2

I'm looping through some text with embedded literature references. Some of these are DOI numbers, and I need to linkify them.

Example text:

<div>Interesting article here:  doi:10.1203/00006450-199305000-00005</div>

What I've tried so far:

$html = preg_replace("\b(10[.][0-9]{4,}(?:[.][0-9]+)*/(?:(?![\"&\'<>])[[:graph:]])+)\b", "<a href='https://doi.org/\\0' target='_new'>doi:\\0</a>",$html);

This returns an empty string.

I'm expecting:

<div>Interesting article here:  <a href='https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-199305000-00005' target='_new'>doi:10.1203/00006450-199305000-00005</a></div>

Where am I going wrong?

edit 2018-01-30: updated DOI resolver per Katrin's answer below.

3 Answers 3

1

CrossRef has a recommendation, that they tested successfully on 99.3% of DOIs:

/^10.\d{4,9}/[-._;()/:A-Z0-9]+$/i

Also, the new recommended resolver resides at https://doi.org/.

1
  • Thanks, will update my question with the new resolver.
    – a coder
    Jan 30, 2018 at 18:48
1

I changed recommended pattern from CrossRef recommendation pattern, then I use this function for my Laravel project:

function is_valid_doi($doi)
{
    return preg_match('/^((http(s)?:\/\/)?(dx.)?doi.org\/)?10.\d{4,9}\/[-._;()\/:A-Z\d]+$/i', $doi);
}

hope to help you.

0

Using Regular Expression Test Tool I found an expression that works for my example text:

$pattern        = '(10[.][0-9]{4,}[^\s"/<>]*/[^\s"<>]+)';
$replacement    = "<a href='http://dx.doi.org/$0' target='1'>doi:$0</a>";
$html = preg_replace($pattern, $replacement, $html);

hth

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.