Maxwell Troy Milton King is right, but since his answer is a bit short, I'll post this as well and provide some examples to illustrate.
First, the .
meta character by default does NOT match line breaks. This is true for many regex implementations, including PHP's flavour. That said, take the text:
$text = "Line 1
Line 2
Line 3";
and the regex
'/.*/'
then the regex will only match Line 1
. See for yourself:
preg_match('/.*/', $text, $match);
echo $match[0]; // echos: 'Line 1'
since the .*
"stops matching" at the
(new line char). If you want to let it match line breaks as well, append the s-modifier (aka DOT-ALL modifier) at the end of your regex:
preg_match('/.*/s', $text, $match);
echo $match[0]; // echos: 'Line 1
Line 2
Line 3'
Now about the m-modifier (multi-line): that will let the ^
match not only the start of the input string, but also the start of each line. The same with $
: it will let the $
match not only the end of the input string, but also the end of each line.
An example:
$text = "Line 1
Line 2
Line 3";
preg_match_all('/[0-9]$/', $text, $matches);
print_r($matches);
which will match only the 3 (at the end of the input). But:
but enabling the m-modifier:
$text = "Line 1
Line 2
Line 3";
preg_match_all('/[0-9]$/m', $text, $matches);
print_r($matches);
all (single) digits at the end of each line ('1', '2' and '3') are matched.
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