Why not simply capture what you want, rather than try to remove what you don't 
want?

preg_match_all("%<([EMAIL PROTECTED])>%", $text, $matches);

now print_r($matches[1]) and you see your addresses

A little better code might be, sense it is more explicit and less prone to pick up malformed addresses.

preg_match_all("%<([EMAIL PROTECTED],4})>%", $text, $matches);

Make a new file with:

$new_file= '';
foreach($matches[1] as $addr){
        $new_file .= $addr . "<br>";
}
        
Al.....


Dotan Cohen wrote:
I have many email address that are stored like this:
"=?UTF-8?B?15jXqNeR15XXp9eZ16DXlCDXnteo15nXkNeg15Q=?=" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"=?UTF-8?B?15nXoNem158g157XqNeZ15Q=?=" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
"=?UTF-8?B?15zXmSDXpNeV15zXmdeg15Q=?=" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

I'm trying to run a script that will leave the file as so:
[EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

The first step is to remove the UTF-8 names. This code _doesn't_ work,
but I think that it should:
$text=preg_replace('/\"=\?UTF\-8\?B\?([a-z0-9]+)\?=\"/i', '', $text);

I've tried with single and double quotes, and I've tried backslashing
and not backslashing the question marks. Where am I erring? Thanks.

Dotan Cohen

http://technology-sleuth.com/long_answer/what_are_the_advantages_of_lcd_monitors.html
http://kubuntu.info

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