strtr

(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

strtrTauscht Zeichen aus oder ersetzt Zeichenketten

Beschreibung

strtr(string $string, string $from, string $to): string

Alternative Signatur (benannte Parameter werden nicht unterstützt):

strtr(string $string, array $replace_pairs): string

Diese Funktion gibt eine Kopie von string zurück, in der alle Vorkommen jedes Zeichens von from in das korrespondierende Zeichen in to umgewandelt wurden. Mit drei Argumenten gibt diese Funktion eine Kopie von string zurück, in der alle Vorkommen jedes (single-byte) Zeichens von from in das korrespondierende Zeichen in to übersetzt wurden; d. h., jedes Vorkommen von $from[$n] wurde ersetzt durch $to[$n], wobei $n ein gültiger Offset in beiden Argumenten ist.

Haben from und to eine unterschiedliche Länge, werden die überzähligen Zeichen im jeweils längeren Parameter ignoriert. Die Länge von string wird die gleiche wie die des Rückgabewertes sein.

Wurden zwei Argumente übergeben, sollte das zweite ein array in der Form array('from' => 'to', ...) sein. Der Rückgabewert ist ein string, in dem alle Vorkommen der Array Schlüssel durch die entsprechenden Werte ersetzt wurden. Die längsten Schlüssel werden zuerst getestet werden. Wurde eine Teilzeichenkette ersetzt, wird ihr neuer Wert nicht nochmals durchsucht.

In diesem Fall können die Schlüssel und Werte beliebige Längen haben, vorausgesetzt, es gibt keinen leeren Schlüssel; zusätzlich kann die Länge des Rückgabewertes von der des string abweichen. Diese Funktion ist jedoch dann am effizientesten, wenn alle Schlüssel die gleiche Größe besitzen.

Parameter-Liste

string

Der String, in dem die Ersetzungen vorgenommen werden sollen.

from

Der String, der gegen to ausgetauscht werden soll.

to

Der String, der from ersetzen soll.

replace_pairs

Der replace_pairs-Parameter kann anstatt der Parameter to und from verwendet werden. In diesem Fall muss ein array in der Form array('von' => 'nach', ...) übergeben werden.

Wenn replace_pairs einen Schlüssel enthält, der ein leerer string ("") ist, wird das Element ignoriert; ab PHP wird in diesem Fall ein E_WARNING erzeugt.

Rückgabewerte

Gibt den übersetzten string zurück.

Beispiele

Beispiel #1 strtr()-Beispiel

<?php
//In dieser Form, strtr() übersetzt byte-zu-byte
//Daher gehen wir hier von einer single-byte Kodierung aus.
$addr = strtr($addr, "äåö", "aao");
?>

Das nächste Beispiel zeigt das Verhalten von strtr(), aufgerufen mit nur zwei Argumenten. Beachten Sie den Vorrang der Ersetzungen ("h" wird nicht gewählt, da es längere Übereinstimmungen gibt) und dass der ersetzte Text nicht erneut durchsucht wurde.

Beispiel #2 strtr()-Beispiel mit zwei Argumenten

<?php
$trans
= array("h" => "-", "hello" => "hi", "hi" => "hello");
echo
strtr("hi all, I said hello", $trans);
?>

Das oben gezeigte Beispiel erzeugt folgende Ausgabe:

hello all, I said hi

Die zwei Verhaltensweisen unterscheiden sich wesentlich. Mit 3 Argumenten esetzt strtr() Bytes; mit zweien kann sie längere Teilzeichenketten ersetzen.

Beispiel #3 strtr(): Vergleich der Verhaltensweisen

<?php
echo strtr("baab", "ab", "01"),"\n";

$trans = array("ab" => "01");
echo
strtr("baab", $trans);
?>

Das oben gezeigte Beispiel erzeugt folgende Ausgabe:

1001
ba01

Siehe auch

  • str_replace() - Ersetzt alle Vorkommen des Suchstrings durch einen anderen String
  • preg_replace() - Sucht und ersetzt mit regulären Ausdrücken

add a note add a note

User Contributed Notes 32 notes

up
106
evan dot king at NOSPAM dot example dot com
9 years ago
Here's an important real-world example use-case for strtr where str_replace will not work or will introduce obscure bugs:

<?php

$strTemplate
= "My name is :name, not :name2.";
$strParams = [
 
':name' => 'Dave',
 
'Dave' => ':name2 or :password', // a wrench in the otherwise sensible input
 
':name2' => 'Steve',
 
':pass' => '7hf2348', // sensitive data that maybe shouldn't be here
];

echo
strtr($strTemplate, $strParams);
// "My name is Dave, not Steve."

echo str_replace(array_keys($strParams), array_values($strParams), $strTemplate);
// "My name is Steve or 7hf2348word, not Steve or 7hf2348word2."

?>

Any time you're trying to template out a string and don't necessarily know what the replacement keys/values will be (or fully understand the implications of and control their content and order), str_replace will introduce the potential to incorrectly match your keys because it does not expand the longest keys first.

Further, str_replace will replace in previous replacements, introducing potential for unintended nested expansions.  Doing so can put the wrong data into the "sub-template" or even give users a chance to provide input that exposes data (if they get to define some of the replacement strings).

Don't support recursive expansion unless you need it and know it will be safe.  When you do support it, do so explicitly by repeating strtr calls until no more expansions are occurring or a sane iteration limit is reached, so that the results never implicitly depend on order of your replacement keys.  Also make certain that any user input will expanded in an isolated step after any sensitive data is already expanded into the output and no longer available as input.

Note: using some character(s) around your keys to designate them also reduces the possibility of unintended mangling of output, whether maliciously triggered or otherwise.  Thus the use of a colon prefix in these examples, which you can easily enforce when accepting replacement input to your templating/translation system.
up
60
Hayley Watson
11 years ago
Since strtr (like PHP's other string functions) treats strings as a sequence of bytes, and since UTF-8 and other multibyte encodings use - by definition - more than one byte for at least some characters, the three-string form is likely to have problems. Use the associative array form to specify the mapping.

<?php
// Assuming UTF-8
$str = 'Äbc Äbc'; // strtr() sees this as nine bytes (including two for each Ä)
echo strtr($str, 'Ä', 'a'); // The second argument is equivalent to the string "\xc3\x84" so "\xc3" gets replaced by "a" and the "\x84" is ignored

echo strtr($str, array('Ä' => 'a')); // Works much better
?>
up
18
allixsenos at gmail dot com
15 years ago
fixed "normaliza" functions written below to include Slavic Latin characters... also, it doesn't return lowercase any more (you can easily get that by applying strtolower yourself)...

also, renamed to normalize()

<?php

function normalize ($string) {
   
$table = array(
       
'Š'=>'S', 'š'=>'s', 'Đ'=>'Dj', 'đ'=>'dj', 'Ž'=>'Z', 'ž'=>'z', 'Č'=>'C', 'č'=>'c', 'Ć'=>'C', 'ć'=>'c',
       
'À'=>'A', 'Á'=>'A', 'Â'=>'A', 'Ã'=>'A', 'Ä'=>'A', 'Å'=>'A', 'Æ'=>'A', 'Ç'=>'C', 'È'=>'E', 'É'=>'E',
       
'Ê'=>'E', 'Ë'=>'E', 'Ì'=>'I', 'Í'=>'I', 'Î'=>'I', 'Ï'=>'I', 'Ñ'=>'N', 'Ò'=>'O', 'Ó'=>'O', 'Ô'=>'O',
       
'Õ'=>'O', 'Ö'=>'O', 'Ø'=>'O', 'Ù'=>'U', 'Ú'=>'U', 'Û'=>'U', 'Ü'=>'U', 'Ý'=>'Y', 'Þ'=>'B', 'ß'=>'Ss',
       
'à'=>'a', 'á'=>'a', 'â'=>'a', 'ã'=>'a', 'ä'=>'a', 'å'=>'a', 'æ'=>'a', 'ç'=>'c', 'è'=>'e', 'é'=>'e',
       
'ê'=>'e', 'ë'=>'e', 'ì'=>'i', 'í'=>'i', 'î'=>'i', 'ï'=>'i', 'ð'=>'o', 'ñ'=>'n', 'ò'=>'o', 'ó'=>'o',
       
'ô'=>'o', 'õ'=>'o', 'ö'=>'o', 'ø'=>'o', 'ù'=>'u', 'ú'=>'u', 'û'=>'u', 'ý'=>'y', 'ý'=>'y', 'þ'=>'b',
       
'ÿ'=>'y', 'Ŕ'=>'R', 'ŕ'=>'r',
    );
   
    return
strtr($string, $table);
}

?>
up
6
Annubis
6 years ago
Since I was having a lot of trouble finding a multibyte safe strtr and the solutions I found didn't help, I came out with this function, I don't know how it works with non latin chars but it works for me using spanish/french utf8, I hope it helps someone...
<?php
if(!function_exists('mb_strtr')) {
    function
mb_strtr ($str, $from, $to = null) {
        if(
is_array($from)) {
           
$from = array_map('utf8_decode', $from);
           
$from = array_map('utf8_decode', array_flip ($from));
            return
utf8_encode (strtr (utf8_decode ($str), array_flip ($from)));
        }
        return
utf8_encode (strtr (utf8_decode ($str), utf8_decode($from), utf8_decode ($to)));
    }
}
?>
up
8
Michael Schuijff
13 years ago
I found that this approach is often faster than strtr() and won't change the same thing in your string twice (as opposed to str_replace(), which will overwrite things in the order of the array you feed it with):

<?php
function replace ($text, $replace) {
   
$keys = array_keys($replace);
   
$length = array_combine($keys, array_map('strlen', $keys));
   
arsort($length);
   
   
$array[] = $text;
   
$count = 1;
   
reset($length);
    while (
$key = key($length)) {
        if (
strpos($text, $key) !== false) {
            for (
$i = 0; $i < $count; $i += 2) {
                if ((
$pos = strpos($array[$i], $key)) === false) continue;
               
array_splice($array, $i, 1, array(substr($array[$i], 0, $pos), $replace[$key], substr($array[$i], $pos + strlen($key))));
               
$count += 2;
            }
        }
       
next($length);
    }
    return
implode($array);
}
?>
up
11
dot dot dot dot dot alexander at gmail dot com
16 years ago
OK, I debugged the function (had some errors)
Here it is:

if(!function_exists("stritr")){
    function stritr($string, $one = NULL, $two = NULL){
/*
stritr - case insensitive version of strtr
Author: Alexander Peev
Posted in PHP.NET
*/
        if(  is_string( $one )  ){
            $two = strval( $two );
            $one = substr(  $one, 0, min( strlen($one), strlen($two) )  );
            $two = substr(  $two, 0, min( strlen($one), strlen($two) )  );
            $product = strtr(  $string, ( strtoupper($one) . strtolower($one) ), ( $two . $two )  );
            return $product;
        }
        else if(  is_array( $one )  ){
            $pos1 = 0;
            $product = $string;
            while(  count( $one ) > 0  ){
                $positions = array();
                foreach(  $one as $from => $to  ){
                    if(   (  $pos2 = stripos( $product, $from, $pos1 )  ) === FALSE   ){
                        unset(  $one[ $from ]  );
                    }
                    else{
                        $positions[ $from ] = $pos2;
                    }
                }
                if(  count( $one ) <= 0  )break;
                $winner = min( $positions );
                $key = array_search(  $winner, $positions  );
                $product = (   substr(  $product, 0, $winner  ) . $one[$key] . substr(  $product, ( $winner + strlen($key) )  )   );
                $pos1 = (  $winner + strlen( $one[$key] )  );
            }
            return $product;
        }
        else{
            return $string;
        }
    }/* endfunction stritr */
}/* endfunction exists stritr */
up
4
horak.jan AT centrum.cz
17 years ago
Here is a function to convert middle-european windows charset (cp1250) to the charset, that php script is written in:

<?php
   
function cp1250_to_utf2($text){
       
$dict  = array(chr(225) => 'á', chr(228) =>  'ä', chr(232) => 'č', chr(239) => 'ď',
           
chr(233) => 'é', chr(236) => 'ě', chr(237) => 'í', chr(229) => 'ĺ', chr(229) => 'ľ',
           
chr(242) => 'ň', chr(244) => 'ô', chr(243) => 'ó', chr(154) => 'š', chr(248) => 'ř',
           
chr(250) => 'ú', chr(249) => 'ů', chr(157) => 'ť', chr(253) => 'ý', chr(158) => 'ž',
           
chr(193) => 'Á', chr(196) => 'Ä', chr(200) => 'Č', chr(207) => 'Ď', chr(201) => 'É',
           
chr(204) => 'Ě', chr(205) => 'Í', chr(197) => 'Ĺ',    chr(188) => 'Ľ', chr(210) => 'Ň',
           
chr(212) => 'Ô', chr(211) => 'Ó', chr(138) => 'Š', chr(216) => 'Ř', chr(218) => 'Ú',
           
chr(217) => 'Ů', chr(141) => 'Ť', chr(221) => 'Ý', chr(142) => 'Ž',
           
chr(150) => '-');
        return
strtr($text, $dict);
    }
?>
up
6
dcz at phpbb-seo dot com
11 years ago
strstr will issue a notice when $replace_pairs contains an array, even unused, with php 5.5.0.

It was not the case with version at least up to 5.3.2, but I'm not sure the notice was added with exactly 5.5.0.

<?php
$str
= 'hi all, I said hello';
$replace_pairs = array(
     
'all' => 'everybody',
   
'unused' => array('somtehing', 'something else'),
    
'hello' => 'hey',
);
// php 5.5.0 Notice: Array to string conversion in test.php on line 8
echo strtr($str, $replace_pairs); // hi everybody, I said hey
?>

since the result is still correct, @strstr seems a working solution.
up
4
elloromtz at gmail dot com
14 years ago
If you supply 3 arguments and the 2nd is an array, strtr will search the "A" from "Array" (because you're treating it as a scalar string) and replace it with the 3rd argument:

strtr('Analogy', array('x'=>'y'),  '_'); //'_nalogy'

so in reality the above code has the same affect as:

strtr('Analogy', 'A' , '_');
up
5
dot dot dot dot dot alexander at gmail dot com
16 years ago
Here is the stritr I always needed... I wrote it in 15 minutes... But only after the idea struck me. Hope you find it helpful, and enjoy...
<?php
if(!function_exists("stritr")){
    function
stritr($string, $one = NULL, $two = NULL){
/*
stritr - case insensitive version of strtr
Author: Alexander Peev
Posted in PHP.NET
*/
       
if(  is_string( $one )  ){
           
$two = strval( $two );
           
$one = substr$one, 0, min( strlen($one), strlen($two) )  );
           
$two = substr$two, 0, min( strlen($one), strlen($two) )  );
           
$product = strtr$string, ( strtoupper($one) . strtolower($one) ), ( $two . $two )  );
            return
$product;
        }
        else if( 
is_array( $one )  ){
           
$pos1 = 0;
           
$product = $string;
            while( 
count( $one ) > ){
               
$positions = array();
                foreach( 
$one as $from => $to  ){
                    if(   ( 
$pos2 = stripos( $product, $from, $pos1 )  ) === FALSE   ){
                        unset( 
$one[ $from ]  );
                    }
                    else{
                       
$positions[ $from ] = $pos2;
                    }
                }
               
$winner = min( $positions );
               
$key = array_search$winner, $positions  );
               
$product = (   substr$product, 0, $winner  ) . $positions[$key] . substr$product, ( $winner + strlen($key) )  )   );
               
$pos1 = (  $winner + strlen( $positions[$key] )  );
            }
            return
$product;
        }
        else{
            return
$string;
        }
    }
/* endfunction stritr */
}/* endfunction exists stritr */
?>
up
6
Tedy
12 years ago
Since strtr() is twice faster than strlwr I decided to write my own lowering function which also handles UTF-8 characters.

<?php

function strlwr($string, $utf = 1)
{
   
$latin_letters = array('Ă' => 'a',
                           
'Â' => 'a',
                           
'Î' => 'i',
                           
'Ș' => 's',
                           
'Ş' => 's',
                           
'Ț' => 't',
                           
'Ţ' => 't');
                           
   
$utf_letters = array('Ă' => 'ă',
                       
'Â' => 'â',
                       
'Î' => 'î',
                       
'Ș' => 'ș',
                       
'Ş' => 'ş',
                       
'Ț' => 'ț',
                       
'Ţ' => 'ţ');
                     
   
$letters = array('A' => 'a',
                   
'B' => 'b',
                   
'C' => 'c',
                   
'D' => 'd',
                   
'E' => 'e',
                   
'F' => 'f',
                   
'G' => 'g',
                   
'H' => 'h',
                   
'I' => 'i',
                   
'J' => 'j',
                   
'K' => 'k',
                   
'L' => 'l',
                   
'M' => 'm',
                   
'N' => 'n',
                   
'O' => 'o',
                   
'P' => 'p',
                   
'Q' => 'q',
                   
'R' => 'r',
                   
'S' => 's',
                   
'T' => 't',
                   
'U' => 'u',
                   
'V' => 'v',
                   
'W' => 'w',
                   
'X' => 'x',
                   
'Y' => 'y',
                   
'Z' => 'z');
   
    return (
$utf == 1) ? strtr($string, array_merge($utf_letters, $letters)) : strtr($string, array_merge($latin_letters, $letters));
}

?>

This allows you to lower every character (even UTF-8 ones) if you don't set the second parameter, or just lower the UTF-8 ones into their specific latin characters (used when making friendly-urls for example).

I used romanian characters but, of course, you can add your own local characters.

Feel free to use/modify this function as you wish. Hope it helps.
up
4
doydoy44
11 years ago
The example of VOVA (http://www.php.net/manual/fr/function.strtr.php#111968) is good but the result is false:
His example dont replace the string.

<?php
function f1_strtr() {
  for(
$i=0; $i<1000000; ++$i) {
   
$new_string = strtr("aboutdealers.com", array(".com" => ""));
  }
  return
$new_string;
}
function
f2_str_replace() {
  for(
$i=0; $i<1000000; ++$i) {
   
$new_string = str_replace( ".com", "", "aboutdealers.com");
  }
  return
$new_string;
}
$start = microtime(true);
$strtr = f1_strtr();
$stop = microtime(true);
$time_strtr = $stop - $start;

$start = microtime(true);
$str_replace = f2_str_replace();
$stop = microtime(true);
$time_str_replace = $stop - $start;


echo
'time strtr       : ' . $time_strtr       . "\tresult :" . $strtr       . "\n";
echo
'time str_replace : ' . $time_str_replace . "\tresult :" . $str_replace . "\n";
echo
'time strtr > time str_replace => ' . ($time_strtr > $time_str_replace);
?>
--------------------------------------
time strtr       : 3.9719619750977      result :aboutdealers
time str_replace : 2.9930369853973      result :aboutdealers
time strtr > time str_replace => 1

str_replace is faster than strtr
up
4
qeremy [atta] gmail [dotta] com
11 years ago
Weird, but strtr corrupting chars, if used like below and if file is encoded in UTF-8;

<?php
$str
= 'Äbc Äbc';
echo
strtr($str, 'Ä', 'a');
// output: a�bc a�bc
?>

And a simple solution;

<?php
function strtr_unicode($str, $a = null, $b = null) {
   
$translate = $a;
    if (!
is_array($a) && !is_array($b)) {
       
$a = (array) $a;
       
$b = (array) $b;
       
$translate = array_combine(
           
array_values($a),
           
array_values($b)
        );
    }
   
// again weird, but accepts an array in this case
   
return strtr($str, $translate);
}

$str = 'Äbc Äbc';
echo
strtr($str, 'Ä', 'a') ."\n";
echo
strtr_unicode($str, 'Ä', 'a') ."\n";
echo
strtr_unicode($str, array('Ä' => 'a')) ."\n";
// outputs
// a�bc a�bc
// abc abc
// abc abc
?>
up
4
troelskn at gmail dot com
16 years ago
Here's another transcribe function. This one converts cp1252 (aka. Windows-1252) into iso-8859-1 (aka. latin1, the default PHP charset). It only transcribes the few exotic characters, which are unique to cp1252.

function transcribe_cp1252_to_latin1($cp1252) {
  return strtr(
    $cp1252,
    array(
      "\x80" => "e",  "\x81" => " ",    "\x82" => "'", "\x83" => 'f',
      "\x84" => '"',  "\x85" => "...",  "\x86" => "+", "\x87" => "#",
      "\x88" => "^",  "\x89" => "0/00", "\x8A" => "S", "\x8B" => "<",
      "\x8C" => "OE", "\x8D" => " ",    "\x8E" => "Z", "\x8F" => " ",
      "\x90" => " ",  "\x91" => "`",    "\x92" => "'", "\x93" => '"',
      "\x94" => '"',  "\x95" => "*",    "\x96" => "-", "\x97" => "--",
      "\x98" => "~",  "\x99" => "(TM)", "\x9A" => "s", "\x9B" => ">",
      "\x9C" => "oe", "\x9D" => " ",    "\x9E" => "z", "\x9F" => "Y"));
up
5
Sidney Ricardo
16 years ago
This work fine to me:

<?php
function normaliza ($string){
   
$a = 'ÀÁÂÃÄÅÆÇÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÐÑÒÓÔÕÖØÙÚÛÜÝÞ
ßàáâãäåæçèéêëìíîïðñòóôõöøùúûýýþÿŔŕ'
;
   
$b = 'aaaaaaaceeeeiiiidnoooooouuuuy
bsaaaaaaaceeeeiiiidnoooooouuuyybyRr'
;
   
$string = utf8_decode($string);    
   
$string = strtr($string, utf8_decode($a), $b);
   
$string = strtolower($string);
    return
utf8_encode($string);
}
?>
up
3
martin[dot]pelikan[at]gmail[dot]com
18 years ago
// if you are upset with windows' ^M characters at the end of the line,
// these two lines are for you:
$trans = array("\x0D" => "");
$text = strtr($orig_text,$trans);

// note that ctrl+M (in vim known as ^M) is hexadecimally 0x0D
up
2
joeldegan AT yahoo
18 years ago
After battling with strtr trying to strip out MS word formatting from things pasted into forms I ended up coming up with this..

it strips ALL non-standard ascii characters, preserving html codes and such, but gets rid of all the characters that refuse to show in firefox.

If you look at this page in firefox you will see a ton of "question mark" characters and so it is not possible to copy and paste those to remove them from strings..  (this fixes that issue nicely, though I admit it could be done a bit better)

<?
function fixoutput($str){
   
$good[] = 9#tab
   
$good[] = 10; #nl
   
$good[] = 13; #cr
   
for($a=32;$a<127;$a++){
       
$good[] = $a;
    }   
   
$len = strlen($str);
    for(
$b=0;$b < $len+1; $b++){
        if(
in_array(ord($str[$b]), $good)){
           
$newstr .= $str[$b];
        }
//fi
   
}//rof
   
return $newstr;
}
?>
up
1
Romain
10 years ago
<?php
   
/**
     * Clean string,
     * minimize and remove space, accent and other
     *
     * @param string $string
     * @return string
     */
   
public function mb_strtoclean($string){
       
// Valeur a nettoyer (conversion)
       
$unwanted_array = array(    'Š'=>'S', 'š'=>'s', 'Ž'=>'Z', 'ž'=>'z', 'À'=>'A', 'Á'=>'A', 'Â'=>'A', 'Ã'=>'A', 'Ä'=>'A', 'Å'=>'A', 'Æ'=>'A', 'Ç'=>'C', 'È'=>'E', 'É'=>'E',
                                   
'Ê'=>'E', 'Ë'=>'E', 'Ì'=>'I', 'Í'=>'I', 'Î'=>'I', 'Ï'=>'I', 'Ñ'=>'N', 'Ò'=>'O', 'Ó'=>'O', 'Ô'=>'O', 'Õ'=>'O', 'Ö'=>'O', 'Ø'=>'O', 'Ù'=>'U',
                                   
'Ú'=>'U', 'Û'=>'U', 'Ü'=>'U', 'Ý'=>'Y', 'Þ'=>'B', 'ß'=>'Ss', 'à'=>'a', 'á'=>'a', 'â'=>'a', 'ã'=>'a', 'ä'=>'a', 'å'=>'a', 'æ'=>'a', 'ç'=>'c',
                                   
'è'=>'e', 'é'=>'e', 'ê'=>'e', 'ë'=>'e', 'ì'=>'i', 'í'=>'i', 'î'=>'i', 'ï'=>'i', 'ð'=>'o', 'ñ'=>'n', 'ò'=>'o', 'ó'=>'o', 'ô'=>'o', 'õ'=>'o',
                                   
'ö'=>'o', 'ø'=>'o', 'ù'=>'u', 'ú'=>'u', 'û'=>'u', 'ý'=>'y', 'ý'=>'y', 'þ'=>'b', 'ÿ'=>'y',
                                   
' ' => '', '_' => '', '-' => '', '.'=> '', ',' => '', ';' => '');

        return
mb_strtolower(strtr($string, $unwanted_array ));
    }
up
1
gabi at unica dot edu
22 years ago
To convert special chars to their html entities strtr you can use strtr in conjunction with get_html_translation_table(HTML_ENTITIES) :

$trans = get_html_translation_table(HTML_ENTITIES);
$html_code = strtr($html_code, $trans);

This will replace in $html_code the ? by &Aacute; , etc.
up
1
tomhmambo at seznam dot cz
18 years ago
<?
// Windows-1250 to ASCII
// This function replace all Windows-1250 accent characters with
// thier non-accent ekvivalents. Useful for Czech and Slovak languages.

function win2ascii($str)    {   

   
$str = StrTr($str,
       
"\xE1\xE8\xEF\xEC\xE9\xED\xF2",
       
"\x61\x63\x64\x65\x65\x69\x6E");
       
   
$str = StrTr($str,
       
"\xF3\xF8\x9A\x9D\xF9\xFA\xFD\x9E\xF4\xBC\xBE",
       
"\x6F\x72\x73\x74\x75\x75\x79\x7A\x6F\x4C\x6C");
       
   
$str = StrTr($str,
       
"\xC1\xC8\xCF\xCC\xC9\xCD\xC2\xD3\xD8",
       
"\x41\x43\x44\x45\x45\x49\x4E\x4F\x52");
       
   
$str = StrTr($str,
       
"\x8A\x8D\xDA\xDD\x8E\xD2\xD9\xEF\xCF",
       
"\x53\x54\x55\x59\x5A\x4E\x55\x64\x44");

    return
$str;
}
?>
up
0
Anonymous
19 years ago
If you are going to call strtr a lot, consider using str_replace instead, as it is much faster. I cut execution time in half just by doing this.

<?
// i.e. instead of:
$s=strtr($s,$replace_array);

// use:
foreach($replace_array as $key=>$value) $s=str_replace($key,$value,$s);
?>
up
0
ktogias at math dot upatras dot gr
20 years ago
This function is usefull for
accent insensitive regexp
searches into greek (iso8859-7) text:
(Select View -> Character Encoding -> Greek (iso8859-7)
at your browser to see the correct greek characters)

function gr_regexp($mystring){
        $replacement=array(
                array("?","?","?","?"),
                array("?","?","?","?"),
                array("?","?","?","?"),
                array("?","?","?","?","?","?"),
                array("?","?","?","?"),
                array("?","?","?","?","?","?"),
                array("?","?","?","?")
        );
        foreach($replacement as $group){
                foreach($group as $character){
                        $exp="[";
                        foreach($group as $expcharacter){
                                $exp.=$expcharacter;
                        }
                        $exp.="]";
                        $trans[$character]=$exp;
                }
        }
        $temp=explode(" ", $mystring);
        for ($i=0;$i<sizeof($temp);$i++){
                $temp[$i]=strtr($temp[$i],$trans);
                $temp[$i]=addslashes($temp[$i]);
        }
        return implode(".*",$temp);
}

$match=gr_regexp("????????????????????? ??? ????????");

//The next query string can be sent to MySQL
through mysql_query()
$query=
      "Select `column` from `table` where `column2` REGEXP  
                         '".$match."'";
up
0
j at pureftpd dot org
20 years ago
Here's a very useful function to translate Microsoft characters into Latin 15, so that people won't see any more square instead of characters in web pages .

function demicrosoftize($str) {
    return strtr($str,
"\x82\x83\x84\x85\x86\x87\x89\x8a" .
"\x8b\x8c\x8e\x91\x92\x93\x94\x95" .
"\x96\x97\x98\x99\x9a\x9b\x9c\x9e\x9f",
"'f\".**^\xa6<\xbc\xb4''" .
"\"\"---~ \xa8>\xbd\xb8\xbe");
}
up
0
bisqwit at iki dot fi
22 years ago
#!/bin/sh
# This shell script generates a strtr() call
# to translate from a character set to another.
# Requires: gnu recode, perl, php commandline binary
#
# Usage:
#  Set set1 and set2 to whatever you prefer
#  (multibyte character sets are not supported)
#  and run the script. The script outputs
#  a strtr() php code for you to use.
#
# Example is set to generate a
# cp437..latin9 conversion code.
#
set1=cp437
set2=iso-8859-15
result="`echo '<? for($c=32;$c<256;$c++)'\
              '
echo chr($c);'\           
         |php -q|recode -f $set1..$set2`"
echo "// This php function call converts \$string in $set1 to $set2";
cat <<EOF  | php -q
<?php
\$set1='
`echo -n "$result"\
   |perl -pe "s/([\\\\\'])/\\\\\\\\\\$1/g"
`';
\$set2='
`echo -n "$result"|recode -f $set2..$set1\
   |perl -pe "s/([\\\\\'])/\\\\\\\\\\$1/g"
`';
\$erase=array();
\$l=strlen(\$set1);
for(\$c=0;\$c<\$l;++\$c)
  if(\$set1[\$c]==\$set2[\$c])\$erase[\$set1[\$c]]='';
if(count(\$erase))
{
  \$set1=strtr(\$set1,\$erase);
  \$set2=strtr(\$set2,\$erase);
}
if(!strlen(\$set1))echo '
IRREVERSIBLE';else
echo "strtr(\\\$string,\n  '",
     ereg_replace('([\\\\\\'])', '\\\\\\1', \$set2),
     "',\n  '",
     ereg_replace('([\\\\\\'])', '\\\\\\1', \$set1),
     "');";
EOF
up
-1
patrick at p-roocks dot de
19 years ago
As Daijoubu suggested use str_replace instead of this function for large arrays/subjects. I just tried it with a array of 60 elements, a string with 8KB length, and the execution time of str_replace was faster at factor 20!

Patrick
up
-1
ru dot dy at gmx dot net
19 years ago
Posting umlaute here resulted in a mess. Heres a version of the same function that works with preg_replace only:
<?php
 
function getRewriteString($sString) {
    
$string = strtolower(htmlentities($sString));
    
$string = preg_replace("/&(.)(uml);/", "$1e", $string);
    
$string = preg_replace("/&(.)(acute|cedil|circ|ring|tilde|uml);/", "$1", $string);
    
$string = preg_replace("/([^a-z0-9]+)/", "-", html_entity_decode($string));
    
$string = trim($string, "-");
     return
$string;
  }
?>
up
-1
symlink23-remove-my-spleen at yahoo dot com
22 years ago
As noted in the str_rot13 docs, some servers don't provide the str_rot13() function. However, the presence of strtr makes it easy to build your own facsimile thereof:

if (!function_exists('str_rot13')) {
    function str_rot13($str) {
        $from = 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ';
        $to   = 'nopqrstuvwxyzabcdefghijklmNOPQRSTUVWXYZABCDEFGHIJKLM';

        return strtr($str, $from, $to);
    }
}

This is suitable for very light "encryption" such as hiding email addressess from spambots (then unscrambling them in a mail class, for example).

$mail_to=str_rot13("$mail_to");
up
-1
erik at eldata dot se
23 years ago
As an alternative to the not-yet-existing function stritr mentioned in the first note above You can easily do this:

strtr("abc","ABCabc","xyzxyz")

or more general:

strtr("abc",
strtoupper($fromchars).strtolower($fromchars),
$tochars.$tochars);

Just a thought.
up
-2
ajitsingh4u at gmail dot com
17 years ago
/**
* Replaces special characters with single quote,double quote and comma for charset iso-8859-1
*
* replaceSpecialChars()
* @param string $str
* @return string
*/
function replaceSpecialChars($str)
{
    //`(96) ’(130) „(132) ‘(145) ’(146) “(147) ”(148) ´(180)   // equivalent ascii values of these characters.
    $str = strtr($str, "`’„‘’´", "'','''");
    $str = strtr($str, '“”', '""');
    return $str;
}
up
-1
Anonymous
4 years ago
The string, string form cannot remove characters, but the array form can.
up
-3
Fernando "Malk" Piancastelli
21 years ago
Here's a function to replace linebreaks to html <p> tags. This was initially designed to receive a typed text by a form in a "insert new notice" page and put in a database, then a "notice" page could get the text preformatted with paragraph tags instead of linebreaks that won't appear on browser. The function also removes repeated linebreaks the user may have typed in the form.

function break_to_tags(&$text) {

       // find and remove repeated linebreaks

       $double_break = array("\r\n\r\n" => "\r\n");
       do {
              $text = strtr($text, $double_break);
              $position = strpos($text, "\r\n\r\n");
       } while ($position !== false);

       // find and replace remanescent linebreaks by <p> tags

       $change = array("\r\n" => "<p>");
       $text = strtr($text, $change);
}

[]'s
Fernando
up
-3
tekintian#gmail.com
4 years ago
/**

*  将一个字串中含有全角的数字字符、字母、空格或'%+-()'字符转换为相应半角字符
* @author tekintian#gmail.com
* @param   string       $str         待转换字串
*
* @return  string       $str         处理后字串
*/
function str2byte_convert(String $str):String  {
    $arr = array('0' => '0', '1' => '1', '2' => '2', '3' => '3', '4' => '4',
        '5' => '5', '6' => '6', '7' => '7', '8' => '8', '9' => '9',
        'A' => 'A', 'B' => 'B', 'C' => 'C', 'D' => 'D', 'E' => 'E',
        'F' => 'F', 'G' => 'G', 'H' => 'H', 'I' => 'I', 'J' => 'J',
        'K' => 'K', 'L' => 'L', 'M' => 'M', 'N' => 'N', 'O' => 'O',
        'P' => 'P', 'Q' => 'Q', 'R' => 'R', 'S' => 'S', 'T' => 'T',
        'U' => 'U', 'V' => 'V', 'W' => 'W', 'X' => 'X', 'Y' => 'Y',
        'Z' => 'Z', 'a' => 'a', 'b' => 'b', 'c' => 'c', 'd' => 'd',
        'e' => 'e', 'f' => 'f', 'g' => 'g', 'h' => 'h', 'i' => 'i',
        'j' => 'j', 'k' => 'k', 'l' => 'l', 'm' => 'm', 'n' => 'n',
        'o' => 'o', 'p' => 'p', 'q' => 'q', 'r' => 'r', 's' => 's',
        't' => 't', 'u' => 'u', 'v' => 'v', 'w' => 'w', 'x' => 'x',
        'y' => 'y', 'z' => 'z',
        '(' => '(', ')' => ')', '〔' => '[', '〕' => ']', '【' => '[',
        '】' => ']', '〖' => '[', '〗' => ']', '“' => '[', '”' => ']',
        '‘' => '[', '’' => ']', '{' => '{', '}' => '}', '《' => '<',
        '》' => '>',
        '%' => '%', '+' => '+', '—' => '-', '-' => '-', '~' => '-',
        ':' => ':', '。' => '.', '、' => ',', ',' => '.', '、' => '.',
        ';' => ',', '?' => '?', '!' => '!', '…' => '-', '‖' => '|',
        '”' => '"', '’' => '`', '‘' => '`', '|' => '|', '〃' => '"',
        ' ' => ' ');

    return strtr($str, $arr);
}
To Top