13.4.1 Problem
13.4.2 Solution
Use preg_match_all( ) to pull
all the matches into an array; then pick out the specific matches you're
interested in:
preg_match_all ("/$pattern/$modifiers", $string, $matches)
foreach($matches[1] as $match) {
print "$match\n";
}
13.4.3 Discussion
Unlike in Perl, PHP's Perl-compatible regular expressions don't
support the /g modifier that allows you to loop through the string one
match at a time. You need to use preg_match_all( ) instead of
preg_match( ).
The preg_match_all( ) function returns a
two-dimensional array. The first element holds an array of matches of the
complete pattern. The second element also holds an array of matches, but of the
parenthesized submatches within each complete match. So, to get the third
potato, you access the third element of the second element of the
$matches array:
$potatoes = 'one potato two potato three potato four';
preg_match_all("/(\w+)\s+potato\b/", $potatoes, $matches);
print $matches[1][2];
three
Instead of returning an array divided into full matches and
then submatches, preg_match_all( ) returns an array divided by matches,
with each submatch inside. To trigger this, pass PREG_SET_ORDER in as
the fourth argument. Now, three isn't in $matches[1][2], as
previously, but in $matches[2][1].
Check the return value of preg_match_all( ) to find
the number of matches:
print preg_match_all("/(\w+)\s+potato\b/", $potatoes, $matches);
3
Note that there are only three matches, not four, because
there's no trailing potato after the word four in the string.