composer/pcre
PCRE wrapping library that offers type-safe preg_*
replacements.
This library gives you a way to ensure preg_*
functions do not fail silently, returning
unexpected null
s that may not be handled.
As of 3.0 this library enforces PREG_UNMATCHED_AS_NULL
usage
for all matching and replaceCallback functions, read more below
to understand the implications.
It thus makes it easier to work with static analysis tools like PHPStan or Psalm as it
simplifies and reduces the possible return values from all the preg_*
functions which
are quite packed with edge cases.
This library is a thin wrapper around preg_*
functions with some limitations.
If you are looking for a richer API to handle regular expressions have a look at
rawr/t-regx instead.
Installation
Install the latest version with:
$ composer require composer/pcre
Requirements
- PHP 7.4.0 is required for 3.x versions
- PHP 7.2.0 is required for 2.x versions
- PHP 5.3.2 is required for 1.x versions
Basic usage
Instead of:
if (preg_match('{fo+}', $string, $matches)) { ... }
if (preg_match('{fo+}', $string, $matches, PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE)) { ... }
if (preg_match_all('{fo+}', $string, $matches)) { ... }
$newString = preg_replace('{fo+}', 'bar', $string);
$newString = preg_replace_callback('{fo+}', function ($match) { return strtoupper($match[0]); }, $string);
$newString = preg_replace_callback_array(['{fo+}' => fn ($match) => strtoupper($match[0])], $string);
$filtered = preg_grep('{[a-z]}', $elements);
$array = preg_split('{[a-z]+}', $string);
You can now call these on the Preg
class:
use Composer\Pcre\Preg;
if (Preg::match('{fo+}', $string, $matches)) { ... }
if (Preg::matchWithOffsets('{fo+}', $string, $matches)) { ... }
if (Preg::matchAll('{fo+}', $string, $matches)) { ... }
$newString = Preg::replace('{fo+}', 'bar', $string);
$newString = Preg::replaceCallback('{fo+}', function ($match) { return strtoupper($match[0]); }, $string);
$newString = Preg::replaceCallbackArray(['{fo+}' => fn ($match) => strtoupper($match[0])], $string);
$filtered = Preg::grep('{[a-z]}', $elements);
$array = Preg::split('{[a-z]+}', $string);
The main difference is if anything fails to match/replace/.., it will throw a Composer\Pcre\PcreException
instead of returning null
(or false in some cases), so you can now use the return values safely relying on
the fact that they can only be strings (for replace), ints (for match) or arrays (for grep/split).
Additionally the Preg
class provides match methods that return bool
rather than int
, for stricter type safety
when the number of pattern matches is not useful:
use Composer\Pcre\Preg;
if (Preg::isMatch('{fo+}', $string, $matches)) // bool
if (Preg::isMatchAll('{fo+}', $string, $matches)) // bool
Finally the Preg
class provides a few *StrictGroups
method variants that ensure match groups
are always present and thus non-nullable, making it easier to write type-safe code:
use Composer\Pcre\Preg;
// $matches is guaranteed to be an array of strings, if a subpattern does not match and produces a null it will throw
if (Preg::matchStrictGroups('{fo+}', $string, $matches))
if (Preg::matchAllStrictGroups('{fo+}', $string, $matches))
Note: This is generally safe to use as long as you do not have optional subpatterns (i.e. (something)?
or (something)*
or branches with a |
that result in some groups not being matched at all).
A subpattern that can match an empty string like (.*)
is not optional, it will be present as an
empty string in the matches. A non-matching subpattern, even if optional like (?:foo)?
will anyway not be present in
matches so it is also not a problem to use these with *StrictGroups
methods.
If you would prefer a slightly more verbose usage, replacing by-ref arguments by result objects, you can use the Regex
class:
use Composer\Pcre\Regex;
// this is useful when you are just interested in knowing if something matched
// as it returns a bool instead of int(1/0) for match
$bool = Regex::isMatch('{fo+}', $string);
$result = Regex::match('{fo+}', $string);
if ($result->matched) { something($result->matches); }
$result = Regex::matchWithOffsets('{fo+}', $string);
if ($result->matched) { something($result->matches); }
$result = Regex::matchAll('{fo+}', $string);
if ($result->matched && $result->count > 3) { something($result->matches); }
$newString = Regex::replace('{fo+}', 'bar', $string)->result;
$newString = Regex::replaceCallback('{fo+}', function ($match) { return strtoupper($match[0]); }, $string)->result;
$newString = Regex::replaceCallbackArray(['{fo+}' => fn ($match) => strtoupper($match[0])], $string)->result;
Note that preg_grep
and preg_split
are only callable via the Preg
class as they do not have
complex return types warranting a specific result object.
See the MatchResult, MatchWithOffsetsResult, MatchAllResult, MatchAllWithOffsetsResult, and ReplaceResult class sources for more details.
Restrictions / Limitations
Due to type safety requirements a few restrictions are in place.
- matching using
PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE
is made available viamatchWithOffsets
andmatchAllWithOffsets
. You cannot pass the flag tomatch
/matchAll
. Preg::split
will also rejectPREG_SPLIT_OFFSET_CAPTURE
and you should usesplitWithOffsets
instead.matchAll
rejectsPREG_SET_ORDER
as it also changes the shape of the returned matches. There is no alternative provided as you can fairly easily code around it.preg_filter
is not supported as it has a rather crazy API, most likely you should rather usePreg::grep
in combination with some loop andPreg::replace
.replace
,replaceCallback
andreplaceCallbackArray
do not support an array$subject
, only simple strings.- As of 2.0, the library always uses
PREG_UNMATCHED_AS_NULL
for matching, which offers much saner/more predictable results. As of 3.0 the flag is also set forreplaceCallback
andreplaceCallbackArray
.
PREG_UNMATCHED_AS_NULL
As of 2.0, this library always uses PREG_UNMATCHED_AS_NULL for all match*
and isMatch*
functions. As of 3.0 it is also done for replaceCallback
and replaceCallbackArray
.
This means your matches will always contain all matching groups, either as null if unmatched or as string if it matched.
The advantages in clarity and predictability are clearer if you compare the two outputs of running this with and without PREG_UNMATCHED_AS_NULL in $flags:
preg_match('/(a)(b)*(c)(d)*/', 'ac', $matches, $flags);
no flag | PREG_UNMATCHED_AS_NULL |
---|---|
array (size=4) | array (size=5) |
0 => string 'ac' (length=2) | 0 => string 'ac' (length=2) |
1 => string 'a' (length=1) | 1 => string 'a' (length=1) |
2 => string '' (length=0) | 2 => null |
3 => string 'c' (length=1) | 3 => string 'c' (length=1) |
4 => null | |
group 2 (any unmatched group preceding one that matched) is set to '' . You cannot tell if it matched an empty string or did not match at all |
group 2 is null when unmatched and a string if it matched, easy to check for |
group 4 (any optional group without a matching one following) is missing altogether. So you have to check with isset() , but really you want isset($m[4]) && $m[4] !== '' for safety unless you are very careful to check that a non-optional group follows it |
group 4 is always set, and null in this case as there was no match, easy to check for with $m[4] !== null |
License
composer/pcre is licensed under the MIT License, see the LICENSE file for details.