|  | Posted by Dotan Cohen on 01/17/05 23:43 
I looked at the 'sound like' modules in php (leveshtien, soundex) but they are for comparing 2 strings, not creating a string based on what we already have.
 
 I see that str_replace supports regular expessions. Without devoting hours
 learning to write a regex, would it be inappropriate for me to ask how would
 a regex look that basically says to str_replace "replace the n-th occurence
 of $was with $willbe" and then I could just loop n==1 n==2 until
 n==substr_count($data, $was);
 
 Did I mention how much I appreciate your help in this matter? I am very
 impress with the wealth of information the php community is willing to share.
 
 Dotan
 
 On Monday 17 January 2005 04:41 am, Richard Lynch wrote:
 > Dotan Cohen wrote:
 > > kayak. Focusing only on the 'k's I get this array: kayak, cayac. But I
 > > need
 > > kayak, kayac, cayak, cayac.
 >
 > You may (or may not) be able to get something going with that extra
 > optional last argument to str_replace which tells how many characters to
 > replace.
 >
 > str_replace('k', 'c', 'kayak', 1) ==> cayak
 >
 > You probably should step back and use soundex, or one of the other "sound
 > like" modules in PHP as Greg suggested though, as a word with THREE k's in
 > it will maybe be too much hassle...
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