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Using

(a{4,})

I can match 4 or more of a specific characters in a row

a aaa aaaaaa aa

and with

([0-9]{4,})

I can match 4 or more of a specific group of characters in a row

1 123 1234321 12

But I'm looking for a way to catch runs of an individual character in a string of characters. Meaning: I have a collection of strings in the range [a-zA-z0-9]. Whenever one of these characters is repeated more than 4 times, the regex should match up.

To give you a more practical example: in...

This is Teeeeeeest version 1.0.33333.4

...it should be able to match the run of the e character and the run of the 3 character.

Now, the following clearly doesn't satisfy my needs...

([a-zA-Z0-9]{4,})

...since it would simply catch all runs of the allowed chars. But I only need to catch the moments where a single character is repeated 4 or more times.

I really want to avoid looping all 64 possible characters through individual regexes with a for(...) and I'm sure there "must be a way" to do it with one regex. But since I've tried near to everything and I'mm close to hitting my head against the wall, I opted-in to hope that someone can help me with this by pushing me in the right direction.

How can I preg_match a character-run of individual characters? (aka: What would the regex look like?)

EDIT (after accepting answer)

Thanks for your answer(s) and comment(s),because the only option I found to do what I wanted was

(a{4,}|b{4,}|c{4,}|d{4,}|e{4,}|f{4,}|g{4,}|h{4,}|i{4,}|j{4,}|k{4,}|l{4,}|m{4,}|n{4,}|o{4,}|p{4,}|q{4,}|r{4,}|s{4,}|t{4,}|u{4,}|v{4,}|w{4,}|x{4,}|y{4,}|z{4,}|A{4,}|B{4,}|C{4,}|D{4,}|E{4,}|F{4,}|G{4,}|H{4,}|I{4,}|J{4,}|K{4,}|L{4,}|M{4,}|N{4,}|O{4,}|P{4,}|Q{4,}|R{4,}|S{4,}|T{4,}|U{4,}|V{4,}|W{4,}|X{4,}|Y{4,}|Z{4,}|0{4,}|1{4,}|2{4,}|3{4,}|4{4,}|5{4,}|6{4,}|7{4,}|8{4,}|9{4,})

but that just didn't feel good... and it sure doesn't look healthy either, does it? ;)

Anyway, I ended up with this...

preg_match_all('#([a-zA-Z0-9])\1{3}#',
               'This is Teeeeeeest version 1.0.33333.4',
               $matches));
var_dump($matches);
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1 Answer 1

4

You need to use the regex "backreference" capability. In your case it would be:

([a-zA-Z0-9])\1{3}

See this fiddle using your test string.

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  • Thanks for setting up that fiddle! [+1] Btw: that seems to be a pretty usable site. bookmarked
    – e-sushi
    Aug 5, 2013 at 5:32
  • Glad it was helpful, although I confess that I couldn't figure out a way to get the php variant to match multiple occurrences of the regex within a string. Aug 5, 2013 at 5:41
  • preg_match_all handles that one. ;)
    – e-sushi
    Aug 5, 2013 at 5:55

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