2

I am newbie to regular expression and I have this simple doubt.

I have found this code in wordpress

$self = preg_replace('|^.*/wp-admin/|i', '', $self); 

according to the doc on php.net | is not permissible as delimiter..

Can someone explain the code?

1 Answer 1

3

Have you tried it?

From your link:

When using the PCRE functions, it is required that the pattern is enclosed by delimiters. A delimiter can be any non-alphanumeric, non-backslash, non-whitespace character.

So | is a perfectly valid delimiter. When you read the comments on that page, they suggest to not use meta characters (like |) as delimiters, when they should be used inside the regex.

Since there is no alternation in your example $self = preg_replace('|^.*/wp-admin/|i', '', $self); there is no problem and it is working as expected.

When you have an alternation in the regex (e.g. preg_match("|(F|f)oo|", "Foobar")) you will get a warning "Unknown modifier 'f'", because the interpreter thinks the regex does end at the first alternation.

Conclusion: It's allowed, but not recommended to use regex meta-characters like |, ^, +, ... as regex delimiters.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.