I have an application that I have inherited that dynamically builds HREF links within the displayed text. All seemed to be working well until we recently did a database change and our list of terms to link started to get returned from the query in a different order. This exposed a bug within the existing REGEX where it tries to place an HREF link within a preexisting HREF. Simply forcing a new ordering on the terms list is not an option. A term could be just one word, could be multiple words and even could be words formatted using HTML.
What would I need to adjust within the REGEX so that it ignores terms within the HREF attribute of an A element? Here is an example of what I am referring to:
<cfset Output = "This is some sample text to show the problem when we have term1 term2." />
<cfloop index="w" list="sample;term1 term2;term1" delimiters=";">
<cfset Output = "." & Variables.Output & "." />
<cfset Output = REReplaceNoCase(Variables.Output, "(?![</]#w#>)(\W)(#w#)(\W)", "\1\2\3", "one") />
<cfset Output = Mid(Variables.Output, 2, Len(Variables.Output)-2) />
</cfloop>
<cfoutput>#Variables.Output#</cfoutput>
Change the first (\W) in the regex to ([^=\w>]) and the second to ([^=\w<])
<cfset Output = REReplaceNoCase(Variables.Output, "(?![</]#w#>)([^=\w>])(#w#)([^=\w<])", "\1\2\3", "one") />
Related
I have a word document with tables laid out to look like a form. I have placeholders like %firstName%, %lastName%, %birthdate%...etc.
When I use the replace() function, the %firstName%, %lastName%, %birthdate% and all of the other placeholder fields are replaced on the first and second page. After the second, nothing replaces. All the names of the placeholders on the 3rd and 4th pages are the same as the 1st and 2nd pages. I even copied and pasted the placeholder names and I've made sure there are no added spaced. Curious to know if anyone else has had this happen and can tell me what was done to fix it.
<cfset docPath = GetDirectoryFromPath(GetCurrentTemplatePath()) & "UserTemplate.rtf" />
<cflock name="UserTemp" type="exclusive" timeout="30">
<cfset rtf = FileRead(docPath) />
<cfquery name = "qUserFormData">
SELECT * FROM vUserFormData WHERE UserID = 3
</cfquery>
<cfset rtf = Replace(rtf,"%firstName%",#firstName#)/>
<cfset rtf = Replace(rtf,"%lastName%",#lastName#) />
<cfset rtf = Replace(rtf,"%birthday%",#birthday#) />
</cflock>
<cfheader name="content-disposition" value="filename=UserTemplate.doc" />
<cfcontent type="application/msword"><cfoutput>#rtf#</cfoutput>
There is a fourth (optional) parameter to the replace() method; scope.
Scope:
one: replaces the first occurrence (default)
all: replaces all occurrences
Notice that "one" is the default and that only replaces the first occurrence. Try adding that fourth parameter like this:
<cfset rtf = Replace(rtf,"%firstName%",firstName,"all") />
<cfset rtf = Replace(rtf,"%lastName%",lastName,"all") />
<cfset rtf = Replace(rtf,"%birthday%",birthday,"all") />
(The hash tags # are not necessary in this bit of code.)
Also be aware that the replace() method you are using is case sensitive.
I'm trying to teach myself ColdFusion.
I have a string coming in from the database in this format:
domain.com
<br/>
www.facebook.com/facebookpage
<br/>
http://instagram.com/instagrampage
It is all coming from #getRacer.txtDescription#. The format of this text will always be the same.
I need to split it into 3 variables. I tried this (derived from the example on the adobe website)
<h3>ListToArray Example</h3>
<cfset myList = ValueList(getRacer.txtDescription)>
<p>My list is a list with <cfoutput>#ListLen(myList)#</cfoutput> elements.
<cfset myArrayList = ListToArray(myList,'<br/>')>
<p>My array list is an array with
<cfoutput>#ArrayLen(myArrayList)#</cfoutput> elements.
I somehow ended up with 11 items in the array.
Thank you
This should work.
<cfset TestSTring = "domain.com<br/>www.facebook.com/facebookpage<br/>http://instagram.com/instagrampage">
<cfset a = TestString.Split("<br/>")>
The reason ListtoArray is displaying 11 items is because ColdFusion treats each character in the delimiter string (<br/>) as a separate delimiter
Based on #Leigh's comment updating my answer to ensure people should learn the Coldfusion APIs rather than fiddling with Java functions, <cfset a = ListToArray(TestString, "<br/>", false, true)> will also work. Thanks Leigh.
Note: The false at the end is for the includeEmptyFields flag and the true is for the multiCharacterDelimiter flag. See the docs.
<cfset myList = ReplaceNoCase(getRacer.txtDescription,'<br/>','|','ALL')>
<cfset myArrayList = ListToArray(myList,'|')>
I chose a pipe character because it is unlikely to already exist in your string. If you wanted to account for the possibility that your BR tag may or may not use XML syntax then you could you regex:
<cfset myList = ReReplaceNoCase(str,'<br/?>','|','ALL')>
<cfset myArrayList = ListToArray(myList,'|')>
We currently have some application variables being defined on our apps and also have a special set of tags that are processed within our templates. However I'm finding it to be a bit difficult to split the tags, so I can convert them to application variables when parsed by the template.
<cfset mystring = "[pss]'fetchMessages','VWO-Tracking-Code'[end_pss]">
<cfset the_match = REMatch("\[pss\]\s*(((?!\[pss\]|\[end_pss\]).)+)\s*\[end_pss\]",mystring) />
<cfdump var="#the_match#" />
Our goal is to split the strings between the "[pss] and [end_pss]"
The regex above simply takes the string and applies it to a CF array, which is all good. However I strictly want the code between it as I'll be able to convert it to
<cfset application.snippets['VWO-Tracking-Code']>
Right now it returns everything as one string and I also require the first portion to determine what type of functionality is required.
Any ideas on how to do this would be greatly appreciated.
We are currently using CF 8 and the structure of the code is exactly the same all the time. The only thing is it can be contained within other strings of code as well...
If you're only doing this for one set of tags you can use the replaceList function rather than regEx
<cfset mystring = "[pss]'fetchMessages','VWO-Tracking-Code'[end_pss]">
<cfset mystring = replaceList(mystring,"[pss],[end_pss],'",'')>
<cfset firstitem = listfirst(mystring)>
<cfset seconditem = listlast(mystring)>
<cfdump var="#firstitem#">
<cfdump var="#seconditem#">
This outputs fetchMessages and VWO-Tracking-Code. If you want/need the single quotes on your strings then you can remove the ,' from the 2nd parameter of the replaceList function.
I have HTML code as String variable in Coldfusion.
For example:
<cfset str = "<span class='xyz'> sample text within span </span>" >
Now I want to repalce the word span from text "sample text within span" but not the tag name.
Can someone help me?
Thanks in advance.
I'm going to dumbly answer your question:
<cfset str = "<span class='xyz'> sample text within span </span>" >
<cfdump var="#str#" />
<!--- Convert to list based on start and end tag brackets --->
<cfset arr = listToArray(str, ">,<") />
<!--- Replace the ACTUAL text --->
<cfset newStr = replace(str, arr[2], "my new text") />
<cfdump var="#newStr#" />
Disclaimer: if I caught myself writing this I would probably think myself on the wrong track.
This road leads to one trying to use regular expressions to parse HTML, regarded as a bad thing as mentioned in this article.
Perhaps you can explain your problem a little more and we can help.
I habe changed my code like this and it seems to work, but how efficent it is I don't know
Can someone please check it?
<cfset htmlcontents = ReReplaceNoCase(htmlcontents, "(>[^<]*?)(#Lcase(text2replace)#)", "\1<span class=suchehighlight>\2</span>","ALL")>
Thanks
This has been one of the biggest obstacles in teaching new people ColdFusion.
When to use # is ambiguous at best. Since using them doesn't often create a problem it seems that most people gravitate to using them too much.
So, what are the basic rules?
I think it may be easier to say where NOT to use #. The only place is in cfif statements, and cfset statements where you are not using a variable to build a string in quotes. You would need to use the # sign in almost all other cases.
Example of where you are not going to use it:
<cfset value1 = 5>
<cfset value2 = value1/>
<cfif value1 EQ value2>
Yay!!!
</cfif>
<cfset value2 = "Four plus one is " & value1/>
Examples of where you will use #:
in a cfset where the variable is surrounded by quotes
<cfset value1 = 5>
<cfset value2 = "Four plus one is #value1#"/>
the bodies of cfoutput, cfmail, and cffunction (output="yes") tags
<cfoutput>#value2#</cfoutput>
<cfmail to="e#example.com" from="e#example.com" subject="x">#value2#</cfmail>
<cffunction name="func" output="yes">#value2#</cffunction>
in an attribute value of any coldfusion tag
<cfset dsn = "myDB"/>
<cfquery name="qryUsers" datasource="#dsn#">
<cfset value1 = 5>
<cfset value2 = 10/>
<cfloop from="#value1#" to="#value2#" index="i">
<cfqueryparam value="#value1#" cfsqltype="cf_sql_integer"/>
EDIT:
One oddball little thing I just noticed that seems inconsistent is conditional loops allow the variable name to be used with and without # signs.
<cfset value1 = 5>
<cfloop condition = "value1 LTE 10">
<cfoutput>#value1#</cfoutput><br>
<cfset value1 += 1>
</cfloop>
<cfset value1 = 5>
<cfloop condition = "#value1# LTE 10">
<cfoutput>#value1#</cfoutput><br>
<cfset value1 += 1>
</cfloop>
Here's what Adobe has to say about it:
Using number signs
String interpolation:
<cfset name = "Danny" />
<cfset greeting = "Hello, #name#!" />
<!--- greeting is set to: "Hello, Danny!" --->
Auto-escaped string interpolation in cfquery:
<cfset username = "dannyo'doule" ?>
<cfquery ...>
select u.[ID]
from [User] u
where u.[Username] = '#username#'
</cfquery>
<!--- the query is sent to the server (auto-escaped) as: --->
<!--- select u.[ID] from [User] u where u.[Username] = 'dannyo''doule' --->
<!--- note that the single-quote in the username has been escaped --->
<!--- by cfquery before being sent to the database server --->
Passing complex arguments/attributes in CFML:
<cfset p = StructNew() />
<cfset p.firstName = "Danny" />
<cfset p.lastName = "Robinson" />
<cfmodule template="modules/view/person.cfm" person="#p#">
<!--- the variable Attributes.person will be --->
<!--- available in modules/view/person.cfm --->
Passing complex arguments requires # signes only in CFML, not CFScript. In addition, you can pass any kind of value: simple values, arrays, structs, cfcomponents, cffunctions, java objects, com objects, etc.
In all these cases, the text between the # signs does not have to be the name of a variable. In fact, it can by any expression. Of course, for string interpolation, the expression must evaluate to a simple value, but for argument/attribute passing in CFML, the expression may evaluate to any complex value as well.
The #...# syntax allows you to embed an expression within a string literal. ColdFusion is unfortunately pretty inconsistent about what's a string and what's an expression. Jayson provided a good list of examples of when to use (or not use) #s.
At the risk of sounding like a wise-guy, a rule of thumb is: use # around variables or expressions only when not doing so doesn't yield the correct result. Or: if you don't need them, don't use them.
I like Jayson's answer though.
Let's start by assuming you aren't talking about cfoutput tags, cause then the answer is always, elsewhere in your code, if you are inside of quotation marks, then need to use # symbols if it's possible to actually type the value that is going to be used...so if you are in a cfloop tag setting the 'to' attribute, you could easily type 6, but if you want to use a variable you need to use the # symbols. Now if you are in a cfloop tag setting the query parameter, there is no way you could actually type the query into that attribute, there is no way to type a query, so no # symbols are needed.
Likewise in a cfdump tag, you can dump static text, so if you want to dump the contents of a variable, then you will need to use a # symbol. This problem is generally self-correcting, but I feel your pain, your students are probably frustrated that there is no "ALWAYS USE THEM" or "NEVER USE THEM" approach...sadly this isn't the case, the only thing that is true, is only one way inside of quotation marks is going to be correct. So if it isn't working look at it hard and long and think to yourself: "Could I type that value out instead of using the value contained in that variable?" If the answer is no, then the # symbols won't be needed, otherwise get your # character foo on.