Reputation:
I have a need to extract a sub-string from a longer string. I know how I would approach it using PHP posstr(); and strpos();, but the data is very large and I suspect that it would be more efficient if I could extract the part string using regex.
For example, if I have a number, (say a latitude) that has the format
"3203.79453"
where the the two characters before and "all" the characters after the decimal point represent decimal seconds, then to obtain the decimal latitude I need to compute the following:
32 + (03.79453)/60 = 32.06324217
So in essence I need a regex method of extracting the sub-string "03.79453".
So two questions how do I achieve it using regex and is it faster than using the method of using strpos() and posstr().
Thanks
Upvotes: 0
Views: 66
Reputation: 7617
You could use preg_replace()
like so:
<?php
$geoCoordinate = "3203.79453";
$degrees = preg_replace("#(\d{2}\.\d*?$)#", "", $geoCoordinate);
$seconds = preg_replace("#(\d*?)(\d{2}\.\d*?)#", "$2", $geoCoordinate);
$degAndSecs = round($degrees + ($seconds/60), 8);
var_dump($degAndSecs); //<== PRODUCES::: float 32.06324217
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 24406
It's easy to achieve with both options:
substr($line, strpos($line, '.') - 2);
or:
preg_match("/(\d{2}\..*)/", $line, $matches);
As for performance, I guess you would need to benchmark it. I've done a quick test to compare the performance of each example by running one million reps of each of those lines:
preg_match
: average around 1.6 seconds for 1,000,000 matchessubstr
: average around 0.85 seconds for 1,000,000 matchesIn this case it seems clear that using substr
is the winner in terms of performance.
Upvotes: 2