preg_replace_callback

(PHP 4 >= 4.0.5, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

preg_replace_callbackPerform a regular expression search and replace using a callback

Description

preg_replace_callback(
    string|array $pattern,
    callable $callback,
    string|array $subject,
    int $limit = -1,
    int &$count = null,
    int $flags = 0
): string|array|null

The behavior of this function is almost identical to preg_replace(), except for the fact that instead of replacement parameter, one should specify a callback.

Parameters

pattern

The pattern to search for. It can be either a string or an array with strings.

callback

A callback that will be called and passed an array of matched elements in the subject string. The callback should return the replacement string. This is the callback signature:

handler(array $matches): string

You'll often need the callback function for a preg_replace_callback() in just one place. In this case you can use an anonymous function to declare the callback within the call to preg_replace_callback(). By doing it this way you have all information for the call in one place and do not clutter the function namespace with a callback function's name not used anywhere else.

Example #1 preg_replace_callback() and anonymous function

<?php
/* a unix-style command line filter to convert uppercase
* letters at the beginning of paragraphs to lowercase */
$fp = fopen("php://stdin", "r") or die("can't read stdin");
while (!
feof($fp)) {
$line = fgets($fp);
$line = preg_replace_callback(
'|<p>\s*\w|',
function (
$matches) {
return
strtolower($matches[0]);
},
$line
);
echo
$line;
}
fclose($fp);
?>

subject

The string or an array with strings to search and replace.

limit

The maximum possible replacements for each pattern in each subject string. Defaults to -1 (no limit).

count

If specified, this variable will be filled with the number of replacements done.

flags

flags can be a combination of the PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE and PREG_UNMATCHED_AS_NULL flags, which influence the format of the matches array. See the description in preg_match() for more details.

Return Values

preg_replace_callback() returns an array if the subject parameter is an array, or a string otherwise. On errors the return value is null

If matches are found, the new subject will be returned, otherwise subject will be returned unchanged.

Errors/Exceptions

If the regex pattern passed does not compile to a valid regex, an E_WARNING is emitted.

Changelog

Version Description
7.4.0 The flags parameter was added.

Examples

Example #2 preg_replace_callback() example

<?php
// this text was used in 2002
// we want to get this up to date for 2003
$text = "April fools day is 04/01/2002\n";
$text.= "Last christmas was 12/24/2001\n";
// the callback function
function next_year($matches)
{
// as usual: $matches[0] is the complete match
// $matches[1] the match for the first subpattern
// enclosed in '(...)' and so on
return $matches[1].($matches[2]+1);
}
echo
preg_replace_callback(
"|(\d{2}/\d{2}/)(\d{4})|",
"next_year",
$text);

?>

The above example will output:

April fools day is 04/01/2003
Last christmas was 12/24/2002

Example #3 preg_replace_callback() using recursive structure to handle encapsulated BB code

<?php
$input
= "plain [indent] deep [indent] deeper [/indent] deep [/indent] plain";

function
parseTagsRecursive($input)
{

$regex = '#\[indent]((?:[^[]|\[(?!/?indent])|(?R))+)\[/indent]#';

if (
is_array($input)) {
$input = '<div style="margin-left: 10px">'.$input[1].'</div>';
}

return
preg_replace_callback($regex, 'parseTagsRecursive', $input);
}

$output = parseTagsRecursive($input);

echo
$output;
?>

See Also

add a note

User Contributed Notes 12 notes

up
105
Richard
13 years ago
The easiest way to pass more than one parameters to the callback function is with the 'use' keyword. 

[This is better than using global, because it works even when we are already inside a function.]

In this example, the callback function is an anonymous function, which takes one argument, $match, supplied by preg_replace_callback().  The extra 
"use ($ten)" puts the $ten variable into scope for the function.

<?php
$string = "Some numbers: one: 1; two: 2; three: 3 end";
$ten = 10;
$newstring = preg_replace_callback(
    '/(\\d+)/',
    function($match) use ($ten) { return (($match[0] + $ten)); },
    $string
    );
echo $newstring;
#prints "Some numbers: one: 11; two: 12; three: 13 end";
?>
up
10
Sjon at hortensius dot net
18 years ago
preg_replace_callback returns NULL when pcre.backtrack_limit is reached; this sometimes occurs faster then you might expect. No error is raised either; so don't forget to check for NULL yourself
up
24
Yuri
13 years ago
If you want to call non-static function inside your class, you can do something like this. 

For PHP 5.2 use second argument like array($this, 'replace'):
<?php
class test_preg_callback{

  private function process($text){
    $reg = "/\{([0-9a-zA-Z\- ]+)\:([0-9a-zA-Z\- ]+):?\}/";
    return preg_replace_callback($reg, array($this, 'replace'), $text);
  }
  
  private function replace($matches){
    if (method_exists($this, $matches[1])){
      return @$this->$matches[1]($matches[2]);     
    }
  }  
}
?>

For PHP 5.3 use second argument like "self::replace":
<?php
class test_preg_callback{

  private function process($text){
    $reg = "/\{([0-9a-zA-Z\- ]+)\:([0-9a-zA-Z\- ]+):?\}/";
    return preg_replace_callback($reg, "self::replace", $text);
  }
  
  private function replace($matches){
    if (method_exists($this, $matches[1])){
      return @$this->$matches[1]($matches[2]);     
    }
  }  
}
?>
up
3
carlos dot ballesteros at softonic dot com
16 years ago
A simple function to replace a list of complete words or terms in a string (for PHP 5.3 or above because of the closure):

<?php
function replace_words($list, $line, $callback) {
    return preg_replace_callback(
        '/(^|[^\\w\\-])(' . implode('|', array_map('preg_quote', $list)) . ')($|[^\\w\\-])/mi',
        function($v) use ($callback) { return $v[1] . $callback($v[2]) . $v[3]; },
        $line
    );
}
?>

Example of usage:
<?php
$list = array('php', 'apache web server');
$str = "php and the apache web server work fine together. php-gtk, for example, won't match. apache web servers shouldn't too.";

echo replace_words($list, $str, function($v) {
    return "<strong>{$v}</strong>";
});
?>
up
2
matt at mattsoft dot net
19 years ago
it is much better on preformance and better practice to use the preg_replace_callback function instead of preg_replace with the e modifier.

function a($text){return($text);}

// 2.76 seconds to run 50000 times
preg_replace("/\{(.*?)\}/e","a('\\1','\\2','\\3',\$b)",$a);

// 0.97 seconds to run 50000 times
preg_replace_callback("/\{(.*?)\}/s","a",$a);
up
5
Fredow
10 years ago
<?php
// Nice little function that convert a string to uppercase by keeping the HTMLentities intact.
public static function strtoupper_entities($str) {

    $patternMajEntities = '/(\&([A-Z])(ACUTE|CEDIL|CARON|CIRC|GRAVE|ORN|RING|SLASH|TH|TILDE|UML)\;)+/';
    $str = preg_replace_callback ($patternMajEntities, 
        function ($matches) {
            return "&" . $matches[2] . strtolower($matches[3]) . ";";
        }, strtoupper($str));
    
    return $str;
}
up
2
Drake
15 years ago
The good version of the class PhpHex2Str
<?php
class PhpHex2Str
{
    private $strings;

    private static function x_hex2str($hex) {
        $hex = substr($hex[0], 1);
        $str = '';
        for($i=0;$i < strlen($hex);$i+=2) {
            $str.=chr(hexdec(substr($hex,$i,2)));
        }
        return $str;
    }

    public function decode($strings = null) {
        $this->strings = (string) $strings;
        return preg_replace_callback('#\%[a-zA-Z0-9]{2}#', 'PhpHex2Str::x_hex2str', $this->strings);
    }
}

// Exemple
$obj = new PhpHex2Str;

$strings = $obj->decode($strings);
var_dump($strings);
?>
up
2
T-Soloveychik at ya dot ru
12 years ago
Text lines numeration:
<?PHP
// Multieline text:
    $Text = "
Some 
Multieline
text
for
numeration";

// For count:
    $GLOBALS["LineNUMBER"] = 1;

// Replace linestart on number:
    PRINT preg_replace_callback("/^/m",function ()
        {
            return $GLOBALS["LineNUMBER"]++."  ";
        },
        $Text);

?>

1
2 Some
3 Multieline
4 text
5 for
6 numeration
up
4
development at HashNotAdam dot com
13 years ago
From PHP 5.3 you can use an anonymous function to pass local variables into the callback.

<?php

public function replace_variables( $subject, $otherVars ) {
    $linkPatterns = array(
        '/(<a .*)href=(")([^"]*)"([^>]*)>/U',
        "/(<a .*)href=(')([^']*)'([^>]*)>/U"
    );

    $callback = function( $matches ) use ( $otherVars ) {
        $this->replace_callback($matches, $otherVars);
    };

    return preg_replace_callback($this->patterns, $callback, $subject);
}

public function replace_callback($matches, $otherVars) {
    return $matches[1] . $otherVars['myVar'];
}
?>
up
1
chris at ocproducts dot com
15 years ago
The pcre.backtrack_limit option (added in PHP 5.2) can trigger a NULL return, with no errors. The default pcre.backtrack_limit value is 100000. If you have a match that exceeds about half this limit it triggers a NULL response.
e.g. My limit was at 100000 but 500500 triggered a NULL response. I'm not running unicode but I *guess* PCRE runs in utf-16.
up
2
Evgeny
2 years ago
Please note! if you have defined namespace,
the usage format must me changed:

echo preg_replace_callback(
            "|(\d{2}/\d{2}/)(\d{4})|",
            __NAMESPACE__ . '\\next_year',
            $text);
up
0
steven at nevvix dot com
7 years ago
<?php
$format = <<<SQL
CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS :database;
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON :database_name.* TO ':user'@':host';
SET PASSWORD = PASSWORD(':pass');
SQL;
$args = ["database"=>"people", "user"=>"staff", "pass"=>"pass123", "host"=>"localhost"];

preg_replace_callback("/:(\w+)/", function ($matches) use ($args) {
    return @$args[$matches[1]] ?: $matches[0];
}, $format);

/*
Result:

CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS people;
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON :database_name.* TO 'staff'@'localhost';
SET PASSWORD = PASSWORD('pass123');

The `:database_name` placeholder doesn't exist as a matching key in `$args` so it's returned as is.
This way you know you need to correct the array by adding the "database_name" item.
*/
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