preg_quote()
is what you are looking for:
Description
string preg_quote ( string $str [, string $delimiter = NULL ] )
preg_quote() takes str
and puts a
backslash in front of every character
that is part of the regular expression
syntax. This is useful if you have a
run-time string that you need to match
in some text and the string may
contain special regex characters.
The special regular expression
characters are: . + * ? [ ^ ] $ ( ) { } = ! < > | : -
Parameters
str
The input string.
delimiter
If the optional delimiter is specified, it will also be escaped. This is useful for escaping the delimiter that is required by the PCRE functions. The / is the most commonly used delimiter.
Importantly, note that if the $delimiter
argument is not specified, the delimiter - the character used to enclose your regex, commonly a forward slash (/
) - will not be escaped. You will usually want to pass whatever delimiter you are using with your regex as the $delimiter
argument.
Example - using preg_match
to find occurrences of a given URL surrounded by whitespace:
$url = 'http://stackoverflow.com/questions?sort=newest';
// preg_quote escapes the dot, question mark and equals sign in the URL (by
// default) as well as all the forward slashes (because we pass '/' as the
// $delimiter argument).
$escapedUrl = preg_quote($url, '/');
// We enclose our regex in '/' characters here - the same delimiter we passed
// to preg_quote
$regex = '/s' . $escapedUrl . 's/';
// $regex is now: /shttp://stackoverflow.com/questions?sort=newests/
$haystack = "Bla bla http://stackoverflow.com/questions?sort=newest bla bla";
preg_match($regex, $haystack, $matches);
var_dump($matches);
// array(1) {
// [0]=>
// string(48) " http://stackoverflow.com/questions?sort=newest "
// }
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