On Tue, 2011-01-11 at 11:13 -0800, Richard S. Crawford wrote: > I'm retrieving CLOB data from an Oracle database, and cleaning up the HTML > in it. I'm using the following commands: > > $content = > strip_tags($description->fields['CONTENT'],'<p><ol><ul><li>'); > $content = preg_replace("/<p.*>/","<p>",$content); > > The second line is necessary because the <p> tag frequently comes with class > or style descriptions that must be eliminated. > > This works on the whole except where the <p> tag with the style definition > is broken up over two or more lines. In other words, something like: > > <p class = "bullettext" style = "line-height: normal > border: 3;"> > > In this case, the second line of my code does not strip the class or style > definitions from the paragraph tag. I've tried: > > $content = nl2br($content) > > and > > $content = str_replace(chr(13),$content) > > and > > $content = preg_replace("/[".chr(10)."|".chr(13)."]/","",$content) > (I've read that Oracle uses chr(10) or chr(13) to represent line breaks > internally, so I decided to give those a try as well.) > > and > > $content = str_replace(array('\n','\r','\r\n'),$content) > > all to no avail; these all leave the line break intact, which means my > preg_replace('/<p.*>/','<p>',$content) line still breaks. > > Anyone have any ideas? > If you don't have too many problems with the HTML code (like broken tags, etc) then maybe you could use strip_tags() which will perform better than a regex in this instance, and should work with tags over multiple lines as well (although I can't say I've specifically tried that) Thanks, Ash http://www.ashleysheridan.co.uk