strcspn
(PHP 4, PHP 5)
strcspn — Возвращает длину участка в начале строки, не соответствующего маске
Описание
int strcspn
( string $str1
, string $str2
[, int $start
[, int $length
]] )
Возвращает длину участка в начале строки str1, который не содержит ни одного символа из строки str2.
Список параметров
- str1
-
Первая строка.
- str2
-
Вторая строка.
- start
-
Начальная позиция сравнения строки.
- length
-
Длина сравнения строки.
Возвращаемые значения
Возвращает длину фрагмента в виде целого числа.
Список изменений
| Версия | Описание |
|---|---|
| 4.3.0 | Добавлены параметры start и length |
Примеры
Пример #1 Пример использования strcspn()
<?php
$a = strcspn('abcd', 'apple');
$b = strcspn('abcd', 'banana');
$c = strcspn('hello', 'l');
$d = strcspn('hello', 'world');
var_dump($a);
var_dump($b);
var_dump($c);
var_dump($d);
?>
Результат выполнения данного примера:
int(0) int(0) int(2) int(2)
Примечания
Замечание: Эта функция безопасна для обработки данных в двоичной форме.
Смотрите также
- strspn() - Возвращает длину участка в начале строки, полностью соответствующего маске
- addcslashes
- addslashes
- bin2hex
- chop
- chr
- chunk_split
- convert_cyr_string
- convert_uudecode
- convert_uuencode
- count_chars
- crc32
- crypt
- echo
- explode
- fprintf
- get_html_translation_table
- hebrev
- hebrevc
- hex2bin
- html_entity_decode
- htmlentities
- htmlspecialchars_decode
- htmlspecialchars
- implode
- join
- lcfirst
- levenshtein
- localeconv
- ltrim
- md5_file
- md5
- metaphone
- money_format
- nl_langinfo
- nl2br
- number_format
- ord
- parse_str
- printf
- quoted_printable_decode
- quoted_printable_encode
- quotemeta
- rtrim
- setlocale
- sha1_file
- sha1
- similar_text
- soundex
- sprintf
- sscanf
- str_getcsv
- str_ireplace
- str_pad
- str_repeat
- str_replace
- str_rot13
- str_shuffle
- str_split
- str_word_count
- strcasecmp
- strchr
- strcmp
- strcoll
- strcspn
- strip_tags
- stripcslashes
- stripos
- stripslashes
- stristr
- strlen
- strnatcasecmp
- strnatcmp
- strncasecmp
- strncmp
- strpbrk
- strpos
- strrchr
- strrev
- strripos
- strrpos
- strspn
- strstr
- strtok
- strtolower
- strtoupper
- strtr
- substr_compare
- substr_count
- substr_replace
- substr
- trim
- ucfirst
- ucwords
- vfprintf
- vprintf
- vsprintf
- wordwrap
Коментарии
useful for finding beginning of quotes and/or tags in a variable containing html.$pos = strcspn($data, '<"\'');
will find the first occurance of either the beginning of a tag, or a double- or single-quoted string.
this function can be used like strspn(), except while that can be used to compare a string with an allowed pattern, this one can be use to compare a string with a FORBIDDEN pattern
so, to know if any forbidden character has a position inside our string, we can use (not tested with backslashes)...
<?php
// LARGE VERSION
$forbidden="\"\\?*:/@|<>";
if (strlen($filename) != strcspn($filename,$forbidden)) {
echo "you cant create a file with that name!";
}
// SHORT VERSION
if (strlen($filename) - strcspn($filename,"\"\\?*:/@|<>")) {
echo "i told you, you cant create that file";
}
?>
Also useful for breaking down expressions - for example parsing SQL: values ('this', fn("that,)()", 4))
$sep = strcspn ($list, "'\"`"); // Start of quoted string
$list = substr ($list, $sep);
$find = substr ($list, 0, 1);
while (($sep = strpos ($list, $find, $sep+1)) > 0 && substr ($list, $sep-1, 1) == '\\')
{}
// $sep now spans the entire string, regardless of embedded quotes
Once the strings have been removed, an expression can then be parsed for commas and brackets without worrying about them:
while ($out != '')
{
$sep = strcspn ($list, "(),"); // Next seperator
...
}
The second parameter simply is the set of the "stop"-characters.In other words, this function will return the index (starting from 0) of a first occurence of the stop-character.
strcspn() can also be thought of as analogous to the following regular expression:
<?php
// where ... represents the mask of characters
preg_match('/[^ ...]/', substr($subject, $start, $length) );
?>
By this analogy, strcspn() can be used in place of some regular expressions to match a pattern without the overhead of a regex engine -- for example, ways to verify if an input string represents a binary value:
<?php
preg_match('/^[01]+$/i', $subject);
// or...
!preg_match('/[^01]/i', $subject);
// ...or using strcspn()
!strcspn($subject, '01');
?>
When you use the third parameter remember that the function will return the number of characters it bypassed, which will *not* be the position in your source string. It's a simple fix to just add your third parameter value to the function result to get the position in the first string where the scan stopped, but I didn't think of it at first.