If all you want to do is replace "Animal|" with "Animal:" then you can do a simple str_replace
:
$check = "Apple|Orange|Animal|Dog|Grape";
$newCheck = str_replace("Animal|","Animal:"); // will be set to 'Apple|Orange|Animal:Dog|Grape'
Is that what you meant?
EDIT, FOR CASE 2:
I assume you have a string like "Apple|Orange|Animal:Dog|Cat|Grape"
, which has the category followed by 2 members of the category. From what you've said, you want to transform this string into "Apple|Orange|Animal:Dog,Cat|Grape"
with a comma separating the two group members instead of a pipe. This is more complicated than the first case - the category name could vary, and you can't do a simple str_replace
starting with the colon because the first member of the group could vary as well. For this case, you'll need to use a regular expression to match and replace the pattern of the string. Here's the code:
$check = "Apple|Orange|Animal:Dog|Cat|Grape";
$newCheck = preg_replace("#(Animal:\w+)\|#", "$1,", $check); // will be set to "Apple|Orange|Animal:Dog,Cat|Grape"
DEMO
Let me explain what this does, in case you're not familiar with regular expressions. The first argument of the preg_replace
function, "#(Animal:\w+)\|#"
, tells PHP to look for all substrings of $check
that begin with the text "Animal" followed by a colon, then a string of words with one or more character, and end with a pipe. This will look for the category name as well as the first member of that category in your string. The second argument, ":$1,"
, tells PHP to change the first pipe after this pattern into a comma. If you have a different category name, simply change the pattern you pass as the first argument to the preg_replace
function:
$check = "Apple|Orange|Animal1:Fish|Bird|Grape";
$newCheck = preg_replace("#(Animal1:\w+)\|#", "$1,", $check); // will be set to "Apple|Orange|Animal1:Fish,Bird|Grape"
Let me know if this is hard to follow!