I've got a simple method of performing a reverse strpos which may be of use. This version I have treats the offset very simply:
Positive offsets search backwards from the supplied string index.
Negative offsets search backwards from the position of the character that many characters from the end of the string.
Here is an example of backwards stepping through instances of a string with this function:
<?php
function backwardStrpos($haystack, $needle, $offset = 0){
$length = strlen($haystack);
$offset = ($offset > 0)?($length - $offset):abs($offset);
$pos = strpos(strrev($haystack), strrev($needle), $offset);
return ($pos === false)?false:( $length - $pos - strlen($needle) );
}
$pos = 0;
$count = 0;
echo "Test1<br/>";
while(($pos = backwardStrpos("012340567890", "0", $pos)) !== false){
echo $pos."<br/>";
$pos--;
if($pos < 0){
echo "Done<br/>";break;
}
}
echo "---===---<br/>\nTest2<br/>";
echo backwardStrpos("12341234", "1", 2)."<br/>";
echo backwardStrpos("12341234", "1", -2);
?>
Outputs:
Test1
11
5
0
Done
---===---
Test2
0
4
With Test2 the first line checks from the first 3 in "12341234" and runs backwards until it finds a 1 (at position 0)
The second line checks from the second 2 in "12341234" and seeks towards the beginning for the first 1 it finds (at position 4).
This function is useful for php4 and also useful if the offset parameter in the existing strrpos is equally confusing to you as it is for me.
strrpos
(PHP 4, PHP 5)
strrpos — 文字列中に、ある部分文字列が最後に現れる場所を探す
説明
int strrpos
( string
$haystack
, string $needle
[, int $offset = 0
] )
文字列 haystack の中で、
needle が最後に現れる位置を探します。
パラメータ
-
haystack -
検索を行う文字列。
-
needle -
needleが文字列でない場合は、 それを整数に変換し、その番号に対応する文字として扱います。 -
offset -
指定すると、文字列の開始位置からこの文字数だけ進んだところで検索を中止します。 負の値を指定すると、文字列の最後からこの文字数だけ戻ったところから逆向きに検索を開始します。
返り値
needle が見つかった位置を、
haystack 文字列の先頭 (offset の値とは無関係) からの相対位置で返します。
文字列の開始位置は 0 であり、1 ではないことに注意しましょう。
needle が見つからない場合は FALSE を返します。
変更履歴
| バージョン | 説明 |
|---|---|
| 5.0.0 |
needle
は 1 文字以上の文字列を指定可能です。
|
| 5.0.0 |
offset パラメータが追加されました。
|
例
例1 needle が haystack の中にあるかどうかの確認
"位置 0 に文字が見つかった" と "文字が見つからなかった" 場合の返り値は混同しやすいです。この違いを見分ける方法を以下に示します。
<?php
$pos = strrpos($mystring, "b");
if ($pos === false) { // 注意: 等号が 3 つ並んでいます
// 見つからない...
}
?>
例2 オフセットつきの検索
<?php
$foo = "0123456789a123456789b123456789c";
var_dump(strrpos($foo, '7', -5)); // 末尾から 5 文字戻ったところから検索を始めます
// 結果: int(17)
var_dump(strrpos($foo, '7', 20)); // 文字列の 20 文字目から検索を始めます
// 結果: int(27)
var_dump(strrpos($foo, '7', 28)); // 結果: bool(false)
?>
参考
- strpos() - 文字列内の部分文字列が最初に現れる場所を見つける
- stripos() - 大文字小文字を区別せずに文字列が最初に現れる位置を探す
- strripos() - 文字列中で、特定の(大文字小文字を区別しない)文字列が最後に現れた位置を探す
- strrchr() - 文字列中に文字が最後に現れる場所を取得する
- substr() - 文字列の一部分を返す
maxmike at gmail dot com
12-Jul-2009 12:05
alexandre at NOSPAM dot pixeline dot be
20-Dec-2008 09:35
I needed to check if a variable that contains a generated folder name based on user input had a trailing slash.
This did the trick:
<?php
// Detect and remove a trailing slash
$root_folder = ((strrpos($root_folder, '/') + 1) == strlen($root_folder)) ? substr($root_folder, 0, - 1) : $root_folder;
?>
eagleeye at eeisi dot com
02-Jul-2008 07:44
I had a problem where I was using the following in my .htaccess file.
php_value auto_prepend_file "pre.php"
php_value auto_append_file "post.php"
Not knowing how to prevent the htaccess directives from cascading, without having to put an override .htaccess in each subfolder, I figured, just prevent output in my pre and post scripts if we weren't in the root folder!
I did it using this line of code:
if (strrpos($_SERVER["REQUEST_URI"], "/") != 0) return;
Prevents execution of the rest of the script, and most importantly, doesn't output anything before any other headers may be sent by things in other folders (like my wiki site).
dixonmd at gmail dot com
24-Dec-2007 03:42
<?php
$pos = strlen(string $haystack) - strpos (strrev(string $haystack), strrev(string $needle)) - strlen(string $needle);
?>
If in the needle there is more than one character then in php 4 we can use the above statement for finding the position of last occurrence of a substring in a string instead of strrpos. Because in php 4 strrpos uses the first character of the substring.
eg :
<?php
$haystack = "you you you you you";
$needle = "you";
$pos1 = strlen($haystack) - strpos (strrev($haystack), strrev($needle)) - strlen($needle);
echo $pos1 . "<br>";
$pos2 strrpos($haystack, $needle);
echo $pos2 . "<br>";
?>
t dot hornberger at yatego dot com
17-Oct-2007 06:50
the function posted is false, hier the correction:
function rstrpos ($haystack, $needle, $offset)
{
$size = strlen ($haystack);
$pos = strpos (strrev($haystack), strrev($needle), $size - $offset);
if ($pos === false)
return false;
return $size - $pos - strlen($needle);
}
Daniel Brinca
15-Oct-2007 07:41
Here is a simple function to find the position of the next occurrence of needle in haystack, but searching backwards (lastIndexOf type function):
//search backwards for needle in haystack, and return its position
function rstrpos ($haystack, $needle, $offset){
$size = strlen ($haystack);
$pos = strpos (strrev($haystack), $needle, $size - $offset);
if ($pos === false)
return false;
return $size - $pos;
}
Note: supports full strings as needle
pb at tdcspace dot dk
23-Sep-2007 09:26
what the hell are you all doing. Wanna find the *next* last from a specific position because strrpos is useless with the "offset" option, then....
ex: find 'Z' in $str from position $p, backward...
while($p > -1 and $str{$p} <> 'Z') $p--;
Anyone will notice $p = -1 means: *not found* and that you must ensure a valid start offset in $p, that is >=0 and < string length. Doh
brian at enchanter dot net
16-Jul-2007 09:47
The documentation for 'offset' is misleading.
It says, "offset may be specified to begin searching an arbitrary number of characters into the string. Negative values will stop searching at an arbitrary point prior to the end of the string."
This is confusing if you think of strrpos as starting at the end of the string and working backwards.
A better way to think of offset is:
- If offset is positive, then strrpos only operates on the part of the string from offset to the end. This will usually have the same results as not specifying an offset, unless the only occurences of needle are before offset (in which case specifying the offset won't find the needle).
- If offset is negative, then strrpos only operates on that many characters at the end of the string. If the needle is farther away from the end of the string, it won't be found.
If, for example, you want to find the last space in a string before the 50th character, you'll need to do something like this:
strrpos($text, " ", -(strlen($text) - 50));
If instead you used strrpos($text, " ", 50), then you would find the last space between the 50th character and the end of the string, which may not have been what you were intending.
jafet at g dot m dot a dot i dot l dot com
12-Apr-2007 09:08
It would probably be good if someone would care to merge these little thoughts together...
<?php
function super_conforming_strrpos($haystack, $needle, $offset = 0)
{
# Why does strpos() do this? Anyway...
if(!is_string($needle)) $needle = ord(intval($needle));
if(!is_string($haystack)) $haystack = strval($haystack);
# Setup
$offset = intval($offset);
$hlen = strlen($haystack);
$nlen = strlen($needle);
# Intermezzo
if($nlen == 0)
{
trigger_error(__FUNCTION__.'(): Empty delimiter.', E_USER_WARNING);
return false;
}
if($offset < 0)
{
$haystack = substr($haystack, -$offset);
$offset = 0;
}
elseif($offset >= $hlen)
{
trigger_error(__FUNCTION__.'(): Offset not contained in string.', E_USER_WARNING);
return false;
}
# More setup
$hrev = strrev($haystack);
$nrev = strrev($needle);
# Search
$pos = strpos($hrev, $nrev, $offset);
if($pos === false) return false;
else return $hlen - $nlen - $pos;
}
?>
jafet at g dot m dot a dot i dot l dot com
12-Apr-2007 03:57
Full strpos() functionality, by yours truly.
<?php
function conforming_strrpos($haystack, $needle, $offset = 0)
{
# Why does strpos() do this? Anyway...
if(!is_string($needle)) $needle = ord(intval($needle));
$haystack = strval($haystack);
# Parameters
$hlen = strlen($haystack);
$nlen = strlen($needle);
# Come on, this is a feature too
if($nlen == 0)
{
trigger_error(__FUNCTION__.'(): Empty delimiter.', E_USER_WARNING);
return false;
}
$offset = intval($offset);
$hrev = strrev($haystack);
$nrev = strrev($needle);
# Search
$pos = strpos($hrev, $nrev, $offset);
if($pos === false) return false;
else return $hlen - $nlen - $pos;
}
?>
Note that $offset is evaluated from the end of the string.
Also note that conforming_strrpos() performs some five times slower than strpos(). Just a thought.
mijsoot_at_gmail_dot_com
06-Mar-2007 02:43
To begin, i'm sorry for my English.
So, I needed of one function which gives me the front last position of a character.
Then I said myself that it should be better to make one which gives the "N" last position.
$return_context = "1173120681_0__0_0_Mijsoot_Thierry";
// Here i need to find = "Mijsoot_Thierry"
//echo $return_context."<br />";// -- DEBUG
function findPos($haystack,$needle,$position){
$pos = strrpos($haystack, $needle);
if($position>1){
$position --;
$haystack = substr($haystack, 0, $pos);
$pos = findPos($haystack,$needle,$position);
}else{
// echo $haystack."<br />"; // -- DEBUG
return $pos;
}
return $pos;
}
var_dump(findPos($return_context,"_",2)); // -- TEST
Christ Off
29-Jan-2007 11:50
Function to truncate a string
Removing dot and comma
Adding ... only if a is character found
function TruncateString($phrase, $longueurMax = 150) {
$phrase = substr(trim($phrase), 0, $longueurMax);
$pos = strrpos($phrase, " ");
$phrase = substr($phrase, 0, $pos);
if ((substr($phrase,-1,1) == ",") or (substr($phrase,-1,1) == ".")) {
$phrase = substr($phrase,0,-1);
}
if ($pos === false) {
$phrase = $phrase;
}
else {
$phrase = $phrase . "...";
}
return $phrase;
}
Guilherme Garnier
15-Jan-2007 03:44
Actually, there is a little problem on your code: if $needle is not found inside $haystack, the function should return FALSE, but it is actually returning strlen($haystack) - strlen($needle). Here is a corrected version of it:
<?php
function stringrpos($haystack,$needle,$offset=NULL)
{
if (strpos($haystack,$needle,$offset) === FALSE)
return FALSE;
return strlen($haystack)
- strpos( strrev($haystack) , strrev($needle) , $offset)
- strlen($needle);
}
?>
php NO at SPAMMERS willfris SREMMAPS dot ON nl
20-Dec-2006 07:48
<?php
/*******
** Maybe the shortest code to find the last occurence of a string, even in php4
*******/
function stringrpos($haystack,$needle,$offset=NULL)
{
return strlen($haystack)
- strpos( strrev($haystack) , strrev($needle) , $offset)
- strlen($needle);
}
// @return -> chopped up for readability.
?>
purpleidea
27-Nov-2006 01:07
I was having some issues when I moved my code to run it on a different server.
The earlier php version didn't support more than one character needles, so tada, bugs. It's in the docs, i'm just pointing it out in case you're scratching your head for a while.
dmitry dot polushkin at gmail dot com
03-Nov-2006 11:05
Returns the filename's string extension, else if no extension found returns false.
Example: filename_extension('some_file.mp3'); // mp3
Faster than the pathinfo() analogue in two times.
<?php
function filename_extension($filename) {
$pos = strrpos($filename, '.');
if($pos===false) {
return false;
} else {
return substr($filename, $pos+1);
}
}
?>
kavih7 at yahoo dot com
08-Jun-2006 02:53
<?php
###################################################
#
# DESCRIPTION:
# This function returns the last occurance of a string,
# rather than the last occurance of a single character like
# strrpos does. It also supports an offset from where to
# start the searching in the haystack string.
#
# ARGS:
# $haystack (required) -- the string to search upon
# $needle (required) -- the string you are looking for
# $offset (optional) -- the offset to start from
#
# RETURN VALS:
# returns integer on success
# returns false on failure to find the string at all
#
###################################################
function strrpos_string($haystack, $needle, $offset = 0)
{
if(trim($haystack) != "" && trim($needle) != "" && $offset <= strlen($haystack))
{
$last_pos = $offset;
$found = false;
while(($curr_pos = strpos($haystack, $needle, $last_pos)) !== false)
{
$found = true;
$last_pos = $curr_pos + 1;
}
if($found)
{
return $last_pos - 1;
}
else
{
return false;
}
}
else
{
return false;
}
}
?>
shimon at schoolportal dot co dot il
03-May-2006 01:31
In strrstr function in php 4 there is also no offset.
<?
// by Shimon Doodkin
function chrrpos($haystack, $needle, $offset=false)
{
$needle=$needle[0];
$l=strlen($haystack);
if($l==0) return false;
if($offset===false) $offset=$l-1;
else
{
if($offset>$l) $offset=$l-1;
if($offset<0) return false;
}
for(;$offset>0;$offset--)
if($haystack[$offset]==$needle)
return $offset;
return false;
}
?>
gordon at kanazawa-gu dot ac dot jp
13-Sep-2005 11:56
The "find-last-occurrence-of-a-string" functions suggested here do not allow for a starting offset, so here's one, tried and tested, that does:
function my_strrpos($haystack, $needle, $offset=0) {
// same as strrpos, except $needle can be a string
$strrpos = false;
if (is_string($haystack) && is_string($needle) && is_numeric($offset)) {
$strlen = strlen($haystack);
$strpos = strpos(strrev(substr($haystack, $offset)), strrev($needle));
if (is_numeric($strpos)) {
$strrpos = $strlen - $strpos - strlen($needle);
}
}
return $strrpos;
}
genetically altered mastermind at gmail
22-Aug-2005 12:30
Very handy to get a file extension:
$this->data['extension'] = substr($this->data['name'],strrpos($this->data['name'],'.')+1);
fab
10-Aug-2005 06:07
RE: hao2lian
There are a lot of alternative - and unfortunately buggy - implementations of strrpos() (or last_index_of as it was called) on this page. This one is a slight modifiaction of the one below, but it should world like a *real* strrpos(), because it returns false if there is no needle in the haystack.
<?php
function my_strrpos($haystack, $needle) {
$index = strpos(strrev($haystack), strrev($needle));
if($index === false) {
return false;
}
$index = strlen($haystack) - strlen($needle) - $index;
return $index;
}
?>
lwoods
06-Aug-2005 02:03
If you are a VBScript programmer ("ex-" of course), you will find that 'strrpos' doesn't work like the VBScript 'instrRev' function.
Here is the equivalent function:
VBScript:
k=instrrev(s,">",j);
PHP Equivalent of the above VBScript:
$k=strrpos(substr($s,0,$j),'>');
Comments:
You might think (I did!) that the following PHP function call would be the equivant of the above VBScript call:
$kk=strrpos($s,'>',$j);
NOPE! In the above PHP call, $j defines the position in the string that should be considered the BEGINNING of the string, whereas in the VBScript call, j is to be considered the END of the string, as far as this search is concerned. Anyway, the above 'strrpos' with the 'substr' will work.
(Probably faster to write a for loop!)
hao2lian
02-Aug-2005 09:50
Yet another correction on the last_index_of function algorithm:
function last_index_of($haystack, $needle) {
$index = strpos(strrev($haystack), strrev($needle));
$index = strlen($haystack) - strlen($needle) - $index;
return $index;
}
"strlen(index)" in the most recent one should be "strlen($needle)".
jonas at jonasbjork dot net
06-Apr-2005 03:25
I needed to remove last directory from an path, and came up with this solution:
<?php
$path_dir = "/my/sweet/home/";
$path_up = substr( $path_dir, 0, strrpos( $path_dir, '/', -2 ) )."/";
echo $path_up;
?>
Might be helpful for someone..
08-Mar-2005 12:14
In the below example, it should be substr, not strrpos.
<PHP?
$filename = substr($url, strrpos($url, '/') + 1);
?>
escii at hotmail dot com ( Brendan )
10-Jan-2005 08:12
I was immediatley pissed when i found the behaviour of strrpos ( shouldnt it be called charrpos ?) the way it is, so i made my own implement to search for strings.
<?
function proper_strrpos($haystack,$needle){
while($ret = strrpos($haystack,$needle))
{
if(strncmp(substr($haystack,$ret,strlen($needle)),
$needle,strlen($needle)) == 0 )
return $ret;
$haystack = substr($haystack,0,$ret -1 );
}
return $ret;
}
?>
griffioen at justdesign dot nl
17-Nov-2004 11:57
If you wish to look for the last occurrence of a STRING in a string (instead of a single character) and don't have mb_strrpos working, try this:
function lastIndexOf($haystack, $needle) {
$index = strpos(strrev($haystack), strrev($needle));
$index = strlen($haystack) - strlen(index) - $index;
return $index;
}
nexman at playoutloud dot net
07-Oct-2004 11:22
Function like the 5.0 version of strrpos for 4.x.
This will return the *last* occurence of a string within a string.
function strepos($haystack, $needle, $offset=0) {
$pos_rule = ($offset<0)?strlen($haystack)+($offset-1):$offset;
$last_pos = false; $first_run = true;
do {
$pos=strpos($haystack, $needle, (intval($last_pos)+(($first_run)?0:strlen($needle))));
if ($pos!==false && (($offset<0 && $pos <= $pos_rule)||$offset >= 0)) {
$last_pos = $pos;
} else { break; }
$first_run = false;
} while ($pos !== false);
if ($offset>0 && $last_pos<$pos_rule) { $last_pos = false; }
return $last_pos;
}
If my math is off, please feel free to correct.
- A positive offset will be the minimum character index position of the first character allowed.
- A negative offset will be subtracted from the total length and the position directly before will be the maximum index of the first character being searched.
returns the character index ( 0+ ) of the last occurence of the needle.
* boolean FALSE will return no matches within the haystack, or outside boundries specified by the offset.
harlequin AT gmx DOT de
26-May-2004 11:59
this is my function for finding a filename in a URL:
<?php
function getfname($url){
$pos = strrpos($url, "/");
if ($pos === false) {
// not found / no filename in url...
return false;
} else {
// Get the string length
$len = strlen($url);
if ($len < $pos){
print "$len / $pos";
// the last slash we found belongs to http:// or it is the trailing slash of a URL
return false;
} else {
$filename = substr($url, $pos+1, $len-$pos-1);
}
}
return $filename;
}
?>
tsa at medicine dot wisc dot edu
24-May-2004 07:17
What the heck, I thought I'd throw another function in the mix. It's not pretty but the following function counts backwards from your starting point and tells you the last occurrance of a mixed char string:
<?php
function strrposmixed ($haystack, $needle, $start=0) {
// init start as the end of the str if not set
if($start == 0) {
$start = strlen($haystack);
}
// searches backward from $start
$currentStrPos=$start;
$lastFoundPos=false;
while($currentStrPos != 0) {
if(!(strpos($haystack,$needle,$currentStrPos) === false)) {
$lastFoundPos=strpos($haystack,$needle,$currentStrPos);
break;
}
$currentStrPos--;
}
if($lastFoundPos === false) {
return false;
} else {
return $lastFoundPos;
}
}
?>
dreamclub2000 at hotmail dot com
04-Feb-2004 01:17
This function does what strrpos would if it handled multi-character strings:
<?php
function getLastStr($hay, $need){
$getLastStr = 0;
$pos = strpos($hay, $need);
if (is_int ($pos)){ //this is to decide whether it is "false" or "0"
while($pos) {
$getLastStr = $getLastStr + $pos + strlen($need);
$hay = substr ($hay , $pos + strlen($need));
$pos = strpos($hay, $need);
}
return $getLastStr - strlen($need);
} else {
return -1; //if $need wasnt found it returns "-1" , because it could return "0" if its found on position "0".
}
}
?>
ZaraWebFX
14-Oct-2003 01:06
this could be, what derek mentioned:
<?
function cut_last_occurence($string,$cut_off) {
return strrev(substr(strstr(strrev($string), strrev($cut_off)),strlen($cut_off)));
}
// example: cut off the last occurence of "limit"
$str = "select delta_limit1, delta_limit2, delta_limit3 from table limit 1,7";
$search = " limit";
echo $str."\n";
echo cut_last_occurence($str,"limit");
?>
lee at 5ss dot net
29-Aug-2003 09:21
I should have looked here first, but instead I wrote my own version of strrpos that supports searching for entire strings, rather than individual characters. This is a recursive function. I have not tested to see if it is more or less efficient than the others on the page. I hope this helps someone!
<?php
//Find last occurance of needle in haystack
function str_rpos($haystack, $needle, $start = 0){
$tempPos = strpos($haystack, $needle, $start);
if($tempPos === false){
if($start == 0){
//Needle not in string at all
return false;
}else{
//No more occurances found
return $start - strlen($needle);
}
}else{
//Find the next occurance
return str_rpos($haystack, $needle, $tempPos + strlen($needle));
}
}
?>
ara at bluemedia dot us
14-Jul-2003 03:09
derek@slashview.com notes a great replacement for strrpos because of the single character needle limitation in the strrpos function. He made a slight error in the code. He adds the length of the needle string instead of subtracting it from the final position. The function should be:
<?php
function strlastpos($haystack, $needle) {
# flip both strings around and search, then adjust position based on string lengths
return strlen($haystack) - strlen($needle) - strpos(strrev($haystack), strrev($needle));
}
?>
no_spammage_at_wwwcrm_dot_com
24-Apr-2003 10:07
This function does what strrpos would if it handled multi-character strings:
<?php
//function recurses until it finds last instance of $needle in $haystack
function getLastStr($haystack, $needle, $first_time=1){
$test=strstr($haystack, $needle);//is the needle there?
if ($test) return getLastStr($test, $needle, 0);//see if there is another one?
else if ($first_time) return false;//there is no occurence at all
else return $haystack;//that was the last occurence
}
?>
FIE
15-Feb-2003 06:03
refering to the comment and function about lastIndexOf()...
It seemed not to work for me the only reason I could find was the haystack was reversed and the string wasnt therefore it returnt the length of the haystack rather than the position of the last needle... i rewrote it as fallows:
<?php
function strlpos($f_haystack,$f_needle) {
$rev_str = strrev($f_needle);
$rev_hay = strrev($f_haystack);
$hay_len = strlen($f_haystack);
$ned_pos = strpos($rev_hay,$rev_str);
$result = $hay_len - $ned_pos - strlen($rev_str);
return $result;
}
?>
this one fallows the strpos syntax rather than java's lastIndexOf.
I'm not positive if it takes more resources assigning all of those variables in there but you can put it all in return if you want, i dont care if i crash my server ;).
~SILENT WIND OF DOOM WOOSH!
rob at pulpchat dot com
22-Jan-2003 03:23
For those of you coming from VBScript, I have
converted the instrrev function to PHP:
<?php
function instrrev($n,$s) {
$x=strpos(chr(0).strrev($n),$s)+0;
return (($x==0) ? 0 : strlen($n)-$x+1);
}
?>
Remember that, unlike PHP and Javascript, VBScript
returns 0 for no string found and 1 for the first
character position, etc.
Hopefully this will save some time if you are
converting ASP pages to PHP.
php dot net at insite-out dot com
17-Dec-2002 12:47
I was looking for the equivalent of Java's lastIndexOf(). I couldn't find it so I wrote this:
<?php
/*
Method to return the last occurrence of a substring within a
string
*/
function last_index_of($sub_str,$instr) {
if(strstr($instr,$sub_str)!="") {
return(strlen($instr)-strpos(strrev($instr),$sub_str));
}
return(-1);
}
?>
It returns the numerical index of the substring you're searching for, or -1 if the substring doesn't exist within the string.
su.noseelg@naes, only backwards
13-Dec-2002 11:39
Maybe I'm the only one who's bothered by it, but it really bugs me when the last line in a paragraph is a single word. Here's an example to explain what I don't like:
The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy
dog.
So that's why I wrote this function. In any paragraph that contains more than 1 space (i.e., more than two words), it will replace the last space with ' '.
<?php
function no_orphans($TheParagraph) {
if (substr_count($TheParagraph," ") > 1) {
$lastspace = strrpos($TheParagraph," ");
$TheParagraph = substr_replace($TheParagraph," ",$lastspace,1);
}
return $TheParagraph;
}
?>
So, it would change "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog." to "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog." That way, the last two words will always stay together.
DONT SPAM vardges at iqnest dot com
30-Oct-2002 02:22
that function can be modified to this
<?php
function strrpos_str ($string, $searchFor, $startFrom = 0)
{
$addLen = strlen ($searchFor);
$endPos = $startFrom - $addLen;
while (true)
{
if (($newPos = strpos ($string, $searchFor, $endPos + $addLen)) === false) break;
$endPos = $newPos;
}
return ($endPos >= 0) ? $endPos : false;
}
// example
$str = "abcabcabc";
$search = "ab";
$pos = strrpos_str ($str, $search);
if ($pos === false) echo "not found";
else echo $pos; // returns 6 in this case
?>
28-May-2002 02:46
Cause:
Find position of last occurrence of a string in a string...
and I needed it, I hacked a little code to do this:
Maybe it is helpful for you.
<?php
function _strrpos_needle($sourcestring,$needle){
/* just for easier understanding */
$tempString=$sourcestring;
do {
$tempPos=strpos($tempString,$needle);
$tempString=substr($tempString,$tempPos+strlen($needle));
$realPos=$realPos+$tempPos;
} while (!is_bool($tempPos));
return $realPos;
}
?>
derek at slashview dot com
01-Feb-2002 05:06
To find the position of the start of the last occurence of a string, we can do this:
$pos=strlen($haystack) - (strpos(strrev($haystack), strrev($needle)) + strlen($needle));
The idea is to reverse both $needle and $haystack, use strpos to find the first occurence of $needle in $haystack, then count backwards by the length of $needle. Finally, subtract $pos from length of $haystack. A lot easier to figure out if you use a test string to visualize it. :)
