I'm using preg_match_all() like this:
preg_match_all('/("user":"(.*?)".*?-->)/', $input_lines, $output_array);
On a string, the idea is that I want it to get whatever comes after "user" in a commented out block (it's a long story). So let's say $input_lines is something like:
<!-- block {"user":"josh-hart", 1234566 ,"hide":false} /-->
<!-- block {"user":"jalen-brunson", 7744633 ,"hide":true} /-->
<!-- block {"user":"julius-randle", 333333,"hide":false} /-->
<!-- block {"user":"obi-toppin", 4hh3n33n33n, /-->
<!-- block {"user":"rj-barrett", nmremxxx!! ,"hide":true} /-->
<!-- block {"user":"mitch-robinson",yahaoao /-->
I want it to match the user. But here's the the thing, I only want the user if "hide":true does not appear before the /-->. So for this string I would want the matches to be:
josh-hart, julius-randle, obi-toppin, mitch-robinson
What is this called in regex terms and how do i do it?
Assuming that opening and closing a comment is from
<!--to-->and there is no other use of these in between, you can first get the matches out of the way that contain<!-- ... "hide":true ... -->without crossing the opening or closing of a comment.Then you can get a single match of the username, still in between the comment markers and independent of the order of appearance.
The pattern matches:
<!--Match literaly(?:(?!-->|"hide":).)*+Optionally repeat matching any character not directly followed by either-->or"hide":using a Tempered greedy token"hide":true\bMatch"hide":truefollowed by a word boundary to prevent a partial word match(?:(?!-->).)*/-->Match until the closing-->(*SKIP)(*F)Skip the current match|Or<!--Match literally(?:(?!-->|"user").)*Optionally repeat matching any character not directly followed by either-->or"user:"user":"\KMatch"user":"and forget what is matched so far[^"]+Match 1+ chars other than"(the username that you want to match)(?="(?:(?!-->).)*-->)Assert-->to the rightNote that you can make the matching of the username more specific, as for now it matches 1 or more characters other than a double quote with
[^"]+which can also be a space or a newline. If you want to match only non whitespace characters except for a double quote, than you can change it to[^\s"]+See a regex demo.