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Posted by comp.lang.php on 12/06/05 21:51
Good News: The T_DNUMBER error is gone, but makes absolutely no sense
why it's gone, you CAN use '$1' - '$9' in regular expressions!
Bad News: The pattern match failed to find the pattern to make the
substitution using your code:
[PHP]
$pattern='`^(\s*\*\s+\@version)\s*('.
str_replace('/','\\/',preg_quote($oldversion)).')(.*)$`i';
$contents = preg_replace($pattern, '\\1 ' . $newversion,
$contents);
[/PHP]
So it's half fixed :)
Phil
Justin Koivisto wrote:
> comp.lang.php wrote:
> > Offensive Line:
> > [PHP]
> > $contents =
> > preg_replace('/([\s\t]*\*+[\s\t]*@[vV][eE][rR][sS][iI][oO][nN][\s\t]+)'
> > . str_replace('/', '\\/', preg_quote($oldversion)) . '([\n\r\s\t]*)/e',
> > '$1' . $newversion . '$2', $contents);
> > [/PHP]
> >
> > Bluntly put, I simply don't get it. It's bad enough that the RegExp
> > fails, but why would it break and why break in such a way that makes no
> > sense to anyone?
> >
> > This is all I want to do:
> >
> > REPLACE
> >
> > * @version 1.0.0
> >
> > WITH
> >
> > * @version 1.1.0
> >
> > Inside each non-binary file that contains that exact line pattern!
> >
> > And that's all.
> >
> > Thanx
> > Phil
> >
>
> It's the e modifier... because $2 is not a valid variable name in PHP.
> Try something a bit simpler:
>
> <?php
> $pattern='`^(\s*\*\s+\@version)\s*('.
> str_replace('/','\\/',preg_quote($old_version)).')(.*)$`i';
> $contents = preg_replace($pattern,'\\1 '.$new_version,$contents);
> ?>
>
> That will replace a version number like "1.0.0/rev4" into the new one,
> assuming that the line is similar to:
>
> * @version 1.0.0/rev4 - some other note
>
> Of course, whenever you can use a string function over regex, do it:
> $content=str_replace($old_version,$new_version,$content);
>
> May not apply in your case, but if it does, it's better.
>
> HTH
>
> --
> Justin Koivisto, ZCE - justin@koivi.com
> http://koivi.com
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