vbracco wonderful function below (04-Apr-2009 02:45) doesn't check for if the result is null. My use of the function returned an empty set as the result of min. Here is my correction.
vbracco, thanks for saving me some time.
<?php
function strposa($haystack ,$needles=array(),$offset=0){
$chr = array();
foreach($needles as $needle){
if (strpos($haystack,$needle,$offset)) {
$chr[] = strpos($haystack,$needle,$offset);
}
}
if(empty($chr)) return false;
return min($chr);
}
$string = "This is my string, very simple.";
echo strposa($string,array(".",","," ")); // 2
echo strposa($string,array("T")); // 0
echo strposa($string,array("Q","W")); // false
?>
strpos
(PHP 4, PHP 5)
strpos — Trouve la position d'un caractère dans une chaîne
Description
Retourne la position numérique de la première occurrence de needle dans la chaîne de caractères haystack . Contrairement à la fonction strrpos() avant PHP 5, celle-ci peut prendre une chaîne de caractères complète comme paramètre needle et cette chaîne sera utilisée en totalité.
Liste de paramètres
- haystack
-
La chaîne dans laquelle on doit chercher.
- needle
-
Si needle n'est pas une chaîne, il est converti en entier, et utilisé comme caractère de code ASCII correspondant.
- offset
-
Le paramètre optionnel offset vous permet de spécifier à partir de quel caractère dans haystack vous souhaitez commencer la recherche. La position retournée sera toujours relative au début de la chaîne haystack .
Valeurs de retour
Retourne la position, sous la forme d'un entier. Si needle n'est pas trouvé, strpos() retournera FALSE.
Cette fonction peut retourner FALSE, mais elle peut aussi retourner une valeur équivalent à FALSE comme 0 ou "". Veuillez lire la section sur les booléens pour plus d'informations. Utilisez l'opérateur === pour tester la valeur de retour exacte de cette fonction.
Exemples
Exemple #1 Avec ===
<?php
$mystring = 'abc';
$findme = 'a';
$pos = strpos($mystring, $findme);
// Notez notre utilisation de ===. == ne fonctionnerait pas comme attendu
// car la position de 'a' est la 0-ième (premier) caractère.
if ($pos === false) {
echo "La chaîne '$findme' ne se trouve pas dans la chaîne '$mystring'";
} else {
echo "La chaine '$findme' a été trouvée dans la chaîne '$mystring'";
echo " et débute à la position $pos";
}
?>
Exemple #2 Avec !==
<?php
$mystring = 'abc';
$findme = 'a';
$pos = strpos($mystring, $findme);
// Notez notre utilisation de !==. != ne fonctionnerait pas comme attendu
// car la position de 'a' est la 0-ième (premier) caractère.
if ($pos !== false) {
echo "La chaine '$findme' a été trouvée dans la chaîne '$mystring'";
echo " et débute à la position $pos";
} else {
echo "La chaîne '$findme' ne se trouve pas dans la chaîne '$mystring'";
}
?>
Exemple #3 Utiliser un offset
<?php
// Nous pouvons chercher le caractère, et ignorer tout ce qui est avant l'offset
$newstring = 'abcdef abcdef';
$pos = strpos($newstring, 'a', 1); // $pos = 7, non pas 0
?>
Notes
Note: Cette fonction gère les chaînes binaires.
Voir aussi
- strrpos() - Trouve la position de la dernière occurrence d'un caractère dans une chaîne
- stripos() - Recherche la première occurrence dans une chaîne, sans tenir compte de la casse
- strripos() - Trouve la position de la dernière occurrence d'une chaîne dans une autre, de façon insensible à la casse
- strrchr() - Trouve la dernière occurrence d'un caractère dans une chaîne
- substr() - Retourne un segment de chaîne
- stristr() - Version insensible à la casse de strstr
- strstr() - Trouve la première occurrence dans une chaîne
strpos
29-Jun-2009 05:54
03-Jun-2009 08:26
I found in a certain bit of my code that under certain circumstances, $needle could be an empty string. This caused strpos to generate an error message.
To get round it, I had to first test to see if $needle was an empty string, and then (ie 'else') go forward and do the strpos test if not.
04-Apr-2009 04:45
This function find position of first occurrence of any $needles in a string $haystack.
Return the position as an integer. If needles is not found, strposa() will return boolean FALSE.
<?php
function strposa($haystack ,$needles=array(),$offset=0){
$chr = array();
foreach($needles as $needle){
$chr[] = strpos($haystack,$needle,$offset);
}
if(empty($chr)) return false;
return min($chr);
}
$string = "This is my string, very simple.";
echo strposa($string,array(".",","," ")); // 2
echo strposa($string,array("T")); // 0
echo strposa($string,array("Q","W")); // false
?>
03-Apr-2009 10:57
Note that strpos() will return false if you supply an integer (thus, this presumably applies to float, too) as needle. For example:
<?php
$id = 2; $text = '12345';
if(strpos($text, $id) === false){
echo 'Yes, is false';
}
?>
Will output 'Yes, is false', a behavior which may not be very intuitive (you'd think it would be covered by PHP's type juggling feature).
This can be easily fixed by adding $id = (string)$id; above the strpos() statement.
23-Mar-2009 06:48
routine to return -1 if there is no match for strpos
<?php
//instr function to mimic vb instr fucntion
function InStr($haystack, $needle)
{
$pos=strpos($haystack, $needle);
if ($pos !== false)
{
return $pos;
}
else
{
return -1;
}
}
?>
08-Feb-2009 08:01
A function that return the first occurance of a number in a string, if anyone needs it.
Translation/prevod:
Funkcija, ki vrača pozicijo prve številke v besedi, če jo kdo potrebuje.
<?php
function firstNumPos($str) {
$poses = array(); // will be storing positions of the numbers
for($i = 0; $i < 10; ++$i) { // cycle through numbers
if(($a = strpos($str, (string)$i)) !== false) {
$poses[] = $a; // append the position of
// the first occurance of the number
}
}
if(isset($poses[0])) { // if array not empty
sort($poses); // sort to get the lowest one on the 'bottom'
return $poses[0]; // and return it
}
return false; // otherwise return false
} // firstNumPos()
?>
28-Dec-2008 01:48
The Situation:
I wanted to return TRUE if strpos returned position 0, and only position 0, without the added overhead of preg_match.
The Solution:
As PHP treats 0 (zero) as NULL, and strpos returns the int 0 (but not NULL), I used type casting and the "===" comparison operator (as it compares types) to resolve my issue.
<?php
$hayStack = "dbHost";
$needle = "db"
$needlePos = strpos($hayStack, $needle);
if((string)$needlePos === (string)0) {
echo "db is in position zero";
} else {
echo "db is NOT in position zero";
}
?>
Returns:
db is in position zero
<?php
$hayStack = "another_db_host";
$needle = "db"
$needlePos = strpos($hayStack, $needle);
if((string)$needlePos === (string)0) {
echo "db is in position zero";
} else {
echo "db is NOT in position zero";
}
?>
This returns:
db is in NOT position zero
18-Nov-2008 02:52
If you would like to find all occurences of a needle inside a haystack you could use this function strposall($haystack,$needle);. It will return an array with all the strpos's.
<?php
/**
* strposall
*
* Find all occurrences of a needle in a haystack
*
* @param string $haystack
* @param string $needle
* @return array or false
*/
function strposall($haystack,$needle){
$s=0;
$i=0;
while (is_integer($i)){
$i = strpos($haystack,$needle,$s);
if (is_integer($i)) {
$aStrPos[] = $i;
$s = $i+strlen($needle);
}
}
if (isset($aStrPos)) {
return $aStrPos;
}
else {
return false;
}
}
?>
23-Oct-2008 03:19
careful that when you put a strpos in an if statement that you take note that if the string is in the 0 position it will return false, causing your control structure to think its not in the string.
28-Sep-2008 08:40
This is the code,I wrote today, I wanted to strip all the newlines, and format the output in a single line so as to lower the filesize of my php source files.
<?php
/****************************************
@ Code By : Samundra Shrestha
@ Dated : September 28,2008
P.S. Remember to remove all single line comments from the source file
otherwise the file may get corrupted.
******************************************/
if(!isset($_POST['change']) || !isset($_POST['filename']))
{
print "<b>".strtoupper("Paste the fullpath of the file")."</b>";
print "<form name='FrmChange' method='post' action='".$_SERVER['PHP_SELF']."'>";
print "<input type='textbox' name='filename' size='50px' maxlength='255'>";
print "<input type='submit' name='change' value='Start'>";
print "</form>";
}
else
{
$filename=$_POST['filename'];
if(!$fpin=@fopen($filename,"r"))
{
print "<b>Error ! File Doesn't Exists</b>";
exit();
}
$text="";
$i=0;
/*Put the contents of file into the string*/
while(!feof($fpin))
{
$text.=fread($fpin,1024);
}
$count=strlen($text);
$pos=strpos($text,"\n"); //Gives the First occurence of newline
while($i<$count)
{
if($i<$pos-1)
{
$newtext.=$text{$i}; //C Style of String Indexing
}
else
{
$pos=strpos($text,"\n",$i+1);
}
$i++;
}
$newtext.="?>"; //necessary as somehow it is removed from the original source file.
$fp=fopen("sample.txt","wb+");
fwrite($fp,$newtext);
fclose($fp);
print "File Changed Successfully.";
}
?>
The resultant code is all in one new line saved in file sample.txt
I hope, this comes handy to someone.
Cheers,
Samundra Shrestha
http://www.samundra.com.np
19-Sep-2008 08:17
here's a php implementation of stdc++ string class find_first_of using strpos.
<?php
function find_first_of($haystack, $needlesAsString, $offset=0)
{
$max = strlen($needlesAsString);
$index = strlen($haystack)+1;
for($ii=0; $ii<$max;$ii++){
$result = strpos($haystack,$needlesAsString[$ii], $offset);
if( $result !== FALSE && $result < $index)
$index = $result;
}
return ( $index > strlen($haystack)? FALSE: $index);
}
?>
Example:
<?php
$test="Ralph: One of these days, Alice!!";
$look_for=":!,"; // punctuation marks
$ss = 0;
while( $answer=find_first_of($test,$look_for,$ss) ) {
echo $answer . "\n";
$ss = $answer+1;
}
?>
This prints out:
5
24
31
32
05-Aug-2008 09:16
Hi! Don't you people miss the pretty comparison operator 'LIKE' from mySql in PHP??.
I've made this funtion to emulate that method. It's for search a match string into another String
using the '%' caracter just like you do un the LIKE syntax.
For example:
<?php
$mystring = "Hi, this is good!";
$searchthis = "%thi% goo%";
$resp = milike($mystring,$searchthis);
if ($resp){
echo "milike = VERDADERO";
} else{
echo "milike = FALSO";
}
?>
Will print:
milike = VERDADERO
and so on...
this is the function:
<?php
function milike($cadena,$busca){
if($busca=="") return 1;
$vi = split("%",$busca);
$offset=0;
for($n=0;$n<count($vi);$n++){
if($vi[$n]== ""){
if($vi[0]== ""){
$tieneini = 1;
}
} else {
$newoff=strpos($cadena,$vi[$n],$offset);
if($newoff!==false){
if(!$tieneini){
if($offset!=$newoff){
return false;
}
}
if($n==count($vi)-1){
if($vi[$n] != substr($cadena,strlen($cadena)-strlen($vi[$n]), strlen($vi[$n]))){
return false;
}
} else {
$offset = $newoff + strlen($vi[$n]);
}
} else {
return false;
}
}
}
return true;
}
?>
Good luck!
18-Jun-2008 12:48
I wasn't aware of the !== operator, only the === for false. I was using this code on strpos:
<?php
while( ! ($start=@strpos($source,$startTag,$end)) === false) {
// ...
}
?>
This gave a false if the string was found at position 0, which is weird.
However using
<?php
while(($start=@strpos($source,$startTag,$end)) !== false) {
// ...
}
?>
Gives no such error and seems to work correctly
26-May-2008 03:19
Hello! I was founding a function, which finds any occurence of a string (no: first occurence). I wasn't, so I maked this function! It may be very useful.
<?php
int strnpos(string $haystack, mixed $needle, int $occurence);
?>
Example:
<?php
strnpos("I like the bananas. You like coke. We like chocolate.", "like", 2); // 24
?>
Here's code of this function:
<?php
function strnpos($base, $str, $n)
{
if ($n <= 0 || intval($n) != $n || substr_count($base, $str) < $n) return FALSE;
$str = strval($str);
$len = 0;
for ($i=0 ; $i<$n-1 ; ++$i)
{
if ( strpos($base, $str) === FALSE ) return FALSE;
$len += strlen( substr($base, 0, strpos($base, $str) + strlen($str)) );
$base = substr($base, strpos($base, $str) + strlen($str) );
}
return strpos($base, $str) + $len;
}
?>
02-Apr-2008 02:17
This might be useful.
<?php
class String{
//Look for a $needle in $haystack in any position
public static function contains(&$haystack, &$needle, &$offset)
{
$result = strpos($haystack, $needle, $offset);
return $result !== FALSE;
}
//intuitive implementation .. if not found returns -1.
public static function strpos(&$haystack, &$needle, &$offset)
{
$result = strpos($haystack, $needle, $offset);
if ($result === FALSE )
{
return -1;
}
return $result;
}
}//String
?>
12-Jan-2008 12:45
WARNING
As strpos may return either FALSE (substring absent) or 0 (substring at start of string), strict versus loose equivalency operators must be used very carefully.
To know that a substring is absent, you must use:
=== FALSE
To know that a substring is present (in any position including 0), you can use either of:
!== FALSE (recommended)
> -1 (note: or greater than any negative number)
To know that a substring is at the start of the string, you must use:
=== 0
To know that a substring is in any position other than the start, you can use any of:
> 0 (recommended)
!= 0 (note: but not !== 0 which also equates to FALSE)
!= FALSE (disrecommended as highly confusing)
Also note that you cannot compare a value of "" to the returned value of strpos. With a loose equivalence operator (== or !=) it will return results which don't distinguish between the substring's presence versus position. With a strict equivalence operator (=== or !==) it will always return false.
31-Oct-2007 11:19
A further implementation of the great rstrpos function posted in this page. Missing some parameters controls, but the core seems correct.
<?php
// Parameters:
//
// haystack : target string
// needle : string to search
// offset : which character in haystack to start searching, FROM THE END OF haystack
// iNumOccurrence : how many needle to search into haystack beginning from offset ( i.e. the 4th occurrence of xxx into yyy )
function rstrpos ($haystack, $needle, $offset=0, $iNumOccurrence=1)
{
//
$size = strlen ($haystack);
$iFrom = $offset;
$iLoop = 0;
//
do
{
$pos = strpos (strrev($haystack), strrev($needle), $iFrom);
$iFrom = $pos + strlen($needle);
}
while ((++$iLoop)<$iNumOccurrence);
//
if($pos === false) return false;
//
return $size - $pos - strlen($needle);
}
?>
14-Oct-2007 01:49
str_replace evaluates its arguments exactly once.
for example:
<?php
$page = str_replace("##randompicture##", getrandompicture(), $page);
?>
will call getrandompicture() once, ie it will insert the same random picture for each occurrence of ##randompicture## :(
Here is my quick and dirty workaround:
<?php
function add_random_pictures($text) {
while (($i = strpos($text, "##randompicture##")) !== false) {
$text = substr_replace($text, getrandompicture(), $i, strlen("##randompicture##"));
}
return $text;
}
$page = add_random_pictures($page);
?>
17-Aug-2007 10:11
If you plan to use an integer as needle you need first to convert your integer into a String else it's not going to work.
For exemple :
<?php
$id = 1;
$my_text = "hel124lo";
$first_position =strpos($my_text ,substr($id,0));
?>
There are for sure some another solutions to convert an integer into a string in php.
15-May-2007 11:21
This is a bit more useful when scanning a large string for all occurances between 'tags'.
<?php
function getStrsBetween($s,$s1,$s2=false,$offset=0) {
/*====================================================================
Function to scan a string for items encapsulated within a pair of tags
getStrsBetween(string, tag1, <tag2>, <offset>
If no second tag is specified, then match between identical tags
Returns an array indexed with the encapsulated text, which is in turn
a sub-array, containing the position of each item.
Notes:
strpos($needle,$haystack,$offset)
substr($string,$start,$length)
====================================================================*/
if( $s2 === false ) { $s2 = $s1; }
$result = array();
$L1 = strlen($s1);
$L2 = strlen($s2);
if( $L1==0 || $L2==0 ) {
return false;
}
do {
$pos1 = strpos($s,$s1,$offset);
if( $pos1 !== false ) {
$pos1 += $L1;
$pos2 = strpos($s,$s2,$pos1);
if( $pos2 !== false ) {
$key_len = $pos2 - $pos1;
$this_key = substr($s,$pos1,$key_len);
if( !array_key_exists($this_key,$result) ) {
$result[$this_key] = array();
}
$result[$this_key][] = $pos1;
$offset = $pos2 + $L2;
} else {
$pos1 = false;
}
}
} while($pos1 !== false );
return $result;
}
?>
26-Apr-2007 05:58
Here's a somewhat more efficient way to truncate a string at the end of a word. This will end the string on the last dot or last space, whichever is closer to the cut off point. In some cases, a full stop may not be followed by a space eg when followed by a HTML tag.
<?php
$shortstring = substr($originalstring, 0, 400);
$lastdot = strrpos($shortstring, ".");
$lastspace = strrpos($shortstring, " ");
$shortstring = substr($shortstring, 0, ($lastdot > $lastspace? $lastdot : $lastspace));
?>
Obviously, if you only want to split on a space, you can simplify this:
<?php
$shortstring = substr($originalstring, 0, 400);
$shortstring = substr($shortstring, 0, strrpos($shortstring, " "));
?>
11-Apr-2007 02:35
If you want to check for either IE6 or 7 individually.
<?php
function browserIE($version)
{
if($version == 6 || $version == 7)
{
$browser = strpos($_SERVER['HTTP_USER_AGENT'], "MSIE ".$version.".0;");
if($browser == true)
{
return true;
}
else
{
return false;
}
else
{
return false;
}
?>
03-Apr-2007 06:57
this function returns the text between 2 strings:
<?php
function get_between ($text, $s1, $s2) {
$mid_url = "";
$pos_s = strpos($text,$s1);
$pos_e = strpos($text,$s2);
for ( $i=$pos_s+strlen($s1) ; ( ( $i < ($pos_e)) && $i < strlen($text) ) ; $i++ ) {
$mid_url .= $text[$i];
}
return $mid_url;
}
?>
if $s1 or $s2 are not found, $mid_url will be empty
to add an offset, simply compare $pos_s to the offset, and only let it continue if the offset is smaller then $pos_s.
19-Jan-2007 09:15
Try this function to find the first position of needle before a given offset.
For example:
<?php
$s = "This is a test a is This";
$offset = strpos($s, "test");
strnpos($s, "is", $offset); // returns 17
strnpos($s, "is", -$offset); // returns 5
// Works just like strpos if $offset is positive.
// If $offset is negative, return the first position of needle
// before before $offset.
function strnpos($haystack, $needle, $offset=0)
{
if ($offset>=0)
$result=strpos($haystack, $needle, $offset);
else
{
$offset=strlen($haystack)+$offset;
$haystack=strrev($haystack);
$needle=strrev($needle);
$result=strpos($haystack, $needle, $offset);
if ($result!==false)
{
$result+=strlen($needle);
$result=strlen($haystack)-$result;
}
}
return $result;
}
?>
18-Dec-2006 11:31
I've been looking at previous posts and came up with this function to find the start and end off an certain occurance or all occurances of needle within haystack.
I've made some minor tweaks to the code itself, like counting the length of needle only once and counting the result set array instead of using a count variable.
I also added a length parameter to the result set to use in a following substr_replace call etc...
<?php
function strpos_index($haystack = '',$needle = '',$offset = 0,$limit = 99,$return = null)
{
$length = strlen($needle);
$occurances = array();
while((($count = count($occurances)) < $limit) && (false !== ($offset = strpos($haystack,$needle,$offset))))
{
$occurances[$count]['length'] = $length;
$occurances[$count]['start'] = $offset;
$occurances[$count]['end'] = $offset = $offset + $length;
}
return $return === null ? $occurances : $occurances[$return];
}
?>
14-Oct-2006 07:58
if you want to get the position of a substring relative to a substring of your string, BUT in REVERSE way:
<?php
function strpos_reverse_way($string,$charToFind,$relativeChar) {
//
$relativePos = strpos($string,$relativeChar);
$searchPos = $relativePos;
$searchChar = '';
//
while ($searchChar != $charToFind) {
$newPos = $searchPos-1;
$searchChar = substr($string,$newPos,strlen($charToFind));
$searchPos = $newPos;
}
//
if (!empty($searchChar)) {
//
return $searchPos;
return TRUE;
}
else {
return FALSE;
}
//
}
?>
27-Sep-2006 04:33
Yay! I came up with a very useful function. This finds a beginning marker and an ending marker (the first after the beginning marker), and returns the contents between them. You specify an initial position in order to tell it where to start looking. You can use a while() or for() loop to get all occurence of a certain string within a string (for example, taking all hyperlinks in a string of HTML code)...
<?php
function get_middle($source, $beginning, $ending, $init_pos) {
$beginning_pos = strpos($source, $beginning, $init_pos);
$middle_pos = $beginning_pos + strlen($beginning);
$ending_pos = strpos($source, $ending, $beginning_pos + 1);
$middle = substr($source, $middle_pos, $ending_pos - $middle_pos);
return $middle;
}
?>
For example, to find the URL of the very first hyperlink in an HTML string $data, use:
$first_url = get_middle($data, '<a href="', '"', 0);
It's done wonders for scraping HTML pages with certain tools on my website.
12-Jul-2006 12:48
You can use strpos to produce a funciton that will find the nth instance of a certain string within a string. Personally I find this function almost more useful then strpos itself.
I kinda wish they would put it stock into php but I doupt thats gonna happen any time soon. ^_^
Here is da code:
<?php
//just like strpos, but it returns the position of the nth instance of the needle (yay!)
function strpos2($haystack, $needle, $nth = 1)
{
//Fixes a null return if the position is at the beginning of input
//It also changes all input to that of a string ^.~
$haystack = ' '.$haystack;
if (!strpos($haystack, $needle))
return false;
$offset=0;
for($i = 1; $i < $nth; $i++)
$offset = strpos($haystack, $needle, $offset) + 1;
return strpos($haystack, $needle, $offset) - 1;
}
?>
24-Dec-2005 10:38
there was a code (from wodzuY2k at interia dot pl) removing all between <script> tags..
but it didn't work if the tag begins like <SCRIPT language=javascript type=text/javascript>
here is function removing all between "<script" and "/script>"
<?php
function remove_js($contents)
{
while(true)
{
$begPos = strpos($contents,"<script");
if ($begPos===false) break; //all tags were found & replaced.
$endPos = strpos($contents,"/script>",$begPos+strlen("<script"));
$tmp = substr($contents,0,$begPos);
$tmp .= substr($contents,$endPos+strlen("script>"));
$contents = $tmp;
if ($loopcontrol++>100) break; //loop infinity control
continue; //search again
}
return $contents;
}
?>
23-Dec-2005 04:44
If you want to find positions of all needle's in haystack,
you can use this one:
<?php
while (($pos=strpos($haystack,$needle,$pos+1))!==false) $pos_array[$i++]=$pos;
?>
But mind, that it will find from second char. You must use $pos=-1; before you want search from first char.
<?php
$haystack="one two three one two three one two three one two three one";
$needle="one";
$pos=-1;
while (($pos=strpos($haystack,$needle,$pos+1))!==false) $pos_array[$i++]=$pos;
?>
RESULT:
$pos_array[0] = 0
$pos_array[1] = 14
$pos_array[2] = 28
$pos_array[3] = 42
$pos_array[4] = 56
21-Nov-2005 03:00
<?php
function nthPos ($str, $needles, $n=1) {
// finds the nth occurrence of any of $needles' characters in $str
// returns -1 if not found; $n<0 => count backwards from end
// e.g. $str = "c:\\winapps\\morph\\photos\\Party\\Phoebe.jpg";
// substr($str, nthPos($str, "/\\:", -2)) => \Party\Phoebe.jpg
// substr($str, nthPos($str, "/\\:", 4)) => \photos\Party\Phoebe.jpg
$pos = -1;
$size = strlen($str);
if ($reverse=($n<0)) { $n=-$n; $str = strrev($str); }
while ($n--) {
$bestNewPos = $size;
for ($i=strlen($needles)-1;$i>=0;$i--) {
$newPos = strpos($str, $needles[$i], $pos+1);
if ($newPos===false) $needles = substr($needles,0,$i) . substr($needles,$i+1);
else $bestNewPos = min($bestNewPos,$newPos); }
if (($pos=$bestNewPos)==$size) return -1; }
return $reverse ? $size-1-$pos : $pos;
}
?>
Csaba Gabor from Vienna
11-Nov-2005 11:28
if you want need a fast function to find the first occurrence of any ch element of an needle array this function might be of use:
<?php
$eurl = strpos_needle_array($text, array('"'=>0,'\''=>0,'>'=>0, ' '=>0, "\n"=>0), $surl);
function strpos_needle_array(& $text, $needle_ary, $offset=0){
for($ch_pos=$offset;$ch_pos<strlen($text);$ch_pos++){
if(isset($needle_ary[$text[$ch_pos]])){
return $ch_pos;
}
}
return false;
}
?>
06-Oct-2005 02:42
this function takes a space-deliminted string as a list of potential needles and runs it against another string as a haystack.
the number of positive matches of needles within the haystack is returned as a rounded percentile.
<?php
function keyMatch($needles,$haystack) {
$nArray=split(" ",$needles);
$found=0;
$best=count($nArray);
for($i=0;$i<count($nArray);$i++) {
$pzn=strpos(strtoupper($haystack),strtoupper($nArray[$i]));
if ($pzn>-1) { $found++; }
}
$pct=($found*100)/$best;
return round($pct);
}
$test = keyMatch("the quick wolf","the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog");
echo($test);
?>
RESULT:
67
(because "the" and "quick" were found but "wolf" was not)
31-Mar-2005 05:06
Str Pos Nth (Position of nth occurance of a string)
A handy function to get the position of nth occurance of a substring in a string, with an optional param to make it case insenstive. I am calling it strposnth, suggestions welcome.
Third optional parameter gets the value of n, e.g puting in 2 will return position of second occurance of needle in haystack: Valid inputs (1 = default) 2,3,4.....
Fourth optional parameter can be used to specify the function as case insenstive: Valid inputs (0 = case senstive = default) 1 = case insenstive.
Code:
<?php
function strposnth($haystack, $needle, $nth=1, $insenstive=0)
{
//if its case insenstive, convert strings into lower case
if ($insenstive) {
$haystack=strtolower($haystack);
$needle=strtolower($needle);
}
//count number of occurances
$count=substr_count($haystack,$needle);
//first check if the needle exists in the haystack, return false if it does not
//also check if asked nth is within the count, return false if it doesnt
if ($count<1 || $nth > $count) return false;
//run a loop to nth number of accurance
for($i=0,$pos=0,$len=0;$i<$nth;$i++)
{
//get the position of needle in haystack
//provide starting point 0 for first time ($pos=0, $len=0)
//provide starting point as position + length of needle for next time
$pos=strpos($haystack,$needle,$pos+$len);
//check the length of needle to specify in strpos
//do this only first time
if ($i==0) $len=strlen($needle);
}
//return the number
return $pos;
}
?>
I just construct this function after trying to search a similar one to use in a shopping cart. I am using this to display a limited number of lines or text for featured products. My aim is to limit the product description to 100 characters or 3 lines / 3 list items whichever is less.
Example code goes like this
<?php
//get the product description from recordset
$text=$row['product_desc'];
//strip off text if its longer than 100 characters
if (strlen($text)>100) $text=substr($text,0,100)." ...";
//get ending of the third line
$pos=strposnth($text,"\n",3,1);
//if found, strip off text after that
if($pos) $text=substr($text,0,$pos);
//nl2li (new line 2 list) this function converts the \n seprated lines of text into sorted or unsorted lists
//I have posted this function in nl2br
//http://uk2.php.net/manual/en/function.nl2br.php
$text=nl2li($text);
echo $text;
?>
Examples:
<?php
strposnth("I am trying to go now.","o"); // returns 13 (strpos behavior)
strposnth("I am trying to go now.","O"); // returns false (strpos behavior)
strposnth("I am trying to go now.","o",2); // returns 16 (second occurance)
strposnth("I am trying to go now.","o",7); // returns false (occurance count is less than 7)
strposnth("I am trying to go now.","O",1,1); // returns 13 (stripos behavior)
strposnth("I am trying to go now.","O",3,1); // returns 19 (stripos behavior + nth occurance)
?>
Regards,
webKami [at] akdomains.com
07-Feb-2005 03:33
If you want to get all positions in an array, you can use this function. If the optional parameter count is especified, the function will put there the number of matches.
<?php
function strallpos($pajar, $aguja, $offset=0, &$count=null) {
if ($offset > strlen($pajar)) trigger_error("strallpos(): Offset not contained in string.", E_USER_WARNING);
$match = array();
for ($count=0; (($pos = strpos($pajar, $aguja, $offset)) !== false); $count++) {
$match[] = $pos;
$offset = $pos + strlen($aguja);
}
return $match;
}
?>
21-Jan-2005 03:17
I created a useful function that returns an array with the positions within a string. For more info, read the comments:
<?php
// Returns an array in this fashion:
// array(count => position)
function strpos_array($haystack, $needle){
$kill = 0; // Kills while loop when changed
$offset = 0; // Offset for strpos()
$i = 0; // Counter, not iterator
while ($kill === 0) {
$i++;
$result = strpos($haystack, $needle, $offset);
if ($result === FALSE) { // If result is false (no more instances found), kill the while loop
$kill = 1;
} else {
$array[$i] = $result; // Set array
$offset = $result + 1; // Offset is set 1 character after previous occurence
}
}
return $array;
}
?>
03-Dec-2004 06:28
here a little function for tag parsing
<?php
function parsing($tag,$string) {
$start=strpos($string,"<" . $tag . ">" );
$start=$start + strlen("<" . $tag . ">");
$end=(strpos($string, "</" . $tag . ">"));
$num= ($end - $start);
$valore=substr($string,$start,$num);
return $valore;
}
?>
26-Aug-2004 12:52
Many people look for in_string which does not exist in PHP, so, here's the most efficient form of in_string() (that works in both PHP 4/5) that I can think of:
<?php
function in_string($needle, $haystack, $insensitive = 0) {
if ($insensitive) {
return (false !== stristr($haystack, $needle)) ? true : false;
} else {
return (false !== strpos($haystack, $needle)) ? true : false;
}
}
?>
19-Aug-2004 07:33
Watch out for type!
The following code will return "not matched", which is a little counter-intuitive.
<?php
$val1=123;
$val2="123,456,789";
if (strpos($val2, $val1)!==false) echo "matched";
else echo "not matched";
?>
When $val1 is cast to string, it behaves as you might expect:
<?php
$val1=(string)123;
$val2="123,456,789";
if (strpos($val2, $val1)!==false) echo "matched";
else echo "not matched";
?>
Hope this saves someone the couple of hours that it took me to spot it :-)
Regards,
Alex Poole
22-Apr-2004 12:38
Code like this:
<?php
if (strpos('this is a test', 'is') !== false) {
echo "found it";
}
?>
gets repetitive, is not very self-explanatory, and most people handle it incorrectly anyway. Make your life easier:
<?php
function str_contains($haystack, $needle, $ignoreCase = false) {
if ($ignoreCase) {
$haystack = strtolower($haystack);
$needle = strtolower($needle);
}
$needlePos = strpos($haystack, $needle);
return ($needlePos === false ? false : ($needlePos+1));
}
?>
Then, you may do:
<?php
// simplest use
if (str_contains('this is a test', 'is')) {
echo "Found it";
}
// when you need the position, as well whether it's present
$needlePos = str_contains('this is a test', 'is');
if ($needlePos) {
echo 'Found it at position ' . ($needlePos-1);
}
// you may also ignore case
$needlePos = str_contains('this is a test', 'IS', true);
if ($needlePos) {
echo 'Found it at position ' . ($needlePos-1);
}
?>
02-Apr-2004 07:41
You can use this function to find ANY occurence of a string in an array - no matter if it is just part of one of the array elements.
it returns the key of the first found occurence or false
<?php
function search_array($needle,$haystacks) {
$found=false;
foreach ($haystacks as $key => $haystack) {
if (!(strpos($haystack,$needle)===false)) {
$found=$key;
break;
}
}
return ($found);
}
?>
10-Mar-2004 02:26
counting the occurrences of a substring, recursive-style instead of looping.
<?php
function countSubstrs($haystack, $needle)
{
return (($p = strpos($haystack, $needle)) === false) ? 0 : (1 + countSubstrs(substr($haystack, $p+1), $needle));
}
?>
18-Dec-2003 07:34
A simple function to find the number of occurances in a string within a string
<?php
function StringCount($searchstring, $findstring)
{
return (strpos($searchstring, $findstring) === false ? 0 : count(split($findstring, $searchstring)) - 1);
}
?>
01-Oct-2003 06:20
Function:
stripos_words($haystack,'words in string')
This function finds and reports positions of all words in supplied haystack. It returns the results as an array. The array has the following structure.
Array
(
[69] => Array
(
[start] => 69
[end] => 74
[word] => honey
)
[226] => Array
(
[start] => 226
[end] => 232
[word] => cobweb
)
}
Where, for convenience, the main key also contains the positions of each found word occurrence.
If you want the main key to be 0,1,2,3,etc then set the third parameter ($pos_as_key) to false;
Hope this is of help to someone.
Cheers,
Justin :)
<?php
function stripos_words($haystack,$needles='',$pos_as_key=true)
{
$idx=0; // Used if pos_as_key is false
// Convert full text to lower case to make this case insensitive
$haystack = strtolower($haystack);
// Split keywords and lowercase them
foreach ( preg_split('/[^\w]/',strtolower($needles)) as $needle )
{
// Get all occurences of this keyword
$i=0; $pos_cur=0; $pos_found=0;
while ( $pos_found !== false && $needles !== '')
{
// Get the strpos of this keyword (if thereis one)
$pos_found = strpos(substr($haystack,$pos_cur),$needle);
if ( $pos_found !== false )
{
// Set up key for main array
$index = $pos_as_key ? $pos_found+$pos_cur : $idx++;
// Populate main array with this keywords positional data
$positions[$index]['start'] = $pos_found+$pos_cur;
$pos_cur += ($pos_found+strlen($needle));
$positions[$index]['end'] = $pos_cur;
$positions[$index]['word'] = $needle;
$i++;
}
}
}
// If we found anything then sort the array and return it
if ( isset($positions) )
{
ksort($positions);
return $positions;
}
// If nothign was found then return false
return false;
}
?>
