Neither your regular expression or the replacement string make sense. The regular expression is matching everything not in the range [a-z]
(denoted by the leading ^
), and your replacement string appears to contain regular expression syntax, which it shouldn't.
If you're trying to replace the words, your regular expression should probably look something like /[a-z]+/i
which does a case-insensitive greedy match for one or more letters.
To use the matched string in the replacement, you can use \N
, where N
is a number indicating the sub-match you want to reference. To add a sub-match, place brackets around the part of the regular expression you're interested in referencing. The regex becomes /([a-z]+)/i
.
Put them together and you get the following, which appears to give the output you're looking for.
$string = preg_replace("/([a-z]+)/i", "<a href='\\1'>\\1</a>", $string);
Note the double-backslash is an escape sequence inserting a literal backslash into the string.