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Home/ Questions/Q 535443
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T09:43:03+00:00 2026-05-13T09:43:03+00:00

I was working a bit with preg_replace over the weekend and I was reading

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I was working a bit with preg_replace over the weekend and I was reading the Php preg_replace documentation when I saw something odd.

Example #2 from the docs shows that when given the following php code

<?php
$string = 'The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog.';
$patterns[0] = '/quick/';
$patterns[1] = '/brown/';
$patterns[2] = '/fox/';
$replacements[2] = 'bear';
$replacements[1] = 'black';
$replacements[0] = 'slow';
echo preg_replace($patterns, $replacements, $string);
?>

the output will be

"The bear black slow jumped over the lazy dog."

and in order to generate what (in my opinion) should be output by default I would need to call ksort() beforehand. like this:

<?php
ksort($patterns);
ksort($replacements);
echo preg_replace($patterns, $replacements, $string);
?>

Isn’t this really a work-around for a bug in php’s preg_replace()? Why does php behave this way? Is there some idiosyncrasy with the arrays declared here that I am missing?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T09:43:03+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 9:43 am

    the docs also say:

    the keys are processed in the order they appear in the array

    So the reason it happens is that simple foreach-type iteration is used and not index access.

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