I wouldnt recommend using a regular expression for this. Regular
expressions most of the time are now the answer. You could just do
something like:

foreach ($line as file('/home/virtual/....')) {
        if (substr(trim($line), 0, 1) == '#') {
                //$line is a comment
        } else {
                //$line is not a comment
        }
}

On Fri, 2005-03-25 at 11:50, Steve Buehler wrote:
> Ok.  I am really bad at regular expressions.  I have to search through some 
> files and put the contents into an array.  A file could look like this:
> $aliases=`cat /home/virtual/site$site_id/fst/etc/mail/local-host-names`;
> ----start of file----
> # local-host-names - include all aliases for your machine here.
> # Please do not add any domain names in this file.
> domain.net
> domain.com
> ----end of file----
> 
> In $aliases, I need to ignore the lines that start with a # sign.  It is 
> possible, but not probably that it will be more than just the first 2 lines 
> and possible that it isn't even the first two lines.  After done, $aliases 
> should have just the two domain names in it.  One per line.  Then I need to 
> loop through the lines in $aliases and do stuff with each line.  Any help 
> would be GREATLY appreciated.  It would also be fine to just do a loop that 
> checks each line.  Since I guess that would be quicker.  If the line starts 
> with a #, then ignore it, otherwise, do some other stuff.
> 
> Thanks
> Steve
-- 
Regards,
Matthew Fonda
http://mfonda.info

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