Short answer : It's possible !!!
Use the following pattern
' # Match a single quote
(?= # Positive lookahead, this basically makes sure there is an odd number of single quotes ahead in this line
(?:(?:[^'\r\n]*'){2})* # Match anything except single quote or newlines zero or more times followed by a single quote, repeat this twice and repeat this whole process zero or more times (basically a pair of single quotes)
(?:[^'\r\n]*'[^'\r\n]*(?:\r?\n|$)) # You guessed, this is to match a single quote until the end of line
)
| # or
\G(?<!^) # Preceding contiguous match (not beginning of line)
[^'] # Match anything that's not a single quote
(?= # Same as above
(?:(?:[^'\r\n]*'){2})* # Same as above
(?:[^'\r\n]*'[^'\r\n]*(?:\r?\n|$)) # Same as above
)
|
\G(?<!^) # Preceding contiguous match (not beginning of line)
' # Match a single quote
Make sure to use the m
modifier.
Online demo.
Long answer : It's a pain :)
Unless not only you but your whole team loves regex, you might think of using this regex but remember that this is insane and quite difficult to grasp for beginners. Also readability goes (almost) always first.
I'll break the idea of how I did write such a regex:
1) We first need to know what we actually want to replace, we want to replace every character (including the single quotes) that's between two single quotes with a hyphen.
2) If we're going to use preg_replace()
that means our pattern needs to match one single character each time.
3) So the first step would be obvious : '
.
4) We'll use \G
which means match beginning of string or the contiguous character that we matched earlier. Take this simple example ~a|\Gb~
. This will match a
or b
if it's at the beginning or b
if the previous match was a
. See this demo.
5) We don't want anything to do with beginning of string So we'll use \G(?<!^)
.
6) Now we need to match anything that's not a single quote ~'|\G(?<!^)[^']~
.
7) Now begins the real pain, how do we know that the above pattern wouldn't go match c
in 'ab'c
? Well it will, we need to count the single quotes...
Let's recap:
a 'bcd' efg 'hij'
^ It will match this first
^^^ Then it will match these individually with \G(?<!^)[^']
^ It will match since we're matching single quotes without checking anything
^^^^^ And it will continue to match ...
What we want could be done in those 3 rules:
a 'bcd' efg 'hij'
1 ^ Match a single quote only if there is an odd number of single quotes ahead
2 ^^^ Match individually those characters only if there is an odd number of single quotes ahead
3 ^ Match a single quote only if there was a match before this character
8) Checking if there is an odd number of single quotes could be done if we knew how to match an even number :
(?: # non-capturing group
(?: # non-capturing group
[^'\r\n]* # Match anything that's not a single quote or newline, zero or more times
' # Match a single quote
){2} # Repeat 2 times (We'll be matching 2 single quotes)
)* # Repeat all this zero or more times. So we match 0, 2, 4, 6 ... single quotes
9) An odd number would be easy now, we just need to add :
(?:
[^'\r\n]* # Match anything that's not a single quote or newline, zero or more times
' # Match a single quote
[^'\r\n]* # Match anything that's not a single quote or newline, zero or more times
(?:\r?\n|$) # End of line
)
10) Merging above in a single lookahead:
(?=
(?: # non-capturing group
(?: # non-capturing group
[^'\r\n]* # Match anything that's not a single quote or newline, zero or more times
' # Match a single quote
){2} # Repeat 2 times (We'll be matching 2 single quotes)
)* # Repeat all this zero or more times. So we match 0, 2, 4, 6 ... single quotes
(?:
[^'\r\n]* # Match anything that's not a single quote or newline, zero or more times
' # Match a single quote
[^'\r\n]* # Match anything that's not a single quote or newline, zero or more times
(?:\r?\n|$) # End of line
)
)
11) Now we need to merge all 3 rules we defined earlier:
~ # A modifier
#################################### Rule 1 ####################################
' # A single quote
(?= # Lookahead to make sure there is an odd number of single quotes ahead
(?: # non-capturing group
(?: # non-capturing group
[^'\r\n]* # Match anything that's not a single quote or newline, zero or more times
' # Match a single quote
){2} # Repeat 2 times (We'll be matching 2 single quotes)
)* # Repeat all this zero or more times. So we match 0, 2, 4, 6 ... single quotes
(?:
[^'\r\n]* # Match anything that's not a single quote or newline, zero or more times
' # Match a single quote
[^'\r\n]* # Match anything that's not a single quote or newline, zero or more times
(?:\r?\n|$) # End of line
)
)
| # Or
#################################### Rule 2 ####################################
\G(?<!^) # Preceding contiguous match (not beginning of line)
[^'] # Match anything that's not a single quote
(?= # Lookahead to make sure there is an odd number of single quotes ahead
(?: # non-capturing group
(?: # non-capturing group
[^'\r\n]* # Match anything that's not a single quote or newline, zero or more times
' # Match a single quote
){2} # Repeat 2 times (We'll be matching 2 single quotes)
)* # Repeat all this zero or more times. So we match 0, 2, 4, 6 ... single quotes
(?:
[^'\r\n]* # Match anything that's not a single quote or newline, zero or more times
' # Match a single quote
[^'\r\n]* # Match anything that's not a single quote or newline, zero or more times
(?:\r?\n|$) # End of line
)
)
| # Or
#################################### Rule 3 ####################################
\G(?<!^) # Preceding contiguous match (not beginning of line)
' # Match a single quote
~x
Online regex demo.
Online PHP demo
strlen
of the match without the callback. You'd need to match each character individually. Needless to say, the callback is much better here. Why don't you want to use a callback?