Are regex's allowed in PHP switch/case statements and how to use them ?
4 Answers
Switch-case statement works like if-elseif.
As well as you can use regex for if-elseif, you can also use it in switch-case.
if (preg_match('/John.*/', $name)) {
// do stuff for people whose name is John, Johnny, ...
}
can be coded as:
switch $name {
case (preg_match('/John.*/', $name) ? true : false) :
// do stuff for people whose name is John, Johnny, ...
break;
}
-
14This only works when
$name
evaluates totrue
. If$name == ''
this will yield wrong results. -1– NikiCOct 29, 2010 at 13:19 -
9@nikic: you're right but this answers the OP's question :
Are regex's allowed in PHP switch/case statements and how to use them ?
– bourbakiOct 29, 2010 at 18:26 -
2Took me a while to understand why this works. And I think it is an ugly hack. The key is that "most" strings validate to true. And the answer to the question would be: it works, most of the times.– EzequielMay 31, 2013 at 15:36
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switch $name { case (preg_match('/e*/', $name)): echo "match";break;} shouldn't work correctly for $name = "" because preg_match('/e*', $name) is true but true != "".– EzequielMay 31, 2013 at 15:38
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2The
preg_match()
statement incase
in the answer can be simplified ascase (!!preg_match('/John.*/', $name)):
Jun 30, 2018 at 23:07
No or only limited. You could for example switch for true
:
switch (true) {
case $a == 'A':
break;
case preg_match('~~', $a):
break;
}
This basically gives you an if
-elseif
-else
statement chain, but with syntax and might of switch
(for example fall-through.)
Yes, but you should use this technique to avoid issues when the switch argument evals to false
:
switch ($name) {
case preg_match('/John.*/', $name) ? $name : !$name:
// do stuff
}
-
Thanks for your response. If i understand well, i can do
preg_match("/regex/", $foo) ? true : false;
. Can't I ?– TotoOct 28, 2010 at 15:23 -
1The first example in this answer is better than all the other answers because it will always correctly match (or not) the subject of the
switch()
, whereas returning true or false from thepreg_match()
ternary could have unexpected results, as in @NikiC's empty string example.– MichaelOct 24, 2011 at 7:43
Keep in mind the above answer can be slightly optimized like this:
Changing:
switch $name {
case (preg_match('/John.*/', $name) ? true : false) :
// do stuff for people whose name is John, Johnny, ...
break;
}
To:
switch $name {
case (bool)preg_match('/John.*/', $name) :
// do stuff for people whose name is John, Johnny, ...
break;
}