I have 2 wild cards

  1. "PersonalBlue M.*Mat"
  2. "PersonalBlue M.*Copay.*Mat"

and both pattern are match with string "PersonalBlue M14P $3,500/80%; $35 Copay 4 Visits; 50% Rx w/Mat"

<?php

eregi('PersonalBlue M.*Mat', 'PersonalBlue M14P $3,500/80%; $35 Copay 4 Visits; 50% Rx w/Mat', $matches);

eregi('PersonalBlue M.*Copay.*Mat', 'PersonalBlue M14P $3,500/80%; $35 Copay 4 Visits; 50% Rx w/Mat', $matches2);

echo "<br>";
echo strlen ($matches[0]);
echo "<br>";
echo strlen ($matches2[0]);

?>

The length of matched string is same for both. I need the first wild card should match with the string "PersonalBlue M09P $2,500/80%; 50% Rx w/Mat" but not with the "PersonalBlue M14P $3,500/80%; $35 Copay 4 Visits; 50% Rx w/Mat".

What will be the appropriate first wild card?

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eregi O_O doesn't they spam a lot of DEPRECATED there ? XD – yes123 Jun 7 '11 at 18:25
@yes123: Only if you don't have a broken dev environment. – Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams Jun 7 '11 at 18:26
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1 Answer

If I'm following correctly, you want 'PersonalBlue M14P $3,500/80%; $35 Copay 4 Visits; 50% Rx w/Mat' to only match 'PersonalBlue M.*Copay.*Mat' and not match something along the lines of 'PersonalBlue M.*Mat'.

If 'PersonalBlue M.*Mat' is changed to 'PersonalBlue M.*(^Copay).*Mat' it will not match if Copay is in between PersonalBlue M and Mat.

<?php

eregi('PersonalBlue M.*(^Copay).*Mat', 'PersonalBlue M14P $3,500/80%; $35 Copay 4 Visits; 50% Rx w/Mat', $matches);

eregi('PersonalBlue M.*Copay.*Mat', 'PersonalBlue M14P $3,500/80%; $35 Copay 4 Visits; 50% Rx w/Mat', $matches2);

echo "<br>";
echo strlen ($matches[0]); // outputs 0
echo "<br>";
echo strlen ($matches2[0]); // outputs 62

?>

As @yes123 pointed out, eregi has been deprecated and you might want to look at preg_match instead.

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i use that pattern. 'PersonalBlue M.*(^Copay).*Mat' doesn't match with string 'PersonalBlue M14P $3,500/80%; $35 Copay 4 Visits; 50% Rx w/Mat' and 'PersonalBlue M09P $2,500/80%; 50% Rx w/Mat' too. i want that pattern should match with 'PersonalBlue M09P $2,500/80%; 50% Rx w/Mat' – santde Jun 7 '11 at 22:09
Yup, you are totally correct. Sorry, I did not read the question properly and mainly went off your code example. I haven't had as good of luck coming up with an answer to the second part though. Question though, your target string is always semicolon delimited, could you do a split or do you have to use a regex? – Paul DelRe Jun 8 '11 at 14:13
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