* memory. The delimiters are literal strings, not regular expressions.
*
* If the start delimiter ends with an initial substring of the end delimiter,
* memory. The delimiters are literal strings, not regular expressions.
*
* If the start delimiter ends with an initial substring of the end delimiter,
* regex. In this implementation, the end must share no characters with the
* start, so e.g. /*\/ is not considered to be both the start and end of a
* comment. /*\/xy/*\/ is considered to be a single comment with contents /xy/.
* regex. In this implementation, the end must share no characters with the
* start, so e.g. /*\/ is not considered to be both the start and end of a
* comment. /*\/xy/*\/ is considered to be a single comment with contents /xy/.
- preg_match( "!($encStart)|($encEnd)!S$flags", $subject, $m, PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE, $inputPos ) )
+ preg_match( "!($encStart)|($encEnd)!S$flags", $subject, $m, PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE, $inputPos ) )
- $strcmp( $endDelim, substr( $subject, $tokenOffset, $endLength ) ) == 0 )
+ $strcmp( $endDelim, substr( $subject, $tokenOffset, $endLength ) ) == 0 )