Use stripslashes instead. Also, in your regex, you are searching for single backslashes and your replacement is incorrect. \\{2}
should search for double backslashes and \
should replace them with singles, although I haven't tested this.
Just to explain further, the pattern [\\]
matches any character in a set comprised of a single backslash. In php, you should also delimit your regex with forward slashes: /[\\]/
Your replacement, which is (without delimiters) \
, is not a regular expression for matching a single backslash. The regex for matching a single backslash is \\
. Note the escaping. This said, the replacement term needs to be a string, not a regex (with the exception of backreferences).
EDIT: Sven claims below that stripslashes removes all backslashes. This is simply not true, and I will explain why below.
If a string contains 2 backslashes, the first one will be considered an escaping backslash and will be removed. This can be seen at http://www.phpfiddle.org/main/code/3yn-2ut. The fact that any backslashes remain at all by itself contradicts the claim that stripslashes removes all backslashes.
Just to clarify, this string declaration is invalid: $x = "\";
, since the backslash escapes the second quote. This string "\\"
contains one backslash. In the process of unquoting this string, this backslash will be removed. This "\\\\"
string contains two backslashes. When unquoting, the first will be considered an escaping backslash, and will be removed.
stripslashes()
?