4

i dont undestand the () in regexp.

eg. what is the difference between these lines:

"/hello/"
"/(hello)/"

3 Answers 3

6

() provide a way to capture matches and for grouping take a look here for a more full description.

1

By wrapping it in ( and ) you can capture it and handle it as a whole. Suppose we have the following text:

hellohello hello!

If I wanted to find the word "hello" in two's, I could do this:

/hellohello/

Or, I could do this:

/(hello){2}/
4
  • so the above example would give the same result?
    – ajsie
    Feb 20, 2010 at 5:59
  • For finding "hello" twice, yes. You could manually put it in twice if you wanted, but imagine something like /(hello){50}/. This is a very limited demonstration though.
    – Sampson
    Feb 20, 2010 at 6:00
  • nice example..gave u green one for that:) could u please explain these two () in the following code, i cant understand it: '/<a([^>]+)\>(.*?)\<\/a\>/i'
    – ajsie
    Feb 20, 2010 at 6:05
  • It's a backreference. Typically these are used to store parts of the expression for later use. You can see the following question for an example of backreferences: stackoverflow.com/questions/1695427/…
    – Sampson
    Feb 20, 2010 at 6:07
1

As you have written it, there is no actual difference between the two examples. But parantheses allow you to apply post-logic to that entire group of characters (e.g. as another poster used as an example, {2} afterwards would state the the string "hello" is typed two times in a row without anything in between - hellohello. Parantheses also allow you to use "or" statements - "/(hello|goodbye)/" would match EITHER hello OR goodbye.

The most powerful use of them however is extracting data from a string, rather than just matching it, it lets you pull the data out of the string and do what you want with it.

e.g. in PHP if you did

preg_replace( "/hello (.+)/i", "hello how are you?", $holder );`

Then $holder[1] will contain ALL the text after "hello ", which in this case would be "how are you?"

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