16

I want to convert this [email protected] to

hello@domain.com

I have tried:

url_encode($string)

this provides the same string I entered, returned with the @ symbol converted to %40

also tried:

htmlentities($string)

this provides the same string right back.

I am using a UTF8 charset. not sure if this makes a difference....

2
  • ley I deleted my answer because I realized it is no good. (Thanks Artefacto) however, this is not really sufficient protection against spam bots....
    – Pekka
    Jun 9, 2010 at 11:06
  • I am aware that it's not completely foolproof, however I have had good results using this feature in the past, encoding my email address using online services. I'm now trying to build it into a CMS I am building.
    – Mazatec
    Jun 9, 2010 at 11:11

3 Answers 3

41

Here it goes (assumes UTF-8, but it's trivial to change):

function encode($str) {
    $str = mb_convert_encoding($str , 'UTF-32', 'UTF-8'); //big endian
    $split = str_split($str, 4);

    $res = "";
    foreach ($split as $c) {
        $cur = 0;
        for ($i = 0; $i < 4; $i++) {
            $cur |= ord($c[$i]) << (8*(3 - $i));
        }
        $res .= "&#" . $cur . ";";
    }
    return $res;
}

EDIT Recommended alternative using unpack:

function encode2($str) {
    $str = mb_convert_encoding($str , 'UTF-32', 'UTF-8');
    $t = unpack("N*", $str);
    $t = array_map(function($n) { return "&#$n;"; }, $t);
    return implode("", $t);
}
6
  • It's not necessary to print $cur as unsigned when converting to a string in $res .= "&#" . $cur . ";"; because the range of unicode characters doesn't go that far. However, if you have an invalid UTF-8 sequence, this could give negative values (I don't know if mb_convert_encoding validates the range).
    – Artefacto
    Jun 9, 2010 at 11:18
  • This is a brilliant answer for 3 reasons: 1. I couldn't have thought of it myself. 2. Is elegant, and works well, 3.I have learnt a lot of good stuff from it. Thanks.
    – Mazatec
    Jun 15, 2010 at 12:42
  • Your closure in the 2nd version requires PHP 5.3. For pre 5.3, you can pass a string instead, for example 'encoded_str', and then have a function that does what the closure does: function encoded_str($n) { return "&#$n;"; }. Less elegant, but backward compatible.
    – CWSpear
    Sep 15, 2012 at 1:01
  • Artefacto, would you be able to convert it back to the original string? with pack? Oct 25, 2013 at 7:35
  • @Artefacto very nice answer. it also helps me. thanks. Dec 4, 2015 at 12:07
11

Much easier way to do this:

function convertToNumericEntities($string) {
    $convmap = array(0x80, 0x10ffff, 0, 0xffffff);
    return mb_encode_numericentity($string, $convmap, "UTF-8");
}

You can change the encoding if you are using anything different.

  • Fixed map range. Thanks to Artefacto.
5
  • Nice, I haven't tested, but I suppose you also have to change the map to cover all the unicode characters.
    – Artefacto
    Jun 25, 2010 at 10:38
  • probably something like $convmap = array(0x000000, 0x10ffff, 0, 0xffffff); (untested)
    – Artefacto
    Aug 2, 2010 at 18:39
  • The convmap in this comment works: php.net/manual/en/function.mb-encode-numericentity.php#88586
    – koen
    Sep 11, 2011 at 23:31
  • This answer is so simple, and it works well for my application. In order to answer the question, $convmap should include normal alphanumeric characters, but not whitespace or line carriages, so $convmap = array( 0x21, 0x10ffff, 0, 0xffffff, ); may be more applicable. It may also be beneficial to pass the string through a html_entity_decode function call, in order to prevent accidental double-encoding of entities. Sep 26, 2018 at 3:31
  • For some reason this solution just outputs the non-encoded characters. @Artefacto 's answer works fine.
    – Gavin
    Apr 26, 2021 at 12:24
1
function uniord($char) {

     $k=mb_convert_encoding($char , 'UTF-32', 'UTF-8');

     $k1=ord(substr($k,0,1));

     $k2=ord(substr($k,1,1));

     $value=(string)($k2*256+$k1);

     return $value;

}

the above function works for 1 character but if you have a string you can do like this

$string="anytext";

$arr=preg_split(//u,$string,-1,PREG_SPLIT_NO_EMPTY);

$temp=" ";

foreach($arr as $v){

    $temp="&#".uniord($v);//prints the equivalent html entity of string

}

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