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After seeing some errors showing up in our apache logs, I've been trying to figure out 'why'. The errors related to a preg_match command where I was trying to find strings that started with a backslash character:

preg_match('/^\\/',$str)

It was reporting "preg_match(): No ending delimiter '/' found"

Out of curiousity I tried double instead of single quotes, and combinations from 1 to 6 backslashes and it always reports the same error. (I ended up switching the test to if(substr($str,0,1) == "\") {} instead for the time being)

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  • Why not substr($str, 0, 1) === '\\' or even $str[0] === '\\'?
    – Gumbo
    Jun 11, 2013 at 19:28
  • @Gumbo: I had to think twice about === to realize that it is indeed required to eliminate false positives. Did you do that on purpose or just a good habit? Thanks for the "mental correction"! :-)
    – Jon
    Jun 11, 2013 at 19:30
  • @Gumbo: ...aaand it turns out it's not required after all. WTF php, I thought '0' == '\\' is true because the first is numeric. I need to stop using that language. ;-)
    – Jon
    Jun 11, 2013 at 19:35
  • @Jon Just a habit. If I expect the result being the same data type as the value I’m comparing it to, I’ll use ===.
    – Gumbo
    Jun 11, 2013 at 19:37
  • @Gumbo: Good habit. I don't do that enough.
    – Jon
    Jun 11, 2013 at 19:37

4 Answers 4

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This is because \\ inside a string literal is translated to a single \ by PHP.

Therefore your regular expression is /^\/, where \ makes the trailing slash be translated literally as a slash and not as the ending delimiter. That leaves the regex without an ending delimiter, so PCRE complains.

The result you would want to have is /^\\/, and to put that inside a string literal you need to double the backslashes, so:

preg_match('/^\\\\/',$str)

That said, if($str[0] === '\\') is much easier to read and faster to execute.

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Because \\ will be escaped as a single \ you'll need to do:

preg_match('/^\\\\/',$str)
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  • 1
    Yeah, just figured that out - thanks. Not sure what I did the first time I tried that but I got the same error regardless. Got it to work when rebuilding my test-code from scratch.
    – Scott
    Jun 11, 2013 at 19:28
  • Nice, then select this option as the answer to help others.
    – Skatox
    Jun 11, 2013 at 19:36
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OK, weird, I just ran my tests again from scratch and got it working this time with 4 backslashes as I would have expected. My initial thought was the single quotes was still using the first \ to qualify the second. So I tried four but must have screwed something else up in the syntax.

if(preg_match('/^\\\\/', $str)) {}

The above works.

-2

I think this might have to do with ' (single quote)

Try changing them to double quotes ". Two \ should be enough.

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