
Best regards,
MYNAME
EMAIL
EOF;

$aKeywords = array('BLOGNAME', 'BLOGLINK', 'TITLE', 'POST', 'POSTTIME', 'TABLE', 'TABLELINKS', 'PERMALINK', 'TINYLINK', 'DATE', 'TIME', 'MYNAME', 'EMAIL', 'AUTHORNAME', 'LINK', 'CATS', 'TAGS', 'COUNT', 'ACTION');
$keywords = implode('|', $aKeywords);

$reSrch = '/
            (?<!\{)             # (A1) prev symbol is not {
            \b                  # begin of word
            ('.$keywords.') # list of keywords
            \b                  # end of word
            (?!\{)              # (A1) next symbol is not {
            /xm';               //  m - multiline search & x - ignore spaces in regex

$reRepl = '{\1}';

$result = preg_replace($reSrch, $reRepl, $text);

echo '<pre>';
// echo '$reSrch:'.$reSrch.'<hr>';
echo $result.'<br>';


Why regex? Just use str_replace:

foreach ($keywords as $k) {
  $string = str_replace($k, '{'.$k.'}', $string);
}
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