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Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers How to find the string which is starting with some letters and having numbers from 4th position? Post 303045389 by RudiC on Thursday 19th of March 2020 07:33:30 AM
Old 03-19-2020
What ksh version do you have?

man ksh93 :
Quote:
string =~ ere
True if string matches the pattern ~(E)ere where ere is an extended regular expression.


Try
Code:
[[ $string2 =~ ROS[0-9]*$ ]] && echo OK || echo NOK
OK

 

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PREG_MATCH_ALL(3)							 1							 PREG_MATCH_ALL(3)

preg_match_all - Perform a global regular expression match

SYNOPSIS
int preg_match_all PREG_PATTERN_ORDER (string $pattern, string $subject, [array &$matches], [int $flags], [int $offset]) DESCRIPTION
Searches $subject for all matches to the regular expression given in $pattern and puts them in $matches in the order specified by $flags. After the first match is found, the subsequent searches are continued on from end of the last match. PARAMETERS
o $pattern - The pattern to search for, as a string. o $subject - The input string. o $matches - Array of all matches in multi-dimensional array ordered according to $flags. o $flags - Can be a combination of the following flags (note that it doesn't make sense to use PREG_PATTERN_ORDER together with PREG_SET_ORDER): o PREG_PATTERN_ORDER - Orders results so that $matches[0] is an array of full pattern matches, $matches[1] is an array of strings matched by the first parenthesized subpattern, and so on. <?php preg_match_all("|<[^>]+>(.*)</[^>]+>|U", "<b>example: </b><div align=left>this is a test</div>", $out, PREG_PATTERN_ORDER); echo $out[0][0] . ", " . $out[0][1] . " "; echo $out[1][0] . ", " . $out[1][1] . " "; ?> The above example will output: <b>example: </b>, <div align=left>this is a test</div> example: , this is a test So, $out[0] contains array of strings that matched full pattern, and $out[1] contains array of strings enclosed by tags. o PREG_SET_ORDER - Orders results so that $matches[0] is an array of first set of matches, $matches[1] is an array of second set of matches, and so on. <?php preg_match_all("|<[^>]+>(.*)</[^>]+>|U", "<b>example: </b><div align="left">this is a test</div>", $out, PREG_SET_ORDER); echo $out[0][0] . ", " . $out[0][1] . " "; echo $out[1][0] . ", " . $out[1][1] . " "; ?> The above example will output: <b>example: </b>, example: <div align="left">this is a test</div>, this is a test o PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE - If this flag is passed, for every occurring match the appendant string offset will also be returned. Note that this changes the value of $matches into an array where every element is an array consisting of the matched string at offset 0 and its string offset into $subject at offset 1. If no order flag is given, PREG_PATTERN_ORDER is assumed. o $offset - Normally, the search starts from the beginning of the subject string. The optional parameter $offset can be used to specify the alternate place from which to start the search (in bytes). Note Using $offset is not equivalent to passing substr($subject, $offset) to preg_match_all(3) in place of the subject string, because $pattern can contain assertions such as ^, $ or (?<=x). See preg_match(3) for examples. RETURN VALUES
Returns the number of full pattern matches (which might be zero), or FALSE if an error occurred. CHANGELOG
+--------+---------------------------------------------------+ |Version | | | | | | | Description | | | | +--------+---------------------------------------------------+ | 5.4.0 | | | | | | | The $matches parameter became optional. | | | | | 5.3.6 | | | | | | | Returns FALSE if $offset is higher than $subject | | | length. | | | | | 5.2.2 | | | | | | | Named subpatterns now accept the syntax | | | (?<name>) and (?'name') as well as (?P<name>). | | | Previous versions accepted only (?P<name>). | | | | +--------+---------------------------------------------------+ EXAMPLES
Example #1 Getting all phone numbers out of some text. <?php preg_match_all("/(? (d{3})? )? (?(1) [-s] ) d{3}-d{4}/x", "Call 555-1212 or 1-800-555-1212", $phones); ?> Example #2 Find matching HTML tags (greedy) <?php // The \2 is an example of backreferencing. This tells pcre that // it must match the second set of parentheses in the regular expression // itself, which would be the ([w]+) in this case. The extra backslash is // required because the string is in double quotes. $html = "<b>bold text</b><a href=howdy.html>click me</a>"; preg_match_all("/(<([w]+)[^>]*>)(.*?)(</\2>)/", $html, $matches, PREG_SET_ORDER); foreach ($matches as $val) { echo "matched: " . $val[0] . " "; echo "part 1: " . $val[1] . " "; echo "part 2: " . $val[2] . " "; echo "part 3: " . $val[3] . " "; echo "part 4: " . $val[4] . " "; } ?> The above example will output: matched: <b>bold text</b> part 1: <b> part 2: b part 3: bold text part 4: </b> matched: <a href=howdy.html>click me</a> part 1: <a href=howdy.html> part 2: a part 3: click me part 4: </a> Example #3 Using named subpattern <?php $str = <<<FOO a: 1 b: 2 c: 3 FOO; preg_match_all('/(?P<name>w+): (?P<digit>d+)/', $str, $matches); /* This also works in PHP 5.2.2 (PCRE 7.0) and later, however * the above form is recommended for backwards compatibility */ // preg_match_all('/(?<name>w+): (?<digit>d+)/', $str, $matches); print_r($matches); ?> The above example will output: Array ( [0] => Array ( [0] => a: 1 [1] => b: 2 [2] => c: 3 ) [name] => Array ( [0] => a [1] => b [2] => c ) [1] => Array ( [0] => a [1] => b [2] => c ) [digit] => Array ( [0] => 1 [1] => 2 [2] => 3 ) [2] => Array ( [0] => 1 [1] => 2 [2] => 3 ) ) SEE ALSO
PCRE Patterns, preg_quote(3), preg_match(3), preg_replace(3), preg_split(3), preg_last_error(3). PHP Documentation Group PREG_MATCH_ALL(3)
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