It's very comfortible for long Sql queries:
<?php
$_gQuery = "UPDATE `x` SET `a` = %i AND `b` = '%s' WHERE `my` = '%s';"; // ........
mysql_query( sprintf( $_gQuery, 10, 'a', 'rrrr' ) );
?>
But if you have a short query, then it would be much faster to append your data by using `.`.
<?php
$_gQuery = 'SELECT COUNT(*) FROM `' . $_gName . '`;';
?>
sprintf
(PHP 4, PHP 5)
sprintf — Return a formatted string
Description
Returns a string produced according to the formatting string format .
Parameters
- format
-
The format string is composed of zero or more directives: ordinary characters (excluding %) that are copied directly to the result, and conversion specifications, each of which results in fetching its own parameter. This applies to both sprintf() and printf().
Each conversion specification consists of a percent sign (%), followed by one or more of these elements, in order:
- An optional sign specifier that forces a sign (- or +) to be used on a number. By default, only the - sign is used on a number if it's negative. This specifier forces positive numbers to have the + sign attached as well, and was added in PHP 4.3.0.
- An optional padding specifier that says what character will be used for padding the results to the right string size. This may be a space character or a 0 (zero character). The default is to pad with spaces. An alternate padding character can be specified by prefixing it with a single quote ('). See the examples below.
- An optional alignment specifier that says if the result should be left-justified or right-justified. The default is right-justified; a - character here will make it left-justified.
- An optional number, a width specifier that says how many characters (minimum) this conversion should result in.
- An optional precision specifier that says how many decimal digits should be displayed for floating-point numbers. When using this specifier on a string, it acts as a cutoff point, setting a maximum character limit to the string.
-
A type specifier that says what type the argument data should be treated as. Possible types:
- % - a literal percent character. No argument is required.
- b - the argument is treated as an integer, and presented as a binary number.
- c - the argument is treated as an integer, and presented as the character with that ASCII value.
- d - the argument is treated as an integer, and presented as a (signed) decimal number.
- e - the argument is treated as scientific notation (e.g. 1.2e+2). The precision specifier stands for the number of digits after the decimal point since PHP 5.2.1. In earlier versions, it was taken as number of significant digits (one less).
- u - the argument is treated as an integer, and presented as an unsigned decimal number.
- f - the argument is treated as a float, and presented as a floating-point number (locale aware).
- F - the argument is treated as a float, and presented as a floating-point number (non-locale aware). Available since PHP 4.3.10 and PHP 5.0.3.
- o - the argument is treated as an integer, and presented as an octal number.
- s - the argument is treated as and presented as a string.
- x - the argument is treated as an integer and presented as a hexadecimal number (with lowercase letters).
- X - the argument is treated as an integer and presented as a hexadecimal number (with uppercase letters).
The format string supports argument numbering/swapping. Here is an example:
This might output, "There are 5 monkeys in the tree". But imagine we are creating a format string in a separate file, commonly because we would like to internationalize it and we rewrite it as:Example #1 Argument swapping
<?php
$format = 'There are %d monkeys in the %s';
printf($format, $num, $location);
?>We now have a problem. The order of the placeholders in the format string does not match the order of the arguments in the code. We would like to leave the code as is and simply indicate in the format string which arguments the placeholders refer to. We would write the format string like this instead:Example #2 Argument swapping
<?php
$format = 'The %s contains %d monkeys';
printf($format, $num, $location);
?>An added benefit here is that you can repeat the placeholders without adding more arguments in the code. For example:Example #3 Argument swapping
<?php
$format = 'The %2$s contains %1$d monkeys';
printf($format, $num, $location);
?>Example #4 Argument swapping
<?php
$format = 'The %2$s contains %1$d monkeys.
That\'s a nice %2$s full of %1$d monkeys.';
printf($format, $num, $location);
?> - args
-
- ...
-
Return Values
Returns a string produced according to the formatting string format .
ChangeLog
| Version | Description |
|---|---|
| 4.0.6 | Support for argument numbering/swapping was added |
Examples
Example #5 printf(): various examples
<?php
$n = 43951789;
$u = -43951789;
$c = 65; // ASCII 65 is 'A'
// notice the double %%, this prints a literal '%' character
printf("%%b = '%b'\n", $n); // binary representation
printf("%%c = '%c'\n", $c); // print the ascii character, same as chr() function
printf("%%d = '%d'\n", $n); // standard integer representation
printf("%%e = '%e'\n", $n); // scientific notation
printf("%%u = '%u'\n", $n); // unsigned integer representation of a positive integer
printf("%%u = '%u'\n", $u); // unsigned integer representation of a negative integer
printf("%%f = '%f'\n", $n); // floating point representation
printf("%%o = '%o'\n", $n); // octal representation
printf("%%s = '%s'\n", $n); // string representation
printf("%%x = '%x'\n", $n); // hexadecimal representation (lower-case)
printf("%%X = '%X'\n", $n); // hexadecimal representation (upper-case)
printf("%%+d = '%+d'\n", $n); // sign specifier on a positive integer
printf("%%+d = '%+d'\n", $u); // sign specifier on a negative integer
?>
The above example will output:
%b = '10100111101010011010101101' %c = 'A' %d = '43951789' %e = '4.39518e+7' %u = '43951789' %u = '4251015507' %f = '43951789.000000' %o = '247523255' %s = '43951789' %x = '29ea6ad' %X = '29EA6AD' %+d = '+43951789' %+d = '-43951789'
Example #6 printf(): string specifiers
<?php
$s = 'monkey';
$t = 'many monkeys';
printf("[%s]\n", $s); // standard string output
printf("[%10s]\n", $s); // right-justification with spaces
printf("[%-10s]\n", $s); // left-justification with spaces
printf("[%010s]\n", $s); // zero-padding works on strings too
printf("[%'#10s]\n", $s); // use the custom padding character '#'
printf("[%10.10s]\n", $t); // left-justification but with a cutoff of 10 characters
?>
The above example will output:
[monkey] [ monkey] [monkey ] [0000monkey] [####monkey] [many monke]
Example #7 sprintf(): zero-padded integers
<?php
$isodate = sprintf("%04d-%02d-%02d", $year, $month, $day);
?>
Example #8 sprintf(): formatting currency
<?php
$money1 = 68.75;
$money2 = 54.35;
$money = $money1 + $money2;
// echo $money will output "123.1";
$formatted = sprintf("%01.2f", $money);
// echo $formatted will output "123.10"
?>
Example #9 sprintf(): scientific notation
<?php
$number = 362525200;
echo sprintf("%.3e", $number); // outputs 3.625e+8
?>
sprintf
30-Mar-2008 08:40
10-Mar-2008 10:13
Was looking for a assoc way of using sprintf but couldnt find one, probably wasnt looking hard enough so came up with this. Very very simple indeed...
<?php
function sprintf2($str='', $vars=array(), $char='%')
{
if (!$str) return '';
if (count($vars) > 0)
{
foreach ($vars as $k => $v)
{
$str = str_replace($char . $k, $v, $str);
}
}
return $str;
}
echo sprintf2('Hello %your_name my name is %my_name! I am %my_age, how old are you? I like %object!', array(
'your_name' => 'Ben',
'my_name' => 'Matt',
'my_age' => '21',
'object' => 'food'
));
// Hello Ben my name is Matt! I am 21, how old are you? I like food!
?>
Looks nice anyway :)
05-Feb-2008 09:46
An interesting bug, if you do the following:
$val = 2345.35;
$val = sprintf("%01.2f", $val);
echo $val;
Output is "2.00", instead of "2345.35". The solution is to use an intermediate variable:
$val = 2345.35;
$val2 = sprintf("%01.2f", $val);
$val = $val2;
echo $val;
10-Jan-2008 01:22
In the last example of Example#6, there is an error regarding the output.
printf("[%10.10s]\n", $t); // left-justification but with a cutoff of 10 characters
This outputs right-justified.
In order to output left-justified:
printf("[%-10.10s]\n", $t);
06-Sep-2007 11:29
/**
This function returns a formated string with the legnth you specify
@string holds the string which you want to format
@len holds the length you want to format
**/
function formatString($string, $len)
{
if (strlen($string) < $len)
{
$addchar=($len - strlen($string)) ;
for ($i = 0; $i < $addchar; $i++)
{
$string=sprintf("$string%s", "0");
}
}
if (strlen($string) > $len)
{
$string=substr($string,0,$len);
}
return $string;
}
11-May-2007 12:03
Note:
If you want to use % in sprintf, you have to "quote" it like %%.
Example:
echo sprintf("Green => %d%%'", 50);
Output:
Green => 50%
28-Mar-2007 12:25
Display an binary string like an Hex Editor.
<?php
function BinToHexView($binstr) {
$HexView = "";
$binpos = 0;
$binsize = strlen($binstr);
$binr = ( ($binsize-$binpos-16) > 16 ? 16 : $binsize-$binpos-16 );
while ($binr > 0) {
$hline = "";
$dline = "";
$HexView .= sprintf("%04x", $binpos);
for ($c=0;$c<$binr;$c++) {
$hline .= sprintf("%02x",ord($binstr[$binpos+$c]))." ";
}
for ($c=0;$c<$binr;$c++) {
$ord = ord($binstr[$binpos+$c]);
$dline .= ( $ord<32 || $ord>126 ? "." : $binstr[$binpos+$c] );
}
$HexView .= sprintf(" %-48s %-16s\n", $hline, $dline);
$binpos += $binr;
$binr = ( ($binsize-$binpos-16) > 16 ? 16 : $binsize-$binpos-16 );
}
return $HexView;
}
?>
In response to juan at ecogomera dot com:
I think what you want is:
$x = 3327
$y=decbin($x);
echo $y."<br>";
$z = sprintf("%012d", $x);
echo $z;
3327
110011111111
000000003327
Right? You were double-converting the number. First to binary, then again to decimal. You should be converting the source number directly into the required base.
09-Nov-2006 11:46
In response to Anonymous, who claimed that:
printf("[%s]\n", str_pad('Hello', 20));
and
printf("[%-20s]\n", 'Hello');
are the same thing: you've missed the point.
They're only the same when the amount of padding is a known constant. When its a variable (or an expression), its often much more convenient to be able to write:
printf("[%-*s]\n", 3*$n+2, "Hello");
than what you have to go through now, which is either:
$t = 3*$n+2;
printf("[%-{$t}s]\n","Hello");
or
printf("[%s]\n", str_pad('Hello', 3*$n+2));
16-Oct-2006 04:04
In response to Fredrik Rambris in the com top domain:
<?php
//Your code:
printf("[%s]\n", str_pad('Hello', 20));
//Is the same as:
printf("[%-20s]\n", 'Hello');
?>
28-Sep-2006 02:48
The C implementation of printf (alteast in glibc) can handle field length as arguments like this:
printf("[%-*s]\n", (int)20, "Hello");
To have the same result in PHP you need to run
printf("[%s]\n, str_pad("Hello", 20) );
It would be nice if one could use the field length directly like in C.
12-Aug-2006 11:54
Here a litle function that might come handy one time:
It gives back a String and adds a <BR> (you can change it to <br />) to every line end. And it adds $num blanks to the front of the next line.
<?php
function nl2brnl($text, $num)
{
return preg_replace("/\\r\\n|\\n|\\r/", sprintf("% -".(5+$num)."s","<BR>\\n"), $text);
}
$a = " one\\n two\\r\\n three";
$b = nl2brnl($a, 2);
var_dump($b);
/* output will be:
string(30) " one<BR>
two<BR>
three"
*/
echo " <P>\\n ";
echo $b
/* output will be:
<P>
one<BR>
two<BR>
three
*/
?>
Is helpfull for avouding code_soup.
10-Aug-2006 02:54
Note that in PHP5 (.1.4 for me) sprintf will not use the __toString function of an object.
<?php
class pr{
private $l;
public function __construct($l)
{
$this->l=$l;
}
public function __toString()
{
return $this->l;
}
}
echo new pr('This works!!'); //This will display 'This works!!'
echo sprintf(new pr('This doesnt')); // will display 'Object'
?>
Be careful with that!
06-Aug-2006 10:35
<?php
#-----------------------------------------------------
# Viewing Two's Complement using sprintf formatting.
#-----------------------------------------------------
# Systems using Two's Complements have exactly one number that equals its own Two's Complement.
# On a 32-bit system look at 1000 0000 0000 0000 for -2147483648
# Take the one's complement, to get 0111 1111 1111 1111, add 1
# to get the Two's Complement: 1000 0000 0000 0000
# We are back to the original number, the so-called Weird Number for 32-bits.
# For a 64-bit system, format that number as binary, width 64, padded with 0's.
printf("%064b\n", -2147483648);
# Output with added spaces:
# 11111111 11111111 11111111 11111111 10000000 00000000 00000000 00000000
# And here is the Two's Complement on a 64-bit system.
printf("%064b\n", +2147483648);
# Output with added spaces:
# 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 10000000 00000000 00000000 00000000
# They share those last 32 bits, accounting for the 32-bit Weird Number.
#----------------------------------------------------------
# Is PHP running 32-bit or 64-bit?
#----------------------------------------------------------
# Sure, we can look at the max int, but The Weird Number also tells if we are in 32-bit, 64-bit, or ...
function getBitCount() {
$how_many_bits = 1; $n = 2;
while(True) {
$how_many_bits += 1; $n *= 2; # powers of 2
# matches its own two's complement?
if( sprintf("%b", $n) == sprintf("%b", -$n) )
return 1 + $how_many_bits;
}
return;
}
?>
26-Apr-2006 01:51
<?
/**
* [string or int] vprint ( string $format [, mixed $ary [, bool $return]] )
*
* Closely mimics the functionality of sprintf(), printf(), vprintf(), and vsprintf().
*
* Replaces %[bcdeufFosxX] with each element of $ary
* See http://us3.php.net/manual/en/function.sprintf.php for details on replacement types.
*
* If there are not enough elements in $ary (or it is left out) to satisfy $format,
* it will be padded to the correct length.
*
* Since v*printf() doesn't mind having too many elements in the array, $format will be left alone.
*
* If $ary is a string, it will be recast into an array.
*
* If $return is set to a value considered to be false (0, '', null, false, and array()),
* then the output will be sent to STDOUT and the strlen() of the output string will be returned;
* otherwise, the output string will be returned.
*
* It's buggy when using the argument swapping functionality, unless you do it propperly.
*
* May break when using modifiers (%.4e, %02s, etc), unless you do it propperly.
**/
function vprint($format, $ary = array(), $return = true) {
// Sanity?!
if (!is_array($ary)) $ary = array($ary);
// Find %n$n.
preg_match_all('#\\%[\\d]*\\$[bcdeufFosxX]#', $format, $matches);
// Weed out the dupes and count how many there are.
$counts = count(array_unique($matches[0]));
// Count the number of %n's and add it to the number of %n$n's.
$countf = preg_match_all('#\\%[bcdeufFosxX]#', $format, $matches) + $counts;
// Count the number of replacements.
$counta = count($ary);
if ($countf > $counta) {
// Pad $ary if there's not enough elements.
$ary = array_pad($ary, $countf, " ");
}
if ($return) {
return vsprintf($format, $ary);
} else {
return vprintf($format, $ary);
}
}
?>
16-Feb-2006 07:21
The format of floating values has been previously reporting as depending on platform (linux / windows) yet I see it changes within two linux systems depending on the version:
In V4.2.2 "%3.2" displays 3 integers and two decimals (i.e. the first digit represents just the number of integer digits), on V4.4.1 the same displays (and justifies the string to) a three character string (i.e. the first digit is the total lenght of the number, including the decimal dot).
Maybe someone may better specify which version this happens from.
18-Dec-2005 12:57
henke dot andersson
You can accomplish feeding it array if you use call_user_func_array. Not exactly a `clean' option, but it does work.
14-Nov-2005 06:02
Time ? Format
<?php
$v_Dur = "66";
$v_Dur = floor($v_Dur/60) . ":" . number_format( fmod(($v_Dur/60)*60,60) ) ;
echo "HH:MM========" . $v_Dur;
echo "<br>";
$v_Dur = "66";
$v_Dur = floor($v_Dur/60) . ":" . sprintf("%02s",number_format( fmod(($v_Dur/60)*60,60) ) );
echo "HH:MM========" . $v_Dur;
?>
12-Oct-2005 05:35
If you want to center align some text using the printf or sprintf functions, you can just use the following:
function center_text($word){
$tot_width = 30;
$symbol = "-";
$middle = round($tot_width/2);
$length_word = strlen($word);
$middle_word = round($length_word / 2);
$last_position = $middle + $middle_word;
$number_of_spaces = $middle - $middle_word;
$result = sprintf("%'{$symbol}{$last_position}s", $word);
for ($i = 0; $i < $number_of_spaces; $i++){
$result .= "$symbol";
}
return $result;
}
$string = "This is some text";
print center_text($string);
off course you can modify the function to use more arguments.
14-Aug-2005 09:47
trying to fix the multibyte non-compliance of sprintf, I came to that :
<?php
function mb_sprintf($format) {
$argv = func_get_args() ;
array_shift($argv) ;
return mb_vsprintf($format, $argv) ;
}
function mb_vsprintf($format, $argv) {
$newargv = array() ;
preg_match_all("`\%('.+|[0 ]|)([1-9][0-9]*|)s`U", $format, $results, PREG_SET_ORDER) ;
foreach($results as $result) {
list($string_format, $filler, $size) = $result ;
if(strlen($filler)>1)
$filler = substr($filler, 1) ;
while(!is_string($arg = array_shift($argv)))
$newargv[] = $arg ;
$pos = strpos($format, $string_format) ;
$format = substr($format, 0, $pos)
. ($size ? str_repeat($filler, $size-strlen($arg)) : '')
. str_replace('%', '%%', $arg)
. substr($format, $pos+strlen($string_format))
;
}
return vsprintf($format, $newargv) ;
}
?>
handle with care :
1. that function was designed mostly for utf-8. i guess it won't work with any static mb encoding.
2. my configuration sets the mbstring.func_overload configuration directive to 7, so you may wish to replace substr, strlen, etc. with mb_* equivalents.
3. since preg_* doesn't complies with mb strings, I used a '.+' in the regexp to symbolize an escaped filler character. That means, %'xy5s pattern will match, unfortunately. It is recomended to remove the '+', unless you are intending to use an mb char as filler.
4. the filler fills at left, and only at left.
5. I couldn't succeed with a preg_replace thing : the problem was to use the differents lengths of the string arguements in the same replacement, string or callback. That's why the code is much longuer than I expected.
6. The pattern wil not match any %1\$s thing... just was too complicated for me.
7. Although it has been tested, and works fine within the limits above, this is much more a draft than a end-user function. I would enjoy any improvment.
The test code below shows possibilities, and explains the problem that occures with an mb string argument in sprintf.
<?php
header("content-type:text/plain; charset=UTF-8") ;
$mb_string = "xéxàx" ;
echo sprintf("%010s", $mb_string), " [octet-size: ", str_sizeof($mb_string) , " ; count: ", strlen(sprintf("%010s", $mb_string)), " characters]\n" ;
echo mb_sprintf("%010s", $mb_string), " [octet-size: ", str_sizeof($mb_string) , " ; count: ", strlen(mb_sprintf("%010s", $mb_string)), " characters]\n" ;
echo "\n" ;
echo mb_sprintf("%''10s\n%'010s\n%'û10s\n%10d\n%'x10s\n%010s\n% 10s\n%010s\n%'1s\n", "zero", "one", "two", 3, "four", "ƒîve", "%s%i%x", "šéveñ", "eight") ;
?>
16-Jun-2005 11:33
Using sprintf to force leading leading zeros
foreach (range(1, 10) as $v) {echo "<br>tag_".sprintf("%02d",$v);}
displays
tag_01
tag_02
tag_03
.. etc
30-May-2005 07:03
Just to elaborate on downright's point about different meanings for %f, it appears the behavior changed significantly as of 4.3.7, rather than just being different on different platforms. Previously, the width specifier gave the number of characters allowed BEFORE the decimal. Now, the width specifier gives the TOTAL number of characters. (This is in line with the semantics of printf() in other languages.) See bugs #28633 and #29286 for more details.
02-May-2005 12:08
Just a reminder for beginners : example 6 'printf("[%10s]\n", $s);' only works (that is, shows out the spaces) if you put the html '<pre></pre>' tags ( head-scraping time saver ;-).
18-Apr-2005 12:20
@ henke dot andersson at comhem dot se: Use vprintf()/vsprintf() for that.
15-Apr-2005 08:07
Mind that it doesn't allow you to use a array as multiple arguments like this:
<?php
printf('%s %s',array('a','b')) ?>
31-Jan-2005 02:03
Just thought I'd give a heads up for anyone doing cross platform applications.
sprintf spacing is different numerically with Windows and Linux.
Linux aligned correctly:
$ol = sprintf ("%-6s|%11.2f|%11.2f|%11.2f|%11.2f|%11.2f|%11.2f|%11.2f|%11.2f\n",
Windows aligned correctly:
$ol = sprintf ("%-6s|%14.2f|%14.2f|%14.2f|%14.2f|%14.2f|%14.2f|%14.2f|%14.2f\n",
As you can see the strings are fine for spacing, however, the numbers need a difference of 3 in order to have the same amount of spaces.
I noticed this after using sprintf to format a header for a web app I was working on. On windows it fit, however, when it came to linux it was MUCH larger than the header.
21-Jan-2005 07:13
Be careful if you use the %f modifier to round decimal numbers as it (starting from 4.3.10) will no longer produce a float number if you set certain locales, so you can't accumulate the result. For example:
setlocale(LC_ALL, 'es_ES');
echo(sprintf("%.2f", 13.332) + sprintf("%.2f", 14.446))
gives 27 instead of 27.78, so use %F instead.
10-Jan-2005 10:58
Note that the documentation is unclear about the details of the sign specifier. First of all, the character for this is "+".
Also note that the following does NOT print "+00.00" as you might expect:
<?php
printf('%+02.2f', 0);
?>
The sign is included in the width. This can't be solved by increasing the width:
<?php
printf('%+03.2f', 0);
?>
This will put the padding 0 before the sign.
Here is a possible solution:
<?php
$value = 0;
printf('%s%02.2f', ($value < 0) ? '-' : '+', abs($value));
?>
11-Aug-2004 03:58
When using sprintf with padding, it's important to note that specifying the length of your padding does not restrict the length of your output.
For example:
$var = 'test';
$output sprintf("%03s", $var);
print $output;
Produces:
test
NOT:
est
This may seem intuitive for working with numbers, but not neccesarily when working with strings.
15-Jun-2004 02:47
Note, if you are just looking for something to pad out a string consider str_pad.
From testing, it seems faster and was more intuitive to use (for example, making it pad the begining or end of a string... with sprintf you would have to use negative indexes)
08-May-2004 02:13
Note that when using the argument swapping, you MUST number every argument, otherwise sprintf gets confused. This only happens if you use number arguments first, then switch to a non-numbered, and then back to a numbered one.
<?php
$sql = sprintf( "select * from %1\$s left join %2\$s on( %1\$s.id = %2\$s.midpoint ) where %1\$s.name like '%%%s%%' and %2\$s.tagname is not null", "table1", "table2", "bob" );
// Wont work:
// Sprintf will complain about not enough arguments.
$sql = sprintf( "select * from %1\$s left join %2\$s on( %1\$s.id = %2\$s.midpoint ) where %1\$s.name like '%%%3\$s%%' and %2\$s.tagname is not null", "table1", "table2", "bob" );
// Will work: note the %3\$s
?>
16-Apr-2004 07:09
Regarding the previous posting:
I just wanted to give an explanation. This should be because the float to string / integer to string conversion (you are using a string, multiplying it with a float value what php automatically causes to convert the string to a float value). This is a general "problem" (or not), but not that hard to explain.
Where an integer or float starts with 0, in a string it does obviously with 1. So if you are using a string your value will increase by one (You started with a string, so it does not increase but contain the real result. If you start using a float value by not using '' around the value, you have to output the float value as well. This is just the PHP conversion.)
Try putting
$x = strval( $x );
after
$x = $x * 100;
and using your example again. You will see that the output will change to 13664 = 13664 because of the general string conversion. It seems that PHP is converting a float to a string by inceasing by one. By doing the same with intval instead of strval the output changes to 13663 = 13663.
! sprintf seems to behave wrong when using the conversation to an integer value and NOT doing the conversation at all. So use intval to convert to an integer value or strval to convert to a string value BEFORE using sprintf. This should be solving the problems.
29-Mar-2004 09:16
A really working one:
<?php
function cutzero($value) {
return preg_replace("/(\.?)0+$/", "", $value);
}
?>
both of your cut-zero functions are just way too complicated. if it's a string where only the zeros at the end should be truncated, why not use a syntax as simple as rtrim("4.7000","0") ?
16-May-2003 10:02
Your cutzero function could be faster ;-)
return (double)$value;
But if you must have a function:
return preg_replace('/0+$/', '', $value);
08-May-2003 02:55
If you want to cut all the zeros off the end of a float, but not losing any sensitive information, use this:
<?
function cutzero($value) {
return preg_replace("/(\.\d+?)0+$/", "$1", $value)*1;
}
?>
Some examples:
<?
cutzero("4.7600"); // returns 4.76
cutzero("4.7604") // returns 4.7604
cutzero("4.7000"); // returns 4.7
cutzero("4.0000"); // returns 4
?>
18-Feb-2003 05:06
If you want to format a phonenumber with spaces, use chunk_split() which splits a string into smaller chunks. It's much simpler than using sprintf.
$phone = "12345678";
chunk_split ($phone, 2);
will return 12 34 56 78
02-Dec-2002 02:52
a little note to the argument swapping examples which took me a while to get:
if you use single quotes for the format string (like you should do, since there aren't any variable conversions to do as long as you don't need any special chars), the given examples won't work because of the backslash before the $ (needs to be escaped in double quoted strings - but not in single quoted!)
so this:
$format = "The %2\$s contains %1\$d monkeys";
printf($format,$num,$location);
with a single quoted format string would look like this:
$format = 'The %2$s contains %1$d monkeys';
printf($format,$num,$location);
(no escapes)
I hope that helps to avoid confusion ;)
16-Sep-2002 06:29
Using argument swapping in sprintf() with gettext: Let's say you've written the following script:
<?php
$var = sprintf(gettext("The %2\$s contains %1\$d monkeys"), 2, "cage");
?>
Now you run xgettext in order to generate a .po file. The .po file will then look like this:
#: file.php:9
#, ycp-format
msgid "The %2\\$s contains %1\\$d monkeys"
msgstr ""
Notice how an extra backslash has been added by xgettext.
Once you've translated the string, you must remove all backslashes from the ID string as well as the translation, so the po file will look like this:
#: file.php:9
#, ycp-format
msgid "The %2$s contains %1$d monkeys"
msgstr "Der er %1$d aber i %2$s"
Now run msgfmt to generate the .mo file, restart Apache to remove the gettext cache if necessary, and you're off.
10-Sep-2002 11:01
To jrust at rustyparts.com, note that if you're using a double-quoted string and *don't* escape the dollar sign with a backslash, $s and $d will be interpreted as variable references. The backslash isn't part of the format specifier itself but you do need to include it when you write the format string (unless you use single quotes).
03-Jul-2002 02:22
An error in my last example:
$b = sprintf("%30.s", $a);
will only add enough spaces before $a to pad the spaces + strlen($a) to 30 places.
My method of centering fixed text in a 72 character width space is:
$a = "Some string here";
$lwidth = 36; // 72/2
$b = sprintf("%".($lwidth + round(strlen($a)/2)).".s", $a);
26-Jun-2002 02:05
Well I came up with this one, extremely simple. instead of writing <span class="class">hello</a>
you can write: print class('class','hello'); using sprintf
-----------------------------
function class_ ($class, $text=false)
{
return sprintf ("<span class=\"%s\">%s</span>",
$class,
($text ? $text : $class)
);
}
-----------------------------
01-Jun-2002 07:57
Previously submitted sci() function to get scientific representation of a number is not working with 0 and negative numbers. So, here is the modified version:
function sci($x, $d=-1) {
$min=($x<0)?"-":"";
$x=abs($x);
$e=floor(($x!=0)?log10($x):0);
$x*=pow(10,-$e);
$fmt=($d>=0)?".".$d:"";
$e=($e>=0)?"+".sprintf("%02d",$e):"-".sprintf("%02d",-$e);
return sprintf("$min%".$fmt."fe%s",$x,$e);
}
20-Feb-2002 08:54
To have a string with leading zeros use this:
$string_i = sprintf("%04s",$value)
Gives you an output with leading zeros and 4 digits.
i.e.
0001
0002
...
0010
an so on
10-Feb-2002 07:36
To make radu.rendec@ines.ro's excellent function work on signed numbers you must change the first line to:
$e = floor(log10(abs($x)));
05-Dec-2001 04:51
Watch out the mysterious rounding rule.
<?php
$a = 4.5;
$b = sprintf("%d",$a);
$c = 4.5;
$d = sprintf("%.0f",$c);
$e = 0.45;
$f = sprintf("%.1f",$e);
print ("$b,$d,$f\n");
?>
The code above prints "4,5,0.5".
(Perl version prints "4,4,0.5".)
26-Nov-2001 09:26
Took me a while to find this out.
hope will save someones time.
IT ADD A CARACRER TO THE END OF A STRING
$x = sprintf("%'x-10s", "a");
echo $x;
25-Mar-2001 11:16
It is worth noting that "%5.2f" will result in a string 8 characters long (5 then the '.' then 2), not 5 characters as you might expect.
23-Mar-2001 10:55
If you are going to create a counter which uses _symbols_ before actual digits (see, f.e., SpyLog.com counters - they are filling space with "." before, so the count like 12345 looks like "........12345"), you can use the following:
$txt = "Abracadabra"; // actual string
$fit = 16; // how many digits to use
$fill = "."; // what to fill
$digits = sprintf ("%'{$fill}{$fit}s", $txt);
Paul (a.k.a. Mr.Prolix)
17-Nov-2000 06:58
Little note about sprintf and its ilk.
if you attempt something like
$string = "dingy%sflem%dwombat";
$nbr = 5;
$name = "voudras";
$msg = sprintf("%d $string %s", $nbr, $name);
sprintf will complain about a lack in the number of arguments, this would be because of the %'s in the actual string. This can be a great benifit, but is also rather confusing if you dont realize this feature, and are passing questionable variables to sprintf (for, say perhaps logging). One way around this is using
ereg_replace("%","%%", $string); before
sending it off to sprintf. This is actually how i came across this as a problem - i had realized some time ago that i would have to test my $string for
%'s, but when running the %->%% replacement on a very large serialized object, my application timed out.
My solution was to use
sprintf("%d %s %s", $nbr, $string, $name);
but, there was a reason i originally had done this the other way - i suppose i'll find out soon enough
