1

I have the following snippet where I would like to extract code between the {foreach} and {/foreach} using a regular expression:

{foreach (...)}
Some random HTML content <div class="">aklakdls</div> and some {$/r/template} markup inside.
{/foreach}

I already have:

{foreach [^}]*}

but I am unable to match anything after that. Is there any way to match anything BUT {/foreach} as a whole token? Please note that the content between {foreach}{/foreach} can also contain "{$" tokens.

Edit: BaileyP's & Tomalak's answers are correct, but I have chosen BaileyP's answer for simplicity sake.

2 Answers 2

5

I came up with this

/(?:{foreach .*?})(.*?)(?:{\/foreach})/gis

Tested with RegExr

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  • Yeah. I'm feeling a bit stupid now. :-D Sometimes I think a bit too complicated, was typing up the same thing just now. +1
    – Tomalak
    Dec 4, 2008 at 18:26
  • It's not foolproof, of course. Nested foreach loops will break it - but that's a problem you can't solve with regular expressions alone anyway. Dec 4, 2008 at 18:40
  • You can do nested foreach loops with Perl6 Grammars, and Perl 5.10 regexps. Dec 4, 2008 at 20:32
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If your regex flavor did not support non-greedy matching, the following would do it, but since it does I recommend @BaileyP's answer.

\{foreach [^}]*\}((?:.(?!\{/foreach\}))*[^{]?)

Depending on your regex favour, negative zero-width look-ahead and non-capturing groups look a little different.

Here are the components:

\{foreach [^}]*\}  // pretty much self-explanatory
(                  // match group one starts (that's what you are looking for)
 (?:               // non-capturing group starts
  .                // anything...
  (?!\{/foreach\}) // ... that is not followed by "{/foreach}"
 )*                // non-capturing group ends, repeat as often as possible
 [^{]?             // match the last character, unless it is "{"
)                  // match group one ends, done
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  • Wow! You are Regex master! It works, but there is one problem, the last character just before the {/foreach} is not matched. How would you solve that?
    – Vincent
    Dec 4, 2008 at 18:17
  • You need to put the dot after the lookahead, not before it.
    – Alan Moore
    Dec 4, 2008 at 22:23

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