I started out with some crazy failures using preg_replace in php and boiled it down to the problem case of having more than one character class using turkish dotted "i" and undotted "ı" together. Here is a simple test case in php:
<?php
echo 'match single normal i: ';
$str = 'mi';
echo (preg_match('!m[ıi]!', $str)) ? "ok\n" : "fail\n";
echo 'match single undotted ı: ';
$str = 'mı';
echo (preg_match('!m[ıi]!', $str)) ? "ok\n" : "fail\n";
echo 'match double normal i: ';
$str = 'misir';
echo (preg_match('!m[ıi]s[ıi]r!', $str)) ? "ok\n" : "fail\n";
echo 'match double undotted ı: ';
$str = 'mısır';
echo (preg_match('!m[ıi]s[ıi]r!', $str)) ? "ok\n" : "fail\n";
?>
And the same test case again in perl:
#!/usr/bin/perl
$str = 'mi';
$str =~ m/m[ıi]/ && print "match single normal i\n";
$str = 'mı';
$str =~ m/m[ıi]/ && print "match single undotted ı\n";
$str = 'misir';
$str =~ m/m[ıi]s[ıi]r/ && print "match double normal i\n";
$str = 'mısır';
$str =~ m/m[ıi]s[ıi]r/ && print "match double undotted ı\n";
The first three tests work fine. The last one does not match.
Why does this work fine as a character class once but not the second time in the same expression? How do I write an expression to match for a word like this that needs to match no matter what combinations of letters it is written with?
Edit: Background on the language problem I'm trying to program for.
Edit 2: Adding a use utf8;
directive does fix the perl version. Since my original problem was with a php program and I only switched to perl to see if it was a bug in php, that doesn't help me a whole lot. Does anybody know the directive to make PHP not choke on this?