there are several topics with pretty similar questions, but in my specific case, I failed to find an answer.
I have a number, such as:
4,063,500.00
I need it reformatted in
4063500
Is there any inbuilt functionality in PHP or Laravel that allows doing it? Thanks in advance.
Your original number is treated as a string because of the commas. So at minimum you need to remove them before calling intval() which will truncate off the decimal:
<?php
$num = '4,063,500.00';
echo intval(str_replace(',', '', $num));
And the output is:
4063500
You can use regular expression to remove all extra characters except number.
ex removing extra characters from below example.
$num = '4,063,500.00';
$filtered_num = preg_replace("/[^0-9]/", "", substr($num, 0, strpos($num, ".")));
echo $filtered_num;
o/p : 4063500
Related
I've got a problem. This is my PHP code :
$extract = $query;
$extractpoint = strrchr($extract, ".");
So, $extract is a parse_url of my website address.
Exemple : http://test.com?param.6
$extract = param.6 and $extractpoint = .6
BUT, I want a solution to have only the 6, without the point.
Can you help me with that ?
The easiest solution would be restructuring the URL. I that is not possible though you can use strpos to find the position of your specific character and then use substr to select the characters after it.
$extract = 'param.6';
echo substr($extract, strpos($extract, '.') + 1);
Demo: https://3v4l.org/CudTAG
(The +1 is because it returns the position of the match and you want to be one place past that)
There are different ways:
Filter only numbers:
$int = filter_var($extractpoint, FILTER_SANITIZE_NUMBER_INT);
Replace the point
$int = str_replace('.', '', $extractpoint)
//$int = str_replace('param.', '', $extractpoint)
Use regex
/[0-9+]/'
strrchr() results the count of the last instance of a character in a string. In order to get the next character add 1 to the count. Then use substr() to extract the next character from the string.
http://php.net/manual/en/function.strrchr.php
http://php.net/manual/en/function.substr.php
For example, 3 string are the following :
##7##
##563##
##120058##
How can I get those number like this :
echo first number is 7
echo second number is 563
echo third number is 120058
Thank you very much!
$numberAsString = trim($string, '##')
Is probably the easiest and fastest in this case. The output is still a string in this case, but in most cases that doesn't really matter. If it does in your case, you can use (int), (float) or the like to get it to the correct type.
Of course, regex would also be possible, e.g.:
$didMatch = preg_match('/#+([^#]+)#+/', $string, $matches);
Another possibility still is first extract the remaining part after the initial 2 # and then cast to a number, which seems to be always int in this case:
$number = (int)substr($string, 2);
Still another possibility would be to go by the count of the characters and just use substr like:
$numberAsString = substr($string, 2, -2);
Or you could be creative and use something like explode + implode + array functions:
$numberAsString = array_slice(explode('#', implode('', array_slice(explode('#', $string), 2))), 0, -2);
Of course, this last one is purely to show that it can be done in various ways, as it's very inefficient and impractical, but there are surely dozens of other ways.
In case you use this in a tight loop or somewhere where performance really matters, I would benchmark different possibilities - on a guess, I'd say that either the trim or the pure substring solution would be the fastest.
$str = "##563##";
preg_match("|\d+|", $str, $res);
print_r($res);
Just call the filter_var() function it will return the number only.
Whatever the input is, it will only filter the number for you!
filter_var("##120058##", FILTER_SANITIZE_NUMBER_INT) // return 120058
filter_var("*##20kkk", FILTER_SANITIZE_NUMBER_INT) // return 20
I have a STRING $special which is formatted like £130.00 and is also an ex TAX(VAT) price.
I need to strip the first char so i can run some simple addition.
$str= substr($special, 1, 0); // Strip first char '£'
echo $str ; // Echo Value to check its worked
$endPrice = (0.20*$str)+$str ; // Work out VAT
I don't receive any value when i echo on the second line ? Also would i then need to convert the string to an integer in order to run the addition ?
Thanks
Matt
+++ UPDATE
Thanks for your help with this, I took your code and added some of my own, There are more than likely nicer ways to do this but it works :) I found out that if the price was below 1000 would look like £130.00 if the price was a larger value it would include a break. ie £1,400.22.
$str = str_replace('£', '', $price);
$str2 = str_replace(',', '', $str);
$vatprice = (0.2 * $str2) + $str2;
$display_vat_price = sprintf('%0.2f', $vatprice);
echo "£";
echo $display_vat_price ;
echo " (Inc VAT)";
Thanks again, Matt
You cannot use substr the way you are using it currently. This is because you are trying to remove the £ char, which is a two-byte unicode character, but substr() isn't unicode safe. You can either use $str = substr($string, 2), or, better, str_replace() like this:
$string = '£130.00';
$str = str_replace('£', '', $string);
echo (0.2 * $str) + $str; // 156
Original answer
I'll keep this version as it still can give some insight. The answer would be OK if £ wouldn't be a 2byte unicode character. Knowing this, you can still use it but you need to start the sub-string at offset 2 instead of 1.
Your usage of substr is wrong. It should be:
$str = substr($special, 1);
Check the documentation the third param would be the length of the sub-string. You passed 0, therefore you got an empty string. If you omit the third param it will return the sub-string starting from the index given in the first param until the end of the original string.
I generated a serial number with php, the length of this serial number is 16 characters, I want to split this serial number in 4 characters with dash(-) character, like this format xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx so I wrote this php code:
for ($d=0; $d<=3; $d++){
$tmp .= ($tmp ? "-" : null).substr($serial,$d,4);
}
so this loop will return a serial number with xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx format,
I want to know is there any better way or function in php?
I searched in internet I found sprintf and number_format but I don't know how can I use this function for this format !
I would use str_split() and implode():
$result = implode( '-', str_split( $serial, 4));
str_split() will break the string into an array, where each element has 4 characters. Then, implode() joins those array pieces together with a dash.
So, if we generate a random $serial with:
$serial = substr(md5(uniqid(rand(), true)), 0, 16);
We would get as output something similar to:
59e6-997f-8446-80a2
Try this :
$str = "xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx";
echo substr(chunk_split($str, 4, '-'), 0, -1);
Output :
xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx
Ref: http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.chunk-split.php
str_split, fairly clear...
$hyphenated = implode( '-', str_split( $str, 4));
That is pretty clear, but it seems kind of wasteful to generate an array only to implode it. So I wondered if there was another way...
Faster with preg_replace?
I tried a regex, thinking that would eliminate the need for an intermediate array. After all, why have one problem, when you can have two!
$hyphenated = preg_replace('/(.{4})(?=.)/', '$1-', $str);
That little beastie looks for 4 characters, and as long they are followed by at least one more character, will insert a slash after them.
Trouble is, it turned out to be around 25% slower :(
chunk_split faster and with the same great minty taste!
Prasanth Bendra posted a pretty efficient answer which needs no intermediate array
$hyphenated=substr(chunk_split($str, 4, '-'), 0, -1);
Result! This was at least 25% faster than using str_split measured on a 16 character input string, and just as clear as the str_split method.
You can try str_split() with an implode() such as:
$tmpArray = str_split($tmp, 4);
$serialNumber = implode('-', $tmpArray);
assuming i have these texts 'x34' , '150px' , '650dpi' , 'e3r4t5' ... how can i get only numbers ? i mean i want 34 , 150 , 650 , 345 without any other character . i mean get the numbers this string has into one variable .
$str = "e3r4t5";
$str_numbers_only = preg_replace("/[^\d]/", "", $str);
// $number = (int) $str;
Sorry for joining the bandwagon late, rather than using Regex, I would suggest you use PHP's built in functions, which may be faster than Regex.
filter_var
flags for the filters
e.g. to get just numbers from the given string
<?php
$a = '!a-b.c3#j+dk9.0$3e8`~]\]2';
$number = str_replace(['+', '-'], '', filter_var($a, FILTER_SANITIZE_NUMBER_INT));
// Output is 390382
?>
To adhere to more strict standards for your question, I have updated my answer to give a better result.
I have added str_replace, as FILTER_SANITIZE_NUMBER_FLOAT or INT flag will not strip + and - chars from the string, because they are part of PHP's exception rule.
Though it has made the filter bit long, but it's now has less chance of failing or giving you unexpected results, and this will be faster than REGEX.
Edit:
1: Realized that with FILTER_SANITIZE_NUMBER_FLOAT, PHP won't strip these characters optionally .,eE, hence to get just pure numbers kindly use FILTER_SANITIZE_NUMBER_INT
2: If you have a PHP version less than 5.4, then kindly use array('+', '-') instead of the short array syntax ['+', '-'].
You can use a regular expression to remove any character that is not a digit:
preg_replace('/\D/', '', $str)
Here the pattern \D describes any character that is not a digit (complement to \d).
Use PHP FILTER functions if you are using PHP 5.2.X, 5.3.x,5.4 . Its highly recommended
$mixed_input = "e3r4t5";
$only_numbers = filter_var($mixed_input, FILTER_SANITIZE_NUMBER_INT);
Please Go through with this link to know more
Replace everything that isn't a number and use that value.
$str = "foo1bar2baz3";
$num = intval(preg_replace("/[^0-9]/", "", $str));
You could use the following function:
function extract_numbers($string) {
preg_match_all('/([\d]+)/', $string, $match);
return $match;
}