Multiple hyphen handling in .htaccess (URL rewriting)












1















I have a problem with URL rewriting. I have written the following rule in my .htaccess file



RewriteRule ^c-([^/]*)-([^/]*)/$ cat.php?id=$1&slug=$2


It gives me URLs like that : http://localhost/actuco/c-628Y8x-france/ (featuring the ID of the category, and its slug). This URL works perfectly.



But, when I type this URL : http://localhost/actuco/c-xpS3cc-amerique-du-nord/
it doesn't works anymore. The cause of the problem must be the fact that the latter slug contains several hyphens (amerique-du-nord) whereas the first one (france) contains no hyphens at all (I tried with all my categories with slugs including multiple hyphens).



Does anyone know how to solve this please ?



Here is my complete .htaccess code



Options +FollowSymlinks

RewriteEngine On

RewriteBase /actuco/
#RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
#RewriteCond %{REQUEST_URI} /+[^.]+$
#RewriteRule ^(.+[^/])$ %{REQUEST_URI}/ [R=301,L]
RewriteRule ^([^/]*)/([^/]*)/([^/]*)/([^/]*)/([^/]*)/([^/]*)/$ article.php?lng=$1&yr=$2&mo=$3&dy=$4&slug=$5&total_slug=$6
#RewriteRule ^([^/]*)-([^/]*)-([^/]*)$ waluty.php?cur=$1&amt=$2&lang=$3
RewriteRule ^c-([^/]*)-([^/]*)/$ cat.php?id=$1&slug=$2
RewriteRule ^([^/]*)/([^/]*)/$ url.php?mode=$1&u=$2
RewriteRule ^bio$ o.php [L]


Thanks in advance !










share|improve this question





























    1















    I have a problem with URL rewriting. I have written the following rule in my .htaccess file



    RewriteRule ^c-([^/]*)-([^/]*)/$ cat.php?id=$1&slug=$2


    It gives me URLs like that : http://localhost/actuco/c-628Y8x-france/ (featuring the ID of the category, and its slug). This URL works perfectly.



    But, when I type this URL : http://localhost/actuco/c-xpS3cc-amerique-du-nord/
    it doesn't works anymore. The cause of the problem must be the fact that the latter slug contains several hyphens (amerique-du-nord) whereas the first one (france) contains no hyphens at all (I tried with all my categories with slugs including multiple hyphens).



    Does anyone know how to solve this please ?



    Here is my complete .htaccess code



    Options +FollowSymlinks

    RewriteEngine On

    RewriteBase /actuco/
    #RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
    #RewriteCond %{REQUEST_URI} /+[^.]+$
    #RewriteRule ^(.+[^/])$ %{REQUEST_URI}/ [R=301,L]
    RewriteRule ^([^/]*)/([^/]*)/([^/]*)/([^/]*)/([^/]*)/([^/]*)/$ article.php?lng=$1&yr=$2&mo=$3&dy=$4&slug=$5&total_slug=$6
    #RewriteRule ^([^/]*)-([^/]*)-([^/]*)$ waluty.php?cur=$1&amt=$2&lang=$3
    RewriteRule ^c-([^/]*)-([^/]*)/$ cat.php?id=$1&slug=$2
    RewriteRule ^([^/]*)/([^/]*)/$ url.php?mode=$1&u=$2
    RewriteRule ^bio$ o.php [L]


    Thanks in advance !










    share|improve this question



























      1












      1








      1








      I have a problem with URL rewriting. I have written the following rule in my .htaccess file



      RewriteRule ^c-([^/]*)-([^/]*)/$ cat.php?id=$1&slug=$2


      It gives me URLs like that : http://localhost/actuco/c-628Y8x-france/ (featuring the ID of the category, and its slug). This URL works perfectly.



      But, when I type this URL : http://localhost/actuco/c-xpS3cc-amerique-du-nord/
      it doesn't works anymore. The cause of the problem must be the fact that the latter slug contains several hyphens (amerique-du-nord) whereas the first one (france) contains no hyphens at all (I tried with all my categories with slugs including multiple hyphens).



      Does anyone know how to solve this please ?



      Here is my complete .htaccess code



      Options +FollowSymlinks

      RewriteEngine On

      RewriteBase /actuco/
      #RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
      #RewriteCond %{REQUEST_URI} /+[^.]+$
      #RewriteRule ^(.+[^/])$ %{REQUEST_URI}/ [R=301,L]
      RewriteRule ^([^/]*)/([^/]*)/([^/]*)/([^/]*)/([^/]*)/([^/]*)/$ article.php?lng=$1&yr=$2&mo=$3&dy=$4&slug=$5&total_slug=$6
      #RewriteRule ^([^/]*)-([^/]*)-([^/]*)$ waluty.php?cur=$1&amt=$2&lang=$3
      RewriteRule ^c-([^/]*)-([^/]*)/$ cat.php?id=$1&slug=$2
      RewriteRule ^([^/]*)/([^/]*)/$ url.php?mode=$1&u=$2
      RewriteRule ^bio$ o.php [L]


      Thanks in advance !










      share|improve this question
















      I have a problem with URL rewriting. I have written the following rule in my .htaccess file



      RewriteRule ^c-([^/]*)-([^/]*)/$ cat.php?id=$1&slug=$2


      It gives me URLs like that : http://localhost/actuco/c-628Y8x-france/ (featuring the ID of the category, and its slug). This URL works perfectly.



      But, when I type this URL : http://localhost/actuco/c-xpS3cc-amerique-du-nord/
      it doesn't works anymore. The cause of the problem must be the fact that the latter slug contains several hyphens (amerique-du-nord) whereas the first one (france) contains no hyphens at all (I tried with all my categories with slugs including multiple hyphens).



      Does anyone know how to solve this please ?



      Here is my complete .htaccess code



      Options +FollowSymlinks

      RewriteEngine On

      RewriteBase /actuco/
      #RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
      #RewriteCond %{REQUEST_URI} /+[^.]+$
      #RewriteRule ^(.+[^/])$ %{REQUEST_URI}/ [R=301,L]
      RewriteRule ^([^/]*)/([^/]*)/([^/]*)/([^/]*)/([^/]*)/([^/]*)/$ article.php?lng=$1&yr=$2&mo=$3&dy=$4&slug=$5&total_slug=$6
      #RewriteRule ^([^/]*)-([^/]*)-([^/]*)$ waluty.php?cur=$1&amt=$2&lang=$3
      RewriteRule ^c-([^/]*)-([^/]*)/$ cat.php?id=$1&slug=$2
      RewriteRule ^([^/]*)/([^/]*)/$ url.php?mode=$1&u=$2
      RewriteRule ^bio$ o.php [L]


      Thanks in advance !







      .htaccess url-rewriting slug






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      edited Nov 13 '18 at 21:07









      miken32

      23.7k84972




      23.7k84972










      asked Nov 13 '18 at 20:08









      Bara KudaBara Kuda

      228




      228
























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          You can try:



          RewriteRule ^c-([w]+)-([w-]+)/$ cat.php?id=$1&slug=$2





          share|improve this answer
























          • Works perfectly, thanks ! Could you explain please what the antislashes and "w" stand for ?

            – Bara Kuda
            Nov 13 '18 at 20:57






          • 1





            You're welcome! Sure, w is a metacharacter in regexp, it stands for every standard letter and digit and the underscore character. The other antislashes were used for 'escaping' functional characters, like - or /.

            – Dan D.
            Nov 13 '18 at 21:26











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          1 Answer
          1






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          active

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          active

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          1














          You can try:



          RewriteRule ^c-([w]+)-([w-]+)/$ cat.php?id=$1&slug=$2





          share|improve this answer
























          • Works perfectly, thanks ! Could you explain please what the antislashes and "w" stand for ?

            – Bara Kuda
            Nov 13 '18 at 20:57






          • 1





            You're welcome! Sure, w is a metacharacter in regexp, it stands for every standard letter and digit and the underscore character. The other antislashes were used for 'escaping' functional characters, like - or /.

            – Dan D.
            Nov 13 '18 at 21:26
















          1














          You can try:



          RewriteRule ^c-([w]+)-([w-]+)/$ cat.php?id=$1&slug=$2





          share|improve this answer
























          • Works perfectly, thanks ! Could you explain please what the antislashes and "w" stand for ?

            – Bara Kuda
            Nov 13 '18 at 20:57






          • 1





            You're welcome! Sure, w is a metacharacter in regexp, it stands for every standard letter and digit and the underscore character. The other antislashes were used for 'escaping' functional characters, like - or /.

            – Dan D.
            Nov 13 '18 at 21:26














          1












          1








          1







          You can try:



          RewriteRule ^c-([w]+)-([w-]+)/$ cat.php?id=$1&slug=$2





          share|improve this answer













          You can try:



          RewriteRule ^c-([w]+)-([w-]+)/$ cat.php?id=$1&slug=$2






          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Nov 13 '18 at 20:39









          Dan D.Dan D.

          580213




          580213













          • Works perfectly, thanks ! Could you explain please what the antislashes and "w" stand for ?

            – Bara Kuda
            Nov 13 '18 at 20:57






          • 1





            You're welcome! Sure, w is a metacharacter in regexp, it stands for every standard letter and digit and the underscore character. The other antislashes were used for 'escaping' functional characters, like - or /.

            – Dan D.
            Nov 13 '18 at 21:26



















          • Works perfectly, thanks ! Could you explain please what the antislashes and "w" stand for ?

            – Bara Kuda
            Nov 13 '18 at 20:57






          • 1





            You're welcome! Sure, w is a metacharacter in regexp, it stands for every standard letter and digit and the underscore character. The other antislashes were used for 'escaping' functional characters, like - or /.

            – Dan D.
            Nov 13 '18 at 21:26

















          Works perfectly, thanks ! Could you explain please what the antislashes and "w" stand for ?

          – Bara Kuda
          Nov 13 '18 at 20:57





          Works perfectly, thanks ! Could you explain please what the antislashes and "w" stand for ?

          – Bara Kuda
          Nov 13 '18 at 20:57




          1




          1





          You're welcome! Sure, w is a metacharacter in regexp, it stands for every standard letter and digit and the underscore character. The other antislashes were used for 'escaping' functional characters, like - or /.

          – Dan D.
          Nov 13 '18 at 21:26





          You're welcome! Sure, w is a metacharacter in regexp, it stands for every standard letter and digit and the underscore character. The other antislashes were used for 'escaping' functional characters, like - or /.

          – Dan D.
          Nov 13 '18 at 21:26


















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