65

I am attempting to parse the video ID of a youtube URL using preg_match. I found a regular expression on this site that appears to work;

(?<=v=)[a-zA-Z0-9-]+(?=&)|(?<=[0-9]/)[^&\n]+|(?<=v=)[^&\n]+

As shown in this pic:

alt text

My PHP is as follows, but it doesn't work (gives Unknown modifier '[' error)...

<?
 $subject = "http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z_AbfPXTKms&NR=1";

 preg_match("(?<=v=)[a-zA-Z0-9-]+(?=&)|(?<=[0-9]/)[^&\n]+|(?<=v=)[^&\n]+", $subject, $matches);

 print "<pre>";
 print_r($matches);
 print "</pre>";

?>

Cheers

5
  • 1
    In your RegexBuddy, you have Java as the selected language. There is also a Use tab that you can click on that will give you properly escaped code to use for a number of different situations.
    – Benjam
    Jul 1, 2011 at 3:25
  • 1
    See as well: php regex - find all youtube video ids in string
    – hakre
    Jun 2, 2012 at 12:33
  • 1
    Related: stackoverflow.com/questions/5830387/… Mar 12, 2014 at 11:34
  • Because the other question have a best answer, well explained.
    – Toto
    Feb 8, 2020 at 17:27
  • @Toto it also fails to match in some cases, if you see latest comments - so not exactly the better answer
    – J.C
    Feb 8, 2020 at 19:49

10 Answers 10

248

This regex grabs the ID from all of the various URLs I could find... There may be more out there, but I couldn't find reference of them anywhere. If you come across one this doesn't match, please leave a comment with the URL, and I'll try and update the regex to match your URL.

if (preg_match('%(?:youtube(?:-nocookie)?\.com/(?:[^/]+/.+/|(?:v|e(?:mbed)?)/|.*[?&]v=)|youtu\.be/)([^"&?/\s]{11})%i', $url, $match)) {
    $video_id = $match[1];
}

Here is a sample of the URLs this regex matches: (there can be more content after the given URL that will be ignored)

It also works on the youtube-nocookie.com URL with the same above options.

It will also pull the ID from the URL in an embed code (both iframe and object tags)

10
  • I am using the expression provided above and I always get the ending /iframe> in the video ID.
    – Jason Yost
    Jan 1, 2012 at 11:24
  • Can you give a link to a pastebin example of what exactly you are doing? Or create a question here on SO and link to it here?
    – Benjam
    Jan 2, 2012 at 5:06
  • 3
    Again... do you have a code sample? Are you using it correctly? I just tested it with your URL, and it returned an array and in $match[1] was '9ofSV-ATEB0', which IS the id.
    – Benjam
    Jan 27, 2012 at 4:00
  • @Benjam do you have a preg_match for vimeo that is like this one! This is a great regX +1. Thanks! Apr 15, 2012 at 17:03
  • I've got better results for /?v= and iframe/object variants when moving the username/... check ([^/]+/.+/) to the back: %(?:youtube(?:-nocookie)?\.com/(?:(?:v|e(?:mbed)?)/|.*[?&]v=|[^/]+/.+/)|youtu\.be/)([^"&?/ ]{11})%i. For other variants it remains the same.
    – Lode
    Feb 5, 2013 at 12:05
11

Better use parse_url and parse_str to parse the URL and query string:

$subject = "http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z_AbfPXTKms&NR=1";
$url = parse_url($subject);
parse_str($url['query'], $query);
var_dump($query);
2
  • @Webbo: parse_url returns an array of the URL parts, so the URL path is also in there. You need to do some further case differentiation to what type the URL is.
    – Gumbo
    May 29, 2010 at 20:36
  • 3
    I would rather use a regex to do it all in one
    – J.C
    May 29, 2010 at 20:40
9

I had to deal with this for a PHP class i wrote a few weeks ago and ended up with a regex that matches any kind of strings: With or without URL scheme, with or without subdomain, youtube.com URL strings, youtu.be URL strings and dealing with all kind of parameter sorting. You can check it out at GitHub or simply copy and paste the code block below:

/**
 *  Check if input string is a valid YouTube URL
 *  and try to extract the YouTube Video ID from it.
 *  @author  Stephan Schmitz <eyecatchup@gmail.com>
 *  @param   $url   string   The string that shall be checked.
 *  @return  mixed           Returns YouTube Video ID, or (boolean) false.
 */        
function parse_yturl($url) 
{
    $pattern = '#^(?:https?://)?(?:www\.)?(?:youtu\.be/|youtube\.com(?:/embed/|/v/|/watch\?v=|/watch\?.+&v=))([\w-]{11})(?:.+)?$#x';
    preg_match($pattern, $url, $matches);
    return (isset($matches[1])) ? $matches[1] : false;
}

To explain the regex, here's a spilt up version:

/**
 *  Check if input string is a valid YouTube URL
 *  and try to extract the YouTube Video ID from it.
 *  @author  Stephan Schmitz <eyecatchup@gmail.com>
 *  @param   $url   string   The string that shall be checked.
 *  @return  mixed           Returns YouTube Video ID, or (boolean) false.
 */        
function parse_yturl($url) 
{
    $pattern = '#^(?:https?://)?';    # Optional URL scheme. Either http or https.
    $pattern .= '(?:www\.)?';         #  Optional www subdomain.
    $pattern .= '(?:';                #  Group host alternatives:
    $pattern .=   'youtu\.be/';       #    Either youtu.be,
    $pattern .=   '|youtube\.com';    #    or youtube.com
    $pattern .=   '(?:';              #    Group path alternatives:
    $pattern .=     '/embed/';        #      Either /embed/,
    $pattern .=     '|/v/';           #      or /v/,
    $pattern .=     '|/watch\?v=';    #      or /watch?v=,    
    $pattern .=     '|/watch\?.+&v='; #      or /watch?other_param&v=
    $pattern .=   ')';                #    End path alternatives.
    $pattern .= ')';                  #  End host alternatives.
    $pattern .= '([\w-]{11})';        # 11 characters (Length of Youtube video ids).
    $pattern .= '(?:.+)?$#x';         # Optional other ending URL parameters.
    preg_match($pattern, $url, $matches);
    return (isset($matches[1])) ? $matches[1] : false;
}
3
  • Please don't post your answer multiple times. Instead flag as duplicates or add a comment saying that there's an answer on another question if they're not exact duplicates but it's still relevant.
    – Flexo
    May 10, 2012 at 7:51
  • 3
    @awoodland: No prob and thanks for pointing me to the possibilty to flag questions as duplicates.
    – eyecatchUp
    May 10, 2012 at 10:59
  • 1
    Added shorts url too here... <3 function parse_yturl($url) { $pattern = '#^(?:https?://)?(?:www\.)?(?:youtu\.be/|youtube\.com(?:/embed/|/shorts/|/v/|/watch\?v=|/watch\?.+&v=))([\w-]{11})(?:.+)?$#x'; preg_match($pattern, $url, $matches); return (isset($matches[1])) ? $matches[1] : false; }
    – yjs
    Aug 27, 2022 at 6:31
6

I perfected regex from the leader answer. It also grabs the ID from all of the various URLs, but more correctly.

if (preg_match('%(?:youtube(?:-nocookie)?\.com/(?:[\w\-?&!#=,;]+/[\w\-?&!#=/,;]+/|(?:v|e(?:mbed)?)/|[\w\-?&!#=,;]*[?&]v=)|youtu\.be/)([\w-]{11})(?:[^\w-]|\Z)%i', $url, $match)) {
    $video_id = $match[1];
}

Also, it correctly handles the wrong IDs, which more than 11 characters.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0zM3nApSvMgDw3qlxF

2

Use

 preg_match("#(?<=v=)[a-zA-Z0-9-]+(?=&)|(?<=[0-9]/)[^&\n]+|(?<=v=)[^&\n]+#", $subject, $matches);
2
1

You forgot to escape the slash character. So this one should do the job:

preg_match("#(?<=v=)[a-zA-Z0-9-]+(?=&)|(?<=[0-9]\/)[^&\n]+|(?<=v=)[^&\n]+#", $subject, $matches);
1
  • Not need to escape the slash if at the begin and at the end of regex you use a character other than slash, like #
    – Modder
    Oct 3, 2014 at 11:34
1

Parse Start parameter for BBcode (https://developers.google.com/youtube/player_parameters#start)

example: [yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G059ou-7wmo#t=58[/yt]

PHP regex:

'#\[yt\]https?://(?:[0-9A-Z-]+\.)?(?:youtu\.be/|youtube\.com(?:/embed/|/v/|/watch\?v=|/ytscreeningroom\?v=|/feeds/api/videos/|/user\S*[^\w\-\s]|\S*[^\w\-\s]))([\w\-]{11})[?=#&+%\w-]*(t=(\d+))?\[/yt\]#Uim'

replace:

'<iframe id="ytplayer" type="text/html" width="639" height="360" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/$1?rel=0&vq=hd1080&start=$3" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>'
1

I didn't see anyone directly address the PHP error, so I'll try to explain.

The reason for the "Unknown modifier '['" error is that you forgot to wrap your regex in delimiters. PHP just takes the first character as a delimiter, so long as it's a non-alphanumeric, non-whitespace ASCII character. So in your regex:

preg_match("(?<=v=)[a-zA-Z0-9-]+(?=&)|(?<=[0-9]/)[^&\n]+|(?<=v=)[^&\n]+", $subject, $matches);

PHP thinks you meant ( as an opening delimiter. It then finds what it thinks is your closing delimiter, the next ) and assumes what follows are pattern modifiers. However it finds that your first pattern modifier, the next character after the first ), is [. [ is obviously not a valid pattern modifier, which is why you get the error that you do.

The solution is to simply wrap your regex in delimiters and make sure any delimiters within the regex that you want to match literally are escaped. I like to use ~ as delimiters, b/c you rarely need to match a literal ~ in a regex.

0

use below code

$url = "" // here is url of youtube video
$pattern = getPatternFromUrl($url); //this will retun video id

function getPatternFromUrl($url)
{
$url = $url.'&';
$pattern = '/v=(.+?)&+/';
preg_match($pattern, $url, $matches);
//echo $matches[1]; die;
return ($matches[1]);
}
2
  • it works ! i had tried? gimme any example that does not fit on this criteria?
    – xkeshav
    May 31, 2010 at 4:15
  • other related post http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2164040/grab-the-youtube-video-id-with-jquery-match`
    – xkeshav
    May 31, 2010 at 4:16
0

this worked for me.

$yout_url='http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yxYjeNZvICk&blabla=blabla';

$videoid = preg_replace("#[&\?].+$#", "", preg_replace("#http://(?:www\.)?youtu\.?be(?:\.com)?/(embed/|watch\?v=|\?v=|v/|e/|.+/|watch.*v=|)#i", "", $yout_url));

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