useful for finding beginning of quotes and/or tags in a variable containing html.
$pos = strcspn($data, '<"\'');
will find the first occurance of either the beginning of a tag, or a double- or single-quoted string.
(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7)
strcspn — Find length of initial segment not matching mask
$subject
, string $mask
[, int $start
[, int $length
]] )
Returns the length of the initial segment of
subject
which does not
contain any of the characters in mask
.
If start
and length
are omitted, then all of subject
will be
examined. If they are included, then the effect will be the same as
calling strcspn(substr($subject, $start, $length),
$mask) (see substr
for more information).
subject
The string to examine.
mask
The string containing every disallowed character.
start
The position in subject
to
start searching.
If start
is given and is non-negative,
then strcspn() will begin
examining subject
at
the start
'th position. For instance, in
the string 'abcdef', the character at
position 0 is 'a', the
character at position 2 is
'c', and so forth.
If start
is given and is negative,
then strcspn() will begin
examining subject
at
the start
'th position from the end
of subject
.
length
The length of the segment from subject
to examine.
If length
is given and is non-negative,
then subject
will be examined
for length
characters after the starting
position.
If length
is given and is negative,
then subject
will be examined from the
starting position up to length
characters from the end of subject
.
Returns the length of the initial segment of subject
which consists entirely of characters not in mask
.
Note:
When a
start
parameter is set, the returned length is counted starting from this position, not from the beginning ofsubject
.
Example #1 strcspn() example
<?php
$a = strcspn('abcd', 'apple');
$b = strcspn('abcd', 'banana');
$c = strcspn('hello', 'l');
$d = strcspn('hello', 'world');
$e = strcspn('abcdhelloabcd', 'abcd', -9);
$f = strcspn('abcdhelloabcd', 'abcd', -9, -5);
var_dump($a);
var_dump($b);
var_dump($c);
var_dump($d);
var_dump($e);
var_dump($f);
?>
The above example will output:
int(0) int(0) int(2) int(2) int(5) int(4)
Note: This function is binary-safe.
useful for finding beginning of quotes and/or tags in a variable containing html.
$pos = strcspn($data, '<"\'');
will find the first occurance of either the beginning of a tag, or a double- or single-quoted string.
When you use the third parameter remember that the function will return the number of characters it bypassed, which will *not* be the position in your source string. It's a simple fix to just add your third parameter value to the function result to get the position in the first string where the scan stopped, but I didn't think of it at first.
strcspn() can also be thought of as analogous to the following regular expression:
<?php
// where ... represents the mask of characters
preg_match('/[^ ...]/', substr($subject, $start, $length) );
?>
By this analogy, strcspn() can be used in place of some regular expressions to match a pattern without the overhead of a regex engine -- for example, ways to verify if an input string represents a binary value:
<?php
preg_match('/^[01]+$/i', $subject);
// or...
!preg_match('/[^01]/i', $subject);
// ...or using strcspn()
!strcspn($subject, '01');
?>
this function can be used like strspn(), except while that can be used to compare a string with an allowed pattern, this one can be use to compare a string with a FORBIDDEN pattern
so, to know if any forbidden character has a position inside our string, we can use (not tested with backslashes)...
<?php
// LARGE VERSION
$forbidden="\"\\?*:/@|<>";
if (strlen($filename) != strcspn($filename,$forbidden)) {
echo "you cant create a file with that name!";
}
// SHORT VERSION
if (strlen($filename) - strcspn($filename,"\"\\?*:/@|<>")) {
echo "i told you, you cant create that file";
}
?>