str_contains

(PHP 8)

str_containsDetermina se uma string contém uma substring fornecida

Descrição

str_contains(string $haystack, string $needle): bool

Realiza uma busca case-sensitive indicando se needle existe em haystack.

Parâmetros

haystack

A string onde será feita a busca.

needle

A substring para ser buscada em haystack.

Valor Retornado

Retorna true se needle está em haystack, false caso contrário.

Exemplos

Exemplo #1 Usando a string vazia ''

<?php
if (str_contains('abc', '')) {
echo
"Verificando a existência de uma string vazia sempre retornará true";
}
?>

O exemplo acima produzirá:

Verificando a existência de uma string vazia sempre retornará true

Exemplo #2 Mostrando o case-sensitivity

<?php
$string
= 'A raposa preguiçosa pulou a cerca';

if (
str_contains($string, 'raposa')) {
echo
"A string 'raposa' foi encontrada na string\n";
}

if (
str_contains($string, 'Raposa')) {
echo
'A string "Raposa" foi encontrada na string';
} else {
echo
'"Raposa" não foi encontrada porque o case não corresponde';
}

?>

O exemplo acima produzirá:

A string 'raposa' foi encontrada na string
"Raposa" não foi encontrada porque o case não corresponde

Notas

Nota: Esta função é compatível com dados binários.

Veja Também

  • str_ends_with() - Verifica se uma string termina com uma substring fornecida
  • str_starts_with() - Verifica se uma string começa com uma substring fornecida
  • stripos() - Find the position of the first occurrence of a case-insensitive substring in a string
  • strrpos() - Find the position of the last occurrence of a substring in a string
  • strripos() - Find the position of the last occurrence of a case-insensitive substring in a string
  • strstr() - Find the first occurrence of a string
  • strpbrk() - Procura na string por um dos caracteres de um conjunto
  • substr() - Retorna parte de uma string
  • preg_match() - Perform a regular expression match

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User Contributed Notes 9 notes

up
104
scm6079
3 years ago
For earlier versions of PHP, you can polyfill the str_contains function using the following snippet:

<?php
// based on original work from the PHP Laravel framework
if (!function_exists('str_contains')) {
    function
str_contains($haystack, $needle) {
        return
$needle !== '' && mb_strpos($haystack, $needle) !== false;
    }
}
?>
up
15
aisunny7 dot xy at gmail dot com
2 years ago
The polyfill that based on original work from the PHP Laravel framework had a different behavior;

when the $needle is `""` or `null`:
php8's will return `true`;
but, laravel'str_contains will return `false`;

when php8.1, null is deprecated, You can use `$needle ?: ""`;
up
6
harl at gmail dot com
1 year ago
A couple of functions for checking if a string contains any of the strings in an array, or all of the strings in an array:

<?php
function str_contains_any(string $haystack, array $needles): bool
{
    return
array_reduce($needles, fn($a, $n) => $a || str_contains($haystack, $n), false);
}

function
str_contains_all(string $haystack, array $needles): bool
{
    return
array_reduce($needles, fn($a, $n) => $a && str_contains($haystack, $n), true);
}
?>

str_contains_all() will return true if $needles is an empty array. If you think that's wrong, show me a string in $needles that DOESN'T appear in the $haystack, and then look up "vacuous truth".

(By swapping haystacks and needles in the body of these functions you can create versions that check if a needle appears in any/all of an array of haystacks.)
up
3
olivertasche+nospam at gmail dot com
3 years ago
The code from "me at daz dot co dot uk" will not work if the word is
- at the start of the string
- at the end of the string
- at the end of a sentence (like "the ox." or "is that an ox?")
- in quotes
- and so on.

You should explode the string by whitespace, punctations, ... and check if the resulting array contains your word OR try to test with a RegEx like this:
(^|[\s\W])+word($|[\s\W])+

Disclaimer: The RegEx may need some tweaks
up
1
Ancyker
1 year ago
This function doesn't always produce the expected results if you have a needle that isn't UTF-8 but are looking for it in a UTF-8 string. This won't be a concern for most people, but if you are mixing old and new data, especially if reading data from a file, it could be an issue.

Here's a "mb_*"-esque function that searches the string:

<?php
function mb_str_contains(string $haystack, string $needle, $encoding = null) {
    return
$needle === '' || mb_substr_count($haystack, $needle, (empty($encoding) ? mb_internal_encoding() : $encoding)) > 0;
}
?>

I used mb_substr_count() instead of mb_strpos() because mb_strpos() will still match partial characters as it's doing a binary search.

We can compare str_contains to the above suggested function:

<?php
// Some Unicode Kanji (漢字はユニコード)
$string = hex2bin('e6bca2e5ad97e381afe383a6e3838be382b3e383bce38389');

// Some Windows-1252 characters (ãƒ)
$contains = hex2bin('e383');
// ^ file_get_contents() produces the same data when it is saved as "ANSI" in Notepad on Windows, so this is not that unrealistic. The only reason to use hex2bin here is to mix character sets without having to use multiple files.

// A character that actually exists in our string. (ー)
$contains2 = hex2bin('e383bc');

echo
" = Haystack: ".var_export($string, true)."\r\n";
echo
" = Needles:\r\n";
echo
"   + Windows-1252 characters\r\n";
echo
"     - Results:\r\n";
echo
"       >    str_contains: ".var_export(str_contains($string, $contains), true)."\r\n";
echo
"       > mb_str_contains: ".var_export(mb_str_contains($string, $contains), true)."\r\n";
echo
"   + Valid UTF-8 character\r\n";
echo
"     - Results:\r\n";
echo
"       >    str_contains: ".var_export(str_contains($string, $contains2), true)."\r\n";
echo
"       > mb_str_contains: ".var_export(mb_str_contains($string, $contains2), true)."\r\n";
echo
"\r\n";
?>

Output:

= Haystack: '漢字はユニコード'
= Needles:
   + Windows-1252 characters
     - Results:
       >    str_contains: true
       > mb_str_contains: false
   + Valid UTF-8 character
     - Results:
       >    str_contains: true
       > mb_str_contains: true

It's not completely foolproof, however. For instance, ド in Windows-1252 will match ド from the above string. So it's still best to convert the encoding of the parameters to be the same first. But, if the character set isn't known/can't be detected and you have no choice but to deal with dirty data, this is probably the simplest solution.
up
-1
juliyvchirkov at gmail dot com
3 years ago
<?php

// Polyfill for PHP 4 - PHP 7, safe to utilize with PHP 8

if (!function_exists('str_contains')) {
    function
str_contains (string $haystack, string $needle)
    {
        return empty(
$needle) || strpos($haystack, $needle) !== false;
    }
}
up
-3
drupalista dot com dot br at gmail dot com
2 years ago
private function contains(array $needles, string $type, string $haystack = NULL, string $filename = NULL) : bool {
        if (empty($needles)) return FALSE;
        if ($filename)
            $haystack = file_get_contents($filename);

        $now_what = function(string $needle) use ($haystack, $type) : array {
            $has_needle = str_contains($haystack, $needle);
            if ($type === 'any' && $has_needle)
                return ['done' => TRUE, 'return' => TRUE];

            if ($type === 'all' && !$has_needle)
                return ['done' => TRUE, 'return' => FALSE];

            return ['done' => FALSE];
        };

        foreach ($needles as $needle) {
            $check = $now_what($needle);
            if ($check['done'])
                return $check['return'];
        }
        return TRUE;
    }

    function containsAny(array $needles, string $haystack = NULL, string $filename = NULL) : bool {
        return self::contains($needles, 'any', $haystack, $filename);
    }

    function containsAll(array $needles, string $haystack = NULL, string $filename = NULL) : bool {
        return self::contains($needles, 'all', $haystack, $filename);
    }
up
-13
AuxData
2 years ago
Until PHP 8 was released, many-a-programmer were writing our own contain() functions. Mine also handles needles with logical ORs (set to '||').
Here it is.

function contains($haystack, $needle, $offset){
    $OR = '||';
    $result = false;
   
    $ORpos = strpos($needle, $OR, 0);
    if($ORpos !== false){ //ORs exist in the needle string
        $needle_arr = explode($OR, $needle);
        for($i=0; $i < count($needle_arr); $i++){
            $pos = strpos($haystack, trim($needle_arr[$i]), $offset);
            if($pos !== false){
                $result = true;
                break;
            }
        }       
    } else {
        $pos = strpos($haystack, trim($needle), $offset);
        if($pos !== false){
          $result = true;
        }
    }
  return($result);
}

Call: contains("Apple Orange Banana", "Apple || Walnut", 0);
Returns: true
up
-49
kadenskinner at gmail dot com
3 years ago
<?php

$needle
= '@';
$haystack = 'user@example.com';

if (!
str_contains($haystack, $needle)){
echo
'There is not an @ in haystack';
}else{
echo
'There is an @ in haystack';
}
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