-1

My goal is to retrieve the alias from a join clause.

Here is my RegEx: /(.*)rqd_evenements (?:as )([a-z_\-A-Z]+)(.*)/i

Sample string:

LEFT JOIN rqd_term_relationships ON (rqd_posts.ID = rqd_term_relationships.object_id) JOIN rqd_icl_translations t ON rqd_posts.ID = t.element_id AND t.element_type = CONCAT('post_', rqd_posts.post_type) INNER JOIN rqd_evenements AS ev ON ev.post_id = ID

I do a preg_replace:

preg_replace($regex, '$2', $sample_string);

This results in:

LEFT JOIN rqd_term_relationships ON (rqd_posts.ID = rqd_term_relationships.object_id) JOIN rqd_icl_translations t ON rqd_posts.ID = t.element_id ev

Expected result: ev

What's puzzling me is that it is working in RegExr: https://regexr.com/46hil

4
  • It seems to be choking on "AND". If I remove it, it works as expected. Jan 16, 2019 at 16:51
  • If this is db-related which seems to be, check for errors on the query. I don't know which api you're using to connect / query with (or the RDBMS), so I can't give you the right error handler for it. Enable error reporting also. Jan 16, 2019 at 16:54
  • can't reproduce - sandbox.onlinephpfunctions.com/code/…
    – splash58
    Jan 16, 2019 at 16:55
  • Oops, there were hidden linebreaks inserted by another plugin. Jan 16, 2019 at 17:01

1 Answer 1

0

You don't need all those capture groups.

/rqd_evenements (?:as )?\K[\w-]+/i

If you just want to extract a substring, use preg_match() as access the [0] element.

Perhaps your pattern doesn't work on your live query string because you have newline characters not being matched by the dot metacharacter. s flag can fix that.


With preg_replace:

/.*rqd_evenements (?:as )?([\w-]+).*/is

Replace with $1.

2
  • I find my code more readable with a one-line preg_replace vs a simpler regex. Jan 16, 2019 at 17:00
  • You're right. There was newline characters that were not visible. Jan 16, 2019 at 17:02

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.