'How to remove square brackets and anything between them with a regex?
How can I remove text from between square brackets and the brackets themselves?
For example, I need:
hello [quote="im sneaky"] world
to become:
hello world
Here's what I'm trying to use, but it's not doing the trick:
preg_replace("/[\[(.)\]]/", '', $str);
I just ended up with:
hello quote="im sneaky" world
Solution 1:[1]
[ and ] are special characters in a regex. They are used to list characters of a match. [a-z] matches any lowercase letter between a and z. [03b] matches a "0", "3", or "b". To match the characters [ and ], you have to escape them with a preceding \.
Your code currently says "replace any character of [](). with an empty string" (reordered from the order in which you typed them for clarity).
Greedy match:
preg_replace('/\[.*\]/', '', $str); // Replace from one [ to the last ]
A greedy match could match multiple [s and ]s. That expression would take an example [of "sneaky"] text [with more "sneaky"] here and turn it into an example here.
Perl has a syntax for a non-greedy match (you most likely don't want to be greedy):
preg_replace('/\[.*?\]/', '', $str);
Non-greedy matches try to catch as few characters as possible. Using the same example: an example [of "sneaky"] text [with more "sneaky"] here becomes an example text here.
Only up to the first following ]:
preg_replace('/\[[^\]]*\]/', '', $str); // Find a [, look for non-] characters, and then a ]
This is more explicit, but harder to read. Using the same example text, you'd get the output of the non-greedy expression.
Note that none of these deal explicitly with white space. The spaces on either side of [ and ] will remain.
Also note that all of these can fail for malformed input. Multiple [s and ]s without matches could cause a surprising result.
Solution 2:[2]
Just in case you are looking for a recursive removal:
$str = preg_replace("/\[([^\[\]]++|(?R))*+\]/", "", $str);
That will convert this:
This [text [more text]] is cool
to this:
This is cool
Solution 3:[3]
I think you actually want parens for your outer brackets since it's a group. square brackets are a range of expressions. Not sure how to type it in SO.
/(\\[.*\\])/
Sources
This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Overflow and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Source: Stack Overflow
| Solution | Source |
|---|---|
| Solution 1 | double-beep |
| Solution 2 | Andres SK |
| Solution 3 | Amal Murali |
