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  • substr_replace()

    (PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7)

    替换字符串的子串

    说明

    substr_replace(mixed $string, mixed $replacement, mixed $start[,mixed $length] ): mixed

    substr_replace()在字符串$string的副本中将由$start和可选的$length参数限定的子字符串使用$replacement进行替换。

    参数

    $string

    输入字符串。

    Anarrayofstrings can be provided, in which case the replacements will occur on each string in turn. In this case,the$replacement,$startand$lengthparameters may be provided either as scalar values to be applied to each input string in turn, or asarrays, in which case the corresponding array element will be used for each input string.

    $replacement

    替换字符串。

    $start

    如果$start为正数,替换将从$string$start位置开始。

    如果$start为负数,替换将从$string的倒数第$start个位置开始。

    $length

    如果设定了这个参数并且为正数,表示$string中被替换的子字符串的长度。如果设定为负数,它表示待替换的子字符串结尾处距离$string末端的字符个数。如果没有提供此参数,那么它默认为 strlen($string) (字符串的长度)。当然,如果$length为 0,那么这个函数的功能为将$replacement插入到$string$start位置处。

    返回值

    返回结果字符串。如果$string是个数组,那么也将返回一个数组。

    更新日志

    版本说明
    4.3.3All parameters now acceptarrays.

    范例

    Example #1substr_replace()范例

    <?php
    $var = 'ABCDEFGH:/MNRPQR/';
    echo "Original: $var<hr />\n";
    /* 这两个例子使用 “bob” 替换整个 $var。*/
    echo substr_replace($var, 'bob', 0) . "<br />\n";
    echo substr_replace($var, 'bob', 0, strlen($var)) . "<br />\n";
    /* 将 “bob” 插入到 $var 的开头处。*/
    echo substr_replace($var, 'bob', 0, 0) . "<br />\n";
    /* 下面两个例子使用 “bob” 替换 $var 中的 “MNRPQR”。*/
    echo substr_replace($var, 'bob', 10, -1) . "<br />\n";
    echo substr_replace($var, 'bob', -7, -1) . "<br />\n";
    /* 从 $var 中删除 “MNRPQR”。*/
    echo substr_replace($var, '', 10, -1) . "<br />\n";
    ?>

    Usingsubstr_replace()to replace multiple strings at once

    <?php
    $input = array('A: XXX', 'B: XXX', 'C: XXX');
    // A simple case: replace XXX in each string with YYY.
    echo implode('; ', substr_replace($input, 'YYY', 3, 3))."\n";
    // A more complicated case where each replacement is different.
    $replace = array('AAA', 'BBB', 'CCC');
    echo implode('; ', substr_replace($input, $replace, 3, 3))."\n";
    // Replace a different number of characters each time.
    $length = array(1, 2, 3);
    echo implode('; ', substr_replace($input, $replace, 3, $length))."\n";
    ?>

    以上例程会输出:

    A: YYY; B: YYY; C: YYY
    A: AAA; B: BBB; C: CCC
    A: AAAXX; B: BBBX; C: CCC
    

    注释

    Note:此函数可安全用于二进制对象。

    参见

    See array_splice if you want to do this sort of thing to an array.
    It's worth noting that when start and length are both negative -and- the length is less than or equal to start, the length will have the effect of being set as 0.
    <?php
    substr_replace('eggs','x',-1,-1); //eggxs
    substr_replace('eggs','x',-1,-2); //eggxs
    substr_replace('eggs','x',-1,-2); //eggxs
    ?>
    Same as: 
    <?php
    substr_replace('eggs','x',-1,0); //eggxs
    ?>
    <?php
    substr_replace('huevos','x',-2,-2); //huevxos
    substr_replace('huevos','x',-2,-3); //huevxos
    substr_replace('huevos','x',-2,-3); //huevxos
    ?>
    Same as: 
    <?php
    substr_replace('huevos','x',-2,0); //huevxos
    ?>
    Another note, if length is negative and start offsets the same position as length, length (yet again) will have the effect as being set as 0. (Of course, as mentioned in the manual, when length is negative it actually represents the position before it)
    <?php
    substr_replace('abcd', 'x', 0, -4); //xabcd
    ?>
    Same as: 
    <?php
    substr_replace('abcd','x',0,0); //xabcd
    ?>
    <?php
    substr_replace('abcd', 'x', 1, -3); //axbcd
    ?>
    Same as:
    <?php
    substr_replace('abcd', 'x', 1, 0); //axbcd
    ?>
    I've just taken a look at the post by ntoniazzi and I have a very small correction to make.
    In the second if statement, it should be a triple equals, so:
    <?php if ($length === null) ?>
    It requires the triple equals, for the case of pure insertion, where $length = 0, the double equals, will catch this, causing the string to be cut short. I hope this helps someone.
    Forget all of the mb_substr_replace() implementations mentioned in this page, they're all buggy.
    Here is a version that mimics the behavior of substr_replace() exactly:
    <?php
    if (function_exists('mb_substr_replace') === false)
    {
      function mb_substr_replace($string, $replacement, $start, $length = null, $encoding = null)
      {
        if (extension_loaded('mbstring') === true)
        {
          $string_length = (is_null($encoding) === true) ? mb_strlen($string) : mb_strlen($string, $encoding);
          
          if ($start < 0)
          {
            $start = max(0, $string_length + $start);
          }
          
          else if ($start > $string_length)
          {
            $start = $string_length;
          }
          
          if ($length < 0)
          {
            $length = max(0, $string_length - $start + $length);
          }
          
          else if ((is_null($length) === true)  ||  ($length > $string_length))
          {
            $length = $string_length;
          }
          
          if (($start + $length) > $string_length)
          {
            $length = $string_length - $start;
          }
          
          if (is_null($encoding) === true)
          {
            return mb_substr($string, 0, $start) . $replacement . mb_substr($string, $start + $length, $string_length - $start - $length);
          }
          
          return mb_substr($string, 0, $start, $encoding) . $replacement . mb_substr($string, $start + $length, $string_length - $start - $length, $encoding);
        }
        
        return (is_null($length) === true) ? substr_replace($string, $replacement, $start) : substr_replace($string, $replacement, $start, $length);
      }
    }
    ?>
    I recently ran across a situation where I need to strip a heavily nested html list such that only the top level was preserved. I started with a regular expression solution, but found that I kept matching the wrong closing ul with an outer opening ul.
    This was my alternative solution, and it seems to work well:
    <?php
    function stripNestedLists($str)
    {
      $str2 = $str;
      $lastStr = $str2;
      
      do
      {
        // Find the first closing ul
        $cul = strpos($str2, '</ul>');
        $ul = 0;
        $lastUL = 0;
        do
        {
          // Find the next opening ul
          $lastUL = $ul;
          $ul = strpos($str2, '<ul', $ul+1);
        }
        while ($ul !== false && $ul < $cul);
      
        $lastStr = $str2;
        $str2 = substr_replace($str2, '', $lastUL, $cul-$lastUL+5);
        $str2 = trim($str2);
      }
      while (strlen($str2) > 0);
      
      return $lastStr;
    }
    ?>
    Hope this helps someone.
    I wrote a function that you can use for example in combination with a search script to cut off the articles that are too long.
    <?php
    function substr_index($text, $maxChars = 20, $splitter
    = '...') {
    $theReturn = $text;
    $lastSpace = false;
    if (strlen($text) > $maxChars) {
    $theReturn = substr($text, 0, $maxChars - 1);
    if (in_array(substr($text, $maxChars - 1, 1),
    array(' ', '.', '!', '?'))) {
    $theReturn .= substr($text, $maxChars, 1);
    } else {
    $theReturn = substr($theReturn, 0, $maxChars -
    strlen($splitter));
    $lastSpace = strrpos($theReturn, ' ');
    if ($lastSpace !== false) {
    $theReturn = substr($theReturn, 0, $lastSpace);
    }
    if (in_array(substr($theReturn, -1, 1), array(','))) {
    $theReturn = substr($theReturn, 0, -1);
    }
    $theReturn .= $splitter;
    }
    }
    return $theReturn;
    }
    ?>
    This will truncate a longer string to a smaller string of specified length while replacing the middle portion with a separator exactly in the middle.
    <?php
    $longString = 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789z.jpg';
    $separator = '/.../';
    $separatorlength = strlen($separator) ;
    $maxlength = 25 - $separatorlength;
    $start = $maxlength / 2 ;
    $trunc = strlen($longString) - $maxlength;
    echo substr_replace($longString, $separator, $start, $trunc);
    //prints "abcdefghij/.../56789z.jpg"
    ?>
    I have a little function that works like substr_replace () what I use for some purpose. Maybe someone needs it.
    <?php
    function putinplace($string=NULL, $put=NULL, $position=false)
    {
      $d1=$d2=$i=false;
      $d=array(strlen($string), strlen($put));
      if($position > $d[0]) $position=$d[0];
      for($i=$d[0]; $i >= $position; $i--) $string[$i+$d[1]]=$string[$i];
      for($i=0; $i<$d[1]; $i++) $string[$position+$i]=$put[$i];
      return $string;
    }
    // Explanation
    $string='My dog dont love postman'; // string
    $put="'"; // put ' on position
    $position=10; // number of characters (position)
    print_r( putinplace($string, $put, $position) ); 
    ?>
    RESULT: My dog don't love postman
    This is a small powerful function that performs its job flawlessly.
    PHP version of Java's removeCharAt() function:
    <?php
    function removeCharAt($str, $int){
     return substr_replace($str,"",$int,1);
    }
    ?>
    My problem was that substr_replace() always added $replacement, so i wrote my own function.
    This function only adds $replacement, if substr() took action.
    The parameter $length is optional - like substr()'s.
    Or I was too stupid using $start and $length...
    <?php
    function substr_replace_provided($string,$replacement,$start,$length=NULL)
    {
      $tmp=substr($string,$start,$length);
      if($string!==$tmp) {
        $string = $tmp.$replacement;
      }
      return $string;
    }
    ?>
    <?php
    // shortens a long string to a max length while inserting a string into the exact middle
    function strShorten($str, $maxlen = 10, $insert = '/.../') {
     if ($str && !is_array($str)) { // valid string
      if ($maxlen && is_numeric($maxlen) && $maxlen < strlen($str)) { // string needs shortening
       if ($insert && ($ilen = strlen($insert))) { // insert string and length
        if ($ilen >= $maxlen) { // insert string too long so use default insert
         $insert = '**'; // short default so works even when a very small $maxlen
         $ilen = 2;
        }
       }
       $chars = $maxlen - $ilen; // number of $str chars to keep
       $start = ceil($chars/2); // position to start cutting
       $end = floor($chars/2); // position from end to stop cutting
       return substr_replace($str, $insert, $start, -$end); // first.insert.last
      } else { // string already short enough
       return $str; // return original string
      }
     }
    }
    echo strShorten('123456789', 6, ''); // outputs 123789
    echo strShorten('123456789', 6, '-'); // outputs 123-89
    echo strShorten('123456789', 6, 'longstring'); // outputs 12**89
    echo strShorten('abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz', 10, '..'); // outputs abcd..wxyz
    echo strShorten('abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz'); // outputs abc/.../yz
    ?>
    I suggest changing the function suggested by Guru Evi slightly. I found that it doesn't work as written here.
    Original:
    function add_3dots($string,$repl,$start,$limit) {
      if(strlen($string) > $limit) {
        return substr_replace(strip_tags($string),$repl,$start,$limit);
      } else {
        return $string;
      };
    };
    I suggest:
    function add_3dots($string,$repl,$limit) {
        if(strlen($string) > $limit) {
          return substr_replace(strip_tags($string),$repl,$limit-strlen($repl));
        } else {
          return $string;
        }
      }
    Usage:
    $max_length=10;//the max number of characters you want to display
    $too_long_string="BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH etc.";//the string you want to shorten (if it's longer than the $limit)
    $shorter_string=add_3_dots($too_long_string,"...",$max_length);
    I recently needed a routine that would remove the characters in one string from another, like the regex
    <?php
      $result = preg_replace("/[$chars]/", "", $string);
    ?>
    and I needed it to be fast, and accept pretty much all input. The regex above won't work when strlen($chars) == 0. I came up with this, admittedly pretty horrible-looking code, that is quite fast:
    <?php
    function RemoveChars($string, $chars)
    {
      return isset($chars{0}) ? str_replace($chars{0}, "", strtr($string, $chars, str_pad($chars{0}, strlen($chars), $chars{0}))) : $string;
    }
    ?>
    According to my own measurements, the regex in ONLY faster for when strlen($chars) == 1; for longer strings, my routine is faster. What does it do? Let's say you want to remove the period, the comma and the exclamation mark from a string, like so:
    $result = RemoveChars("Isn't this, like, totally neat..!?", ".?!");
    The str_pad function creates a string equal in length to the string that contains the character to be removed, but consisting only of the first character of that string:
    The input is ".,!"
    The output is "..."
    The strtr function translates all characters in the string-to-be-processed ("Isn't this...") that also occur in the input (".,!") to the characters in the same position in the output ("..."). In other words:
    Isn't this, like, totally neat..!?
    becomes
    Isn't this. like. totally neat....
    Finally, the first character from the input (".,!") which happens to be, again, the period, is removed from that string by the str_replace call:
    Isn't this like totally neat?
    The function needs to check is $chars has at least one character, or else the str_pad function will fail. If it's empty, then the unprocessed string is returned.
    If your string is not long enough to meet what you specify in start and length then the replacement string is added towards the end of the string.
    I wanted to replace the end of the string with ... if the string was too long to display (for instance article preview on a website). The problem was that my string was sometimes not that long and it still added the replacement string. So I wrote a function to replace substr_replace in my website:
    function add_3dots($string,$repl,$start,$limit) {
      if(strlen($string) > $limit) {
        return substr_replace(strip_tags($string),$repl,$start,$limit);
      } else {
        return $string;
      };
    };
    I use strip_tags to strip out the HTML otherwise you might get a screwed up HTML (when a tags open in the string, but because you cut-off it doesn't)
    THE DOT DOT DOT ISSUE
    PROBLEM:
    You want to abbreviate a string.
    E.g. You want "BritneySpears" to show as "BritneySpe...", being only the ten first characters followed by "..."
    SOLUTION:
    <?
    $oRIGINAL = "BritneySpears";
    $sHORTER = substr_replace($oRIGINAL, '...', 10);
    echo ($sHORTER);
    ?>
    This will result in BritneySpe...
    Using substr_replace() can be avoided by using substr() instead:
    <?
    $string = substr($string, 0, $position_needle).$replace.substr($string, $position_needle+$length_needle);
    ?>
    This can be useful when you need to replace parts of multibyte strings like strings encoded with utf-8. There isn't a multibute variant for substr_replace(), but for php substr() there is mb_substr(). For more information on multibyte strings see http://nl3.php.net/manual/en/ref.mbstring.php
    Here is a simple function to shorten a string and add an ellipsis
    <?php
    /**
     * truncate() Simple function to shorten a string and add an ellipsis
     * 
     * @param string $string Origonal string
     * @param integer $max Maximum length
     * @param string $rep Replace with... (Default = '' - No elipsis -)
     * @return string
     * @author David Duong
     **/
    function truncate ($string, $max = 50, $rep = '') {
      $leave = $max - strlen ($rep);
      return substr_replace($string, $rep, $leave);
    } 
    echo truncate ('akfhslakdhglksjdgh', 10, '...');
    // Returns akfhsla... (10 chrs)
    ?>
    Add prefix to strings:
    <?php
    substr_replace($strings, '_prefix', 0, 0);
    ?>
    Add suffix/postfix to strings:
    <?php
    substr_replace($strings, '_suffix', array_map('strlen', $strings), 0);
    ?>
    I imagine the description of the parameters really means "number of bytes" where it says "number of characters" (confirmed by testing).
    First Example can be simplified =>
     $input = array('A: XXX', 'B: XXX', 'C: XXX');
     substr_replace($input, 'YYY', -3);
    output: Array ( [0] => A: YYY [1] => B: YYY [2] => C: YYY )
    The preemptive test to see if $string is "too long" shouldn't add strlen($replacement) to $max. $max should represent the absolute maximum length of string returned. The size of the $replacement is irrelevant in that determination.
    The rest of the function (unchanged below) operates as defined above. Meaning, the size of the $replacement is subtracted from the $max, so that the returned string is exactly the length of $max.
    <?php
    function truncate($string, $max = 20, $replacement = '')
    {
      if (strlen($string) <= $max)
      {
        return $string;
      }
      $leave = $max - strlen ($replacement);
      return substr_replace($string, $replacement, $leave);
    }
    ?>
    the version of my predecessor will add $rep even if the string is shorter than max. fixed version:
    <?php
    function truncate($string, $max = 20, $rep = '')
    {
      if (strlen($string) <= ($max + strlen($rep)))
      {
        return $string;
      }
      $leave = $max - strlen ($rep);
      return substr_replace($string, $rep, $leave);
    }
    ?>
    To preserve the filename extension you can call it like this:
    truncate([filename], 30, '...' . end(explode('.', [filename])))
    I like the truncate function below...however, I found a few issues. Particularly if you have content that may have any kind of punctuation in it (?, !, ?!?, --, ..., .., ;, etc.)
    The older function would end up looking like "blah blah?..." or "blah blah,..." which doesn't look so nice to me...
    Here's my fix. It removes all trailing punctuation (that you include in the $punctuation string below) and then adds an ellipse. So even if it has an ellipse with 3 dots, 2 dots, 4 dots, it'll be removed, then re-added.
    <?php
    function truncate($text,$numb,$etc = "...") {
    $text = html_entity_decode($text, ENT_QUOTES);
    if (strlen($text) > $numb) {
    $text = substr($text, 0, $numb);
    $text = substr($text,0,strrpos($text," "));
    $punctuation = ".!?:;,-"; //punctuation you want removed
    $text = (strspn(strrev($text), $punctuation)!=0)
        ?
        substr($text, 0, -strspn(strrev($text), $punctuation))
        :
    $text;
    $text = $text.$etc;
    }
    $text = htmlentities($text, ENT_QUOTES);
    return $text;
    }
    ?>
    I also needed a sort of "middle" truncate. The above function truncates around the end, but if you want to truncate around the middle (ie "Hello this is a long string." --> "Hello this ... long string.") you can use this (requires the truncate function):
    <?php
    function mtruncate($text, $numb, $etc = " ... ") {
      $first_part = truncate(truncate($text, strlen($text)/2, ""), $numb/2, "");
      $second_part = truncate(strrev(truncate(strrev($text), strlen($text)/2, "")), $numb/2, "");
      return $first_part.$etc.$second_part;
    }
    ?>
    I don't know if this function is multibyte safe but I've written a function that will do the same in multibyte mode.
    <?php
    //Check to see if it exists in case PHP has this function later
    if (!function_exists("mb_substr_replace")){
      //Same parameters as substr_replace with the extra encoding parameter.
      function mb_substr_replace($string,$replacement,$start,$length=null,$encoding = null){
        if ($encoding == null){
          if ($length == null){
            return mb_substr($string,0,$start).$replacement;
          }
          else{
            return mb_substr($string,0,$start).$replacement.mb_substr($string,$start + $length);
          }
        }
        else{
          if ($length == null){
            return mb_substr($string,0,$start,$encoding).$replacement;
          }
          else{
            return mb_substr($string,0,$start,$encoding). $replacement. mb_substr($string,$start + $length,mb_strlen($string,$encoding),$encoding);
          }
        }
      }
    }
    ?>
    Just to add to the examples, if replacement is longer than length, only the length number of chars are removed from string and all of replacement is put in its place, and therefor strlen($string) is inreased.
    $var = 'ABCDEFGH:/MNRPQR/';
    /* Should return ABCDEFGH:/testingRPQR/  */
    echo substr_replace ($var, 'testing', 10, 2);
    If you would like to remove characters from the start or end of a string, try the substr() function.
    For example, to remove the last three characters from a string:
    $string = "To be or not to be.";
    $string = substr ($string, 0, -3);
    <?php
    $price = "12000";
    $price = substr_replace ($price, ',', -3, 0)";
    ?> 
    ensure to remove the double quot " at the end of substr_replace ($price, ',', -3, 0)" in the above code to avoid error.
    To abbreviate links into '...' if they outreach a certain amount of space; use the preg_replace function instead.
    For instance you grabbed the headlines of a news site for use on your own page and the lines are to long:
    asuming the raw material is stored in $unedited;
    $edited = preg_replace("/(>)([[:print:]]{52,})(<)/e", "'\\1'.substr_replace('\\2 ', '...', '48').'\\3'", $unedited);
    echo $edited;
    This will shorten strings longer than 52 characters into 51 characters, with the last being three dots...
    The comment by geniusdex is a good one. Short, simple functions are the best. But if the string is not longer than the limit set, NOTHING is returned. Here is the function re-done to always return a string:
    <?php
    function dot($str, $len, $dots = "...") {
      if (strlen($str) > $len) {
        $dotlen = strlen($dots);
        $str = substr_replace($str, $dots, $len - $dotlen);
      }
      return $str;
    }
    ?>
    Almost... In the previous note, change this :
    <?php
      function mb_substr_replace($string, $replacement, $start, $length=null, $encoding=null) {
        if ($encoding == null) $encoding = mb_internal_encoding();
        if($start < 0) $start = mb_strlen($string) + $start;
      [...]
    ?>
    Regarding "...", even the short functions are too long and complicated, and there's no need to use substr_replace. substr() works better and is way faster prior to 4.3.5 as the below poster stated.
    function shorten( $str, $num = 100 ) {
     if( strlen( $str ) > $num ) $str = substr( $str, 0, $num ) . "...";
     return $str;
    }
    This is my version of making dotted strings:
    <?php
    function dot($str, $len, $dots = "...") {
      if (strlen($str) > $len) {
        $dotlen = strlen($dots);
        substr_replace($str, $dots, $len - $dotlen);
      }
    }
    ?>
    Please note that the function array_slice(), which has a similar functionality but for arrays rather than for strings, has its parameters in a different order.
    Hey everyone, I was noticing that there are a lot of ways below that people are using to write their own string truncation functions, but it kinda seemed like a lot of them went a bit too far out to make any sense to a n00b. Not that I am one anymore, but I though I'd add a note on this topic myself, in hopes that it might help others understand things a little better.
    Here's a concept that some people don't know about, or remember to use often enough; You can actually pull individual characters out of a string by referencing that string as though it were an array. Example: If I have the string $s = 'cat', I can use $s[0] to actually get out only the first character of that string, 'c'. I use that same principle below, but I just use a loop to iterate through a string and add the characters to the output variable one by one until the $lenth param has been reached, or until the end of the string.
    I hope this can help someone out!
    -Admiral Potato
    <?php
    function admiralsTruncate($string, $length){
      settype($string, 'string');
      settype($length, 'integer');
      for($a = 0; $a < $length AND $a < strlen($string); $a++){
        $output .= $string[$a];
      }
      return($output);
    }
    $my_string = 'cfcd208495d565ef66e7dff9f98764da';
    echo admiralsTruncate($my_string, 6);  // outputs: cfcd20
    echo '<br>';
    echo admiralsTruncate($my_string, 9);  // outputs: cfcd20849
    ?>

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