(PHP 4, PHP 5)
strtr — Tauscht bestimmte Zeichen aus
Diese Funktion gibt eine Kopie von str zurück, in der alle Vorkommen jedes Zeichens von from in das korrespondierende Zeichen in to umgewandelt wurden.
Haben from und to eine unterschiedliche Länge, werden die überzähligen Zeichen im jeweils längeren Parameter ignoriert.
Der String, in dem die Ersetzungen vorgenommen werden sollen.
Der String, der gegen to ausgetauscht werden soll.
Der String, der from ersetzen soll.
Der replace_pairs-Parameter kann als Alternative für die Parameter to und from verwendet werden. In diesem Fall muss ein array in der Form array('von' => 'nach', ...) übergeben werden.
Die Funktion gibt eine Kopie von str zurück, in der alle Vorkommen eines Zeichens in from gegen ihr entsprechendes Pendant in to ausgetauscht wurden.
Beispiel #1 strtr()-Beispiel
<?php
$addr = strtr($addr, "äåö", "aao");
?>
strtr() kann auch mit nur zwei Argumenten aufgerufen werden. Wenn der Aufruf mit zwei Argumenten durchgeführt wird, verhält sich die Funktion anders: from muss nun ein Array sein, das string -> string-Paare enthält, die im Originalstring ersetzt werden sollen. strtr() tauscht dabei zuerst die längsten möglichen Treffer aus und verändert bereits durchgeführte Ersetzungen *NICHT*.
Beispiel #2 strtr()-Beispiel mit zwei Argumenten
<?php
$trans = array("hallo" => "hi", "hi" => "hallo");
echo strtr("hi ihr, ich sagte hallo", $trans);
?>
Das oben gezeigte Beispiel erzeugt folgende Ausgabe:
hallo ihr, ich sagte hi
This is what we use for prepping data that is going to be used for shortURLs or just needs to be completely cleaned
<?php
$GLOBALS['normalizeChars'] = array(
'Š'=>'S', 'š'=>'s', 'Ð'=>'Dj','Ž'=>'Z', 'ž'=>'z', 'À'=>'A', 'Á'=>'A', 'Â'=>'A', 'Ã'=>'A', 'Ä'=>'A',
'Å'=>'A', 'Æ'=>'A', 'Ç'=>'C', 'È'=>'E', 'É'=>'E', 'Ê'=>'E', 'Ë'=>'E', 'Ì'=>'I', 'Í'=>'I', 'Î'=>'I',
'Ï'=>'I', 'Ñ'=>'N', 'Ò'=>'O', 'Ó'=>'O', 'Ô'=>'O', 'Õ'=>'O', 'Ö'=>'O', 'Ø'=>'O', 'Ù'=>'U', 'Ú'=>'U',
'Û'=>'U', 'Ü'=>'U', 'Ý'=>'Y', 'Þ'=>'B', 'ß'=>'Ss','à'=>'a', 'á'=>'a', 'â'=>'a', 'ã'=>'a', 'ä'=>'a',
'å'=>'a', 'æ'=>'a', 'ç'=>'c', 'è'=>'e', 'é'=>'e', 'ê'=>'e', 'ë'=>'e', 'ì'=>'i', 'í'=>'i', 'î'=>'i',
'ï'=>'i', 'ð'=>'o', 'ñ'=>'n', 'ò'=>'o', 'ó'=>'o', 'ô'=>'o', 'õ'=>'o', 'ö'=>'o', 'ø'=>'o', 'ù'=>'u',
'ú'=>'u', 'û'=>'u', 'ý'=>'y', 'ý'=>'y', 'þ'=>'b', 'ÿ'=>'y', 'ƒ'=>'f'
);
function cleanForShortURL($toClean) {
$toClean = str_replace('&', '-and-', $toClean);
$toClean = trim(preg_replace('/[^\w\d_ -]/si', '', $toClean));//remove all illegal chars
$toClean = str_replace(' ', '-', $toClean);
$toClean = str_replace('--', '-', $toClean);
return strtr($toClean, $GLOBALS['normalizeChars']);
}
This process cleans up any special characters and also coverts strings to a readable safe URL format.
?>
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' , '_');
Here's a one-liner to strip out non-standard ascii characters, inspired by joeldegan AT yahoo's post below.
<?php
$new = preg_replace("/[^\x9\xA\xD\x20-\x7F]/", "", $old);
?>
Hi all,
as u probably know the is some truoble with the (for example) hungarian special characters. If I used the htmlentities() function, the simple chars had benn converted to the basic format, for example: & aacute;. However this was very simple, some cases it needs more transformation.
As I would like to use the correct caracters even in php, html, js, and more, a wrote this short code to solve this issue:
<?php
function charcode ($text) {
$text = htmlentities($text); //to convert the simple spec chars
$search = array("& otilde;","&O tilde;","& ucirc;","&U circ;");
$replace = array("& #337;","& #336;","& #369;","& #368;");
$text = str_replace($search, $replace, $text);
return $text;
}
?>
Now I am able to display any spec chars in any browser with any character encoding set.
Hope U will find this helpful.
Vyktor
fixed "normaliza" functions written below to include Slavic Latin characters... also, it doesn't return lowercase any more (you can easily get that by applying strtolower yourself)...
also, renamed to normalize()
<?php
function normalize ($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, $table);
}
?>
This work fine to me:
<?php
function normaliza ($string){
$a = 'ÀÁÂÃÄÅÆÇÈÉÊËÌÍÎÏÐÑÒÓÔÕÖØÙÚÛÜÝÞ
ßàáâãäåæçèéêëìíîïðñòóôõöøùúûýýþÿŔŕ';
$b = 'aaaaaaaceeeeiiiidnoooooouuuuy
bsaaaaaaaceeeeiiiidnoooooouuuyybyRr';
$string = utf8_decode($string);
$string = strtr($string, utf8_decode($a), $b);
$string = strtolower($string);
return utf8_encode($string);
}
?>
If you try to make a strtr of not usual charafters when you are in a utf8 enviroment, you can do that:
function normaliza ($string){
$string = utf8_decode($string);
$string = strtr($string, utf8_decode(" ÂÊÎÔÛÀ"), "-AEIOU");
$string = strtolower($string);
return $string;
}
OK, I debugged the function (had some errors)
Here it is:
if(!function_exists("stritr")){
function stritr($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 $string;
}
}/* endfunction stritr */
}/* endfunction exists stritr */
Here is the stritr I always needed... I wrote it in 15 minutes... But only after the idea struck me. Hope you find it helpful, and enjoy...
<?php
if(!function_exists("stritr")){
function stritr($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 ) > 0 ){
$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 $string;
}
}/* endfunction stritr */
}/* endfunction exists stritr */
?>
A couple of people have suggested examples of use of strstr() in order to do conversions from one charset to the other.
I would like to point out that this is the purpose of iconv().
Here's another transcribe function. This one converts cp1252 (aka. Windows-1252) into iso-8859-1 (aka. latin1, the default PHP charset). It only transcribes the few exotic characters, which are unique to cp1252.
function transcribe_cp1252_to_latin1($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"));
/**
* 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 $str;
}
To the previous comment: great function, one character mapping it is missing is though is:
chr(226) => 'â'
Here is a function to convert middle-european windows charset (cp1250) to the charset, that php script is written in:
<?php
function cp1250_to_utf2($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, $dict);
}
?>
After battling with strtr trying to strip out MS word formatting from things pasted into forms I ended up coming up with this..
it strips ALL non-standard ascii characters, preserving html codes and such, but gets rid of all the characters that refuse to show in firefox.
If you look at this page in firefox you will see a ton of "question mark" characters and so it is not possible to copy and paste those to remove them from strings.. (this fixes that issue nicely, though I admit it could be done a bit better)
<?
function fixoutput($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;
}
?>
// 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,$trans);
// note that ctrl+M (in vim known as ^M) is hexadecimally 0x0D
<?
// Windows-1250 to ASCII
// This function replace all Windows-1250 accent characters with
// thier non-accent ekvivalents. Useful for Czech and Slovak languages.
function win2ascii($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 $str;
}
?>
Here you are a simple function to rotate a variable according to an array of possible values. You can make a strict comparison (===).
<?php
function rotateValue($string, $values, $strict = TRUE)
{
if (!empty($string) AND is_array($values))
{
$valuesCount = count($values);
for ($i = 0; $i < $valuesCount; $i++)
{
if ($strict ? ($string === $values[$i]) : ($string == $values[$i]))
{
return $values[($i + 1) % $valuesCount];
}
}
}
return FALSE;
}
?>
For example:
- rotateValue("A", array("A", "B", "C")) will return "B"
- rotateValue("C", array("A", "B", "C")) will return "A"
Posting umlaute here resulted in a mess. Heres a version of the same function that works with preg_replace only:
<?php
function getRewriteString($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 $string;
}
?>
And while we're at it, yet another transcriber (the code formerly known as accent remover). It does accents and umlauts, but also ligatures and runes known to ISO-8859-1. The translation strings must be on one line without any whitespaces in it. They are rendered hardwrapped here because this documentation doesn't allow long lines in notes.
function transcribe($string) {
$string = strtr($string,
"\xA1\xAA\xBA\xBF\xC0\xC1\xC2\xC3\xC5\xC7
\xC8\xC9\xCA\xCB\xCC\xCD\xCE\xCF\xD0\xD1
\xD2\xD3\xD4\xD5\xD8\xD9\xDA\xDB\xDD\xE0
\xE1\xE2\xE3\xE5\xE7\xE8\xE9\xEA\xEB\xEC
\xED\xEE\xEF\xF0\xF1\xF2\xF3\xF4\xF5\xF8
\xF9\xFA\xFB\xFD\xFF",
"!ao?AAAAAC
EEEEIIIIDN
OOOOOUUUYa
aaaaceeeei
iiidnooooo
uuuyy");
$string = strtr($string, array("\xC4"=>"Ae", "\xC6"=>"AE", "\xD6"=>"Oe", "\xDC"=>"Ue", "\xDE"=>"TH", "\xDF"=>"ss", "\xE4"=>"ae", "\xE6"=>"ae", "\xF6"=>"oe", "\xFC"=>"ue", "\xFE"=>"th"));
return($string);
}
(Funky: ISO-8859-1 does not cover the french "oe" ligature.)
Here's a nice function for parsing a string to something suitable for URL rewriting (mod_rewrite). It translates all accented characters to their non-accented equivalents and replaces all other non-alphanumeric character with dashes:
function getRewriteString($sString) {
$string = htmlentities(strtolower($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;
}
elonen forgot the character (\xf8)
A (more) complete accent remover:
$txt = strtr($txt,
"\xe1\xc1\xe0\xc0\xe2\xc2\xe4\xc4\xe3\xc3\xe5\xc5".
"\xaa\xe7\xc7\xe9\xc9\xe8\xc8\xea\xca\xeb\xcb\xed".
"\xcd\xec\xcc\xee\xce\xef\xcf\xf1\xd1\xf3\xd3\xf2".
"\xd2\xf4\xd4\xf6\xd6\xf5\xd5\x8\xd8\xba\xf0\xfa\xda".
"\xf9\xd9\xfb\xdb\xfc\xdc\xfd\xdd\xff\xe6\xc6\xdf\xf8",
"aAaAaAaAaAaAacCeEeEeEeEiIiIiIiInNo".
"OoOoOoOoOoOoouUuUuUuUyYyaAso");
Yet another accent remover, this time pretty complete and without any 8-bit characters in the script itself:
$txt = strtr($txt,
"\xe1\xc1\xe0\xc0\xe2\xc2\xe4\xc4\xe3\xc3\xe5\xc5".
"\xaa\xe7\xc7\xe9\xc9\xe8\xc8\xea\xca\xeb\xcb\xed".
"\xcd\xec\xcc\xee\xce\xef\xcf\xf1\xd1\xf3\xd3\xf2".
"\xd2\xf4\xd4\xf6\xd6\xf5\xd5\x8\xd8\xba\xf0\xfa".
"\xda\xf9\xd9\xfb\xdb\xfc\xdc\xfd\xdd\xff\xe6\xc6\xdf",
"aAaAaAaAaAaAacCeEeEeEeEiIiIiIiInNoOoOoOoOoOoOoouUuUuUuUyYyaAs");
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
Wouldn't:
<?php
$s = str_replace(array_key($replace_array), array_value($replace_array), $s);
?>
be faster?
Perhaps even faster using 2 seperate arrays...
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);
?>
Replace control characters in a binary string:
<?
function cc_replace($in) {
for ($i = 0; $i <= 31; $i++) {
$from .= chr($i);
$to .= ".";
}
return strtr($in, $from, $to);
}
?>
This function is usefull for
accent insensitive regexp
searches into greek (iso8859-7) text:
(Select View -> Character Encoding -> Greek (iso8859-7)
at your browser to see the correct greek characters)
function gr_regexp($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."'";
Hi, before I found strtr() function I quickly wrote own repleacement, if someone is interested,
// by http://www.raf256.com - Rafal Maj
function ConvCharset($from,$to,$s) {
$l=strlen($s);
$S=''; // out put
for ($i=0; $i<$l; $i++) {
$c=$s[$i]; // curr char
$x=strpos($from, $c);
if ($x!==FALSE) $c=$to[$x];
$S.=$c;
}
return $S;
}
Regarding christophe's conversion, note that the \x## values should be in double quotes, not single, so that the escape will be applied.
This version of macRomanToIso (originally posted by: marcus at synchromedia dot co dot uk) offers a couple of improvements. First, it removes the extra slashes '\' that broke the original function. Second, it adds four quote characters not supported in ISO 8859-1. These are the left double quote, right double quote, left single quote and right single quote.
Be sure to remove the line breaks from the two strings going into strtr or this function will not work properly.
Be careful what text you apply this to. If you apply it to ISO 8859-1 encoded text it will likely wreak havoc. I'll save you some trouble with this bit of advice: don't bother trying to detect what charset a certain text file is using, it can't be done reliably. Instead, consider making assumptions based upon the HTTP_USER_AGENT, or prompting the user to specify the character encoding used (perhaps both).
<?php
/**
* Converts MAC OS ROMAN encoded strings to the ISO 8859-1 charset.
*
* @param string the string to convert.
* @return string the converted string.
*/
function macRomanToIso($string)
{
return strtr($string,
"\x80\x81\x82\x83\x84\x85\x86\x87\x88\x89\x8a\x8b
\x8c\x8d\x8e\x8f\x90\x91\x92\x93\x94\x95\x96\x97
\x98\x99\x9a\x9b\x9c\x9d\x9e\x9f\xa1\xa4\xa6\xa7
\xa8\xab\xac\xae\xaf\xb4\xbb\xbc\xbe\xbf\xc0\xc1
\xc2\xc7\xc8\xca\xcb\xcc\xd6\xd8\xdb\xe1\xe5\xe6
\xe7\xe8\xe9\xea\xeb\xec\xed\xee\xef\xf1\xf2\xf3
\xf4\xf8\xfc\xd2\xd3\xd4\xd5",
"\xc4\xc5\xc7\xc9\xd1\xd6\xdc\xe1\xe0\xe2\xe4\xe3
\xe5\xe7\xe9\xe8\xea\xeb\xed\xec\xee\xef\xf1\xf3
\xf2\xf4\xf6\xf5\xfa\xf9\xfb\xfc\xb0\xa7\xb6\xdf\xae
\xb4\xa8\xc6\xd8\xa5\xaa\xba\xe6\xf8\xbf\xa1\xac
\xab\xbb\xa0\xc0\xc3\xf7\xff\xa4\xb7\xc2\xca\xc1
\xcb\xc8\xcd\xce\xcf\xcc\xd3\xd4\xd2\xda\xdb\xd9
\xaf\xb8\x22\x22\x27\x27");
}
?>
Latin1 (iso-8859-1) DONT define chars \x80-\x9f (128-159),
but Windows charset 1252 defines _some_ of them
-- like the infamous msoffice 'magic quotes' (\x92 146).
Dont use those invalid control chars in webpages,
but their html (unicode) entities. See ftp.unicode.org/Public/MAPPINGS/VENDORS/MICSFT/WINDOWS/CP1252.TXT
or http://www.microsoft.com/typography/unicode/1252.htm
PS: a '?' in the code means the win-cp1252 dont define the given char.
$badlatin1_cp1252_to_htmlent =
array(
'\x80'=>'€', '\x81'=>'?', '\x82'=>'‚', '\x83'=>'ƒ',
'\x84'=>'„', '\x85'=>'…', '\x86'=>'†', \x87'=>'‡',
'\x88'=>'ˆ', '\x89'=>'‰', '\x8A'=>'Š', '\x8B'=>'‹',
'\x8C'=>'Œ', '\x8D'=>'?', '\x8E'=>'Ž', '\x8F'=>'?',
'\x90'=>'?', '\x91'=>'‘', '\x92'=>'’', '\x93'=>'“',
'\x94'=>'”', '\x95'=>'•', '\x96'=>'–', '\x97'=>'—',
'\x98'=>'˜', '\x99'=>'™', '\x9A'=>'š', '\x9B'=>'›',
'\x9C'=>'œ', '\x9D'=>'?', '\x9E'=>'ž', '\x9F'=>'Ÿ'
);
$str = strtr($str, $badlatin1_cp1252_to_htmlent);
If you have trouble accessing a file which has an accented or tilde letter (,,,,, or ) via Internet Explorer use the following translation table:
$trans = array("" => "%E1", "" => "%E9", "" => "%ED", "" => "%F3","" => "%FA", "" => "%D1",
"" => "%A1", "" => "%A9", "" => "%AD", "" => "%B3","" => "%BA", "" => "%F1");
To obtain the translation for other special characters not used in English (for example, ), type a fictitious filename on the Netscape 7.1 address bar (including URL, for example www.url.com/.jpg) and press enter. Netscape traslates the character while Explorer simply can't handle it.
Seems like another bug on Explorer 6.0...
Regards,
Ricardo Ortiz R.
Here's a very useful function to translate Microsoft characters into Latin 15, so that people won't see any more square instead of characters in web pages .
function demicrosoftize($str) {
return strtr($str,
"\x82\x83\x84\x85\x86\x87\x89\x8a" .
"\x8b\x8c\x8e\x91\x92\x93\x94\x95" .
"\x96\x97\x98\x99\x9a\x9b\x9c\x9e\x9f",
"'f\".**^\xa6<\xbc\xb4''" .
"\"\"---~ \xa8>\xbd\xb8\xbe");
}
Here's a function to replace linebreaks to html <p> tags. This was initially designed to receive a typed text by a form in a "insert new notice" page and put in a database, then a "notice" page could get the text preformatted with paragraph tags instead of linebreaks that won't appear on browser. The function also removes repeated linebreaks the user may have typed in the form.
function break_to_tags(&$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, $change);
}
[]'s
Fernando
// Hello to all Czech and Slovak people!
// I hope this function can be useful and easier to find here,
// than at the original source (and opposite direction). :
// http://www.kosek.cz/clanky/tipy/qa07.html
// s pozdravem Filip Rydlo z Pohodasoftware.Cz
function latin2_to_win1250($text) { // chce text v iso-88592
$text = StrTr($text, "\xA\xAB\xAE\xB\xBB\xBE",
"\x8A\x8D\x8E\x9A\x9D\x9E");
return $text;
}
strtr is a usefull encoding mechinism instead of using str_rot13. you can impliment it when you write usernames to a file, for example. but know that it is easy to crack your encription.
an example:
<?php
$unencripted = "hello";
$from = "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz";
$to = "zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcba";
$temp = strtr($unencripted, $from, $to);
/* will return svool */
?>
Referring to note from 11 October 2000, Thorn (, ), Eth (, ), Esset () and Mu () aren't really accented letters. , , , are ligatures. Best to do the following:
function removeaccents($string){
return strtr(
strtr($string,
'',
'SZszYAAAAAACEEEEIIIINOOOOOOUUUUYaaaaaaceeeeiiiinoooooouuuuyy'),
array('' => 'TH', '' => 'th', '' => 'DH', '' => 'dh', '' => 'ss',
'' => 'OE', '' => 'oe', '' => 'AE', '' => 'ae', '' => 'u'));
}
This would be no good for sorting, as thorn and eth aren't actually found under th and dh. Also especially redundant because of Unicode! Still, I'm sure somone can find use for it - perhaps to constrict filenames...
Mark
to get the ascii equivalent of unicode characters simply use the
utf8_decode() function
Suppose you're trying to remove any character not in your set, i've found this very helpfull:
function my_remove($string, $my_set, $new=" ", $black="#")
{
$first = strtr( $string, $my_set,
str_repeat($black, strlen($my_set)) );
$second = strtr( $string, $first,
str_repeat($new, strlen($first)) );
return $second;
};
NOTE that all non-wanted character will be replace with $new,
note also that $black must NOT to exist in $my_set.
Molok
#!/bin/sh
# This shell script generates a strtr() call
# to translate from a character set to another.
# Requires: gnu recode, perl, php commandline binary
#
# Usage:
# Set set1 and set2 to whatever you prefer
# (multibyte character sets are not supported)
# and run the script. The script outputs
# a strtr() php code for you to use.
#
# Example is set to generate a
# cp437..latin9 conversion code.
#
set1=cp437
set2=iso-8859-15
result="`echo '<? for($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
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 $html_code the by Á , etc.
As noted in the str_rot13 docs, some servers don't provide the str_rot13() function. However, the presence of strtr makes it easy to build your own facsimile thereof:
if (!function_exists('str_rot13')) {
function str_rot13($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");
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.