213

I imagine I need to remove chars 0-31 and 127.

Is there a function or piece of code to do this efficiently?

18 Answers 18

464

7 bit ASCII?

If your Tardis just landed in 1963, and you just want the 7 bit printable ASCII chars, you can rip out everything from 0-31 and 127-255 with this:

$string = preg_replace('/[\x00-\x1F\x7F-\xFF]/', '', $string);

It matches anything in range 0-31, 127-255 and removes it.

8 bit extended ASCII?

You fell into a Hot Tub Time Machine, and you're back in the eighties. If you've got some form of 8 bit ASCII, then you might want to keep the chars in range 128-255. An easy adjustment - just look for 0-31 and 127

$string = preg_replace('/[\x00-\x1F\x7F]/', '', $string);

UTF-8?

Ah, welcome back to the 21st century. If you have a UTF-8 encoded string, then the /u modifier can be used on the regex

$string = preg_replace('/[\x00-\x1F\x7F]/u', '', $string);

This just removes 0-31 and 127. This works in ASCII and UTF-8 because both share the same control set range (as noted by mgutt below). Strictly speaking, this would work without the /u modifier. But it makes life easier if you want to remove other chars...

If you're dealing with Unicode, there are potentially many non-printing elements, but let's consider a simple one: NO-BREAK SPACE (U+00A0)

In a UTF-8 string, this would be encoded as 0xC2A0. You could look for and remove that specific sequence, but with the /u modifier in place, you can simply add \xA0 to the character class:

$string = preg_replace('/[\x00-\x1F\x7F\xA0]/u', '', $string);

Addendum: What about str_replace?

preg_replace is pretty efficient, but if you're doing this operation a lot, you could build an array of chars you want to remove, and use str_replace as noted by mgutt below, e.g.

//build an array we can re-use across several operations
$badchar=array(
    // control characters
    chr(0), chr(1), chr(2), chr(3), chr(4), chr(5), chr(6), chr(7), chr(8), chr(9), chr(10),
    chr(11), chr(12), chr(13), chr(14), chr(15), chr(16), chr(17), chr(18), chr(19), chr(20),
    chr(21), chr(22), chr(23), chr(24), chr(25), chr(26), chr(27), chr(28), chr(29), chr(30),
    chr(31),
    // non-printing characters
    chr(127)
);

//replace the unwanted chars
$str2 = str_replace($badchar, '', $str);

Intuitively, this seems like it would be fast, but it's not always the case, you should definitely benchmark to see if it saves you anything. I did some benchmarks across a variety string lengths with random data, and this pattern emerged using php 7.0.12

     2 chars str_replace     5.3439ms preg_replace     2.9919ms preg_replace is 44.01% faster
     4 chars str_replace     6.0701ms preg_replace     1.4119ms preg_replace is 76.74% faster
     8 chars str_replace     5.8119ms preg_replace     2.0721ms preg_replace is 64.35% faster
    16 chars str_replace     6.0401ms preg_replace     2.1980ms preg_replace is 63.61% faster
    32 chars str_replace     6.0320ms preg_replace     2.6770ms preg_replace is 55.62% faster
    64 chars str_replace     7.4198ms preg_replace     4.4160ms preg_replace is 40.48% faster
   128 chars str_replace    12.7239ms preg_replace     7.5412ms preg_replace is 40.73% faster
   256 chars str_replace    19.8820ms preg_replace    17.1330ms preg_replace is 13.83% faster
   512 chars str_replace    34.3399ms preg_replace    34.0221ms preg_replace is  0.93% faster
  1024 chars str_replace    57.1141ms preg_replace    67.0300ms str_replace  is 14.79% faster
  2048 chars str_replace    94.7111ms preg_replace   123.3189ms str_replace  is 23.20% faster
  4096 chars str_replace   227.7029ms preg_replace   258.3771ms str_replace  is 11.87% faster
  8192 chars str_replace   506.3410ms preg_replace   555.6269ms str_replace  is  8.87% faster
 16384 chars str_replace  1116.8811ms preg_replace  1098.0589ms preg_replace is  1.69% faster
 32768 chars str_replace  2299.3128ms preg_replace  2222.8632ms preg_replace is  3.32% faster

The timings themselves are for 10000 iterations, but what's more interesting is the relative differences. Up to 512 chars, I was seeing preg_replace alway win. In the 1-8kb range, str_replace had a marginal edge.

I thought it was interesting result, so including it here. The important thing is not to take this result and use it to decide which method to use, but to benchmark against your own data and then decide.

18
  • 15
    If you need to consider a newline safe, change the expression to this (inversely search for printables): preg_replace(/[^\x0A\x20-\x7E]/,'',$string);
    – Nick
    Sep 16, 2010 at 19:56
  • 13
    @Dalin There is no such thing as an “UTF-8 character”. There are Unicode symbols/characters, and UTF-8 is an encoding that can represent all of them. You meant to say this doesn’t work for characters outside of the ASCII character set. Dec 31, 2012 at 13:25
  • 4
    If you need to match a unicode character above \xFF, use \x{####} Jul 10, 2013 at 5:09
  • 2
    this will remove Arabic letters, bad solution. Mar 27, 2014 at 11:08
  • 1
    
 is an encoding, not a character. The solution above is only intended to work on ASCII characters.
    – Paul Dixon
    May 21, 2015 at 14:07
161

Many of the other answers here do not take into account unicode characters (e.g. öäüßйȝîûηыეமிᚉ⠛ ). In this case you can use the following:

$string = preg_replace('/[\x00-\x08\x0B\x0C\x0E-\x1F\x7F-\x9F]/u', '', $string);

There's a strange class of characters in the range \x80-\x9F (Just above the 7-bit ASCII range of characters) that are technically control characters, but over time have been misused for printable characters. If you don't have any problems with these, then you can use:

$string = preg_replace('/[\x00-\x08\x0B\x0C\x0E-\x1F\x7F]/u', '', $string);

If you wish to also strip line feeds, carriage returns, tabs, non-breaking spaces, and soft-hyphens, you can use:

$string = preg_replace('/[\x00-\x1F\x7F-\xA0\xAD]/u', '', $string);

Note that you must use single quotes for the above examples.

If you wish to strip everything except basic printable ASCII characters (all the example characters above will be stripped) you can use:

$string = preg_replace('/[^[:print:]]/', '', $string);

For reference see http://www.fileformat.info/info/charset/UTF-8/list.htm

14
  • 1
    Your regexp handles UTF8 characters fine; but it strips non-UTF8 "special" characters; like ç, ü and ö. '/[\x00-\x1F\x80-\xC0]/u'leaves them intact; but also division (F7) and multiplication (D7) sign.
    – Hazard
    May 9, 2012 at 11:11
  • 1
    @Hazar yes you are correct \x80-\xFF stripped out too much, but \x80-\xC0 is still too restrictive. This would miss other printable characters like ©£±. For reference see utf8-chartable.de
    – Dalin
    Feb 7, 2013 at 19:46
  • 1
    @TimMalone because PHP will expand those character sequences: php.net/manual/en/… so the regex won't see the range that you're trying to tell it about.
    – Dalin
    Oct 20, 2016 at 16:20
  • 1
    What about 7F? Should it not be \x7F-\x9F?
    – Bell
    Nov 23, 2016 at 18:54
  • 1
    I just tried a lot, i tried every encoding function available in PHP from regex to mb_ to htmlspecialchars etc. Nothing removed control characters, thanks for investing the work.
    – John
    Jan 6, 2018 at 3:27
48

Starting with PHP 5.2, we also have access to filter_var, which I have not seen any mention of so thought I'd throw it out there. To use filter_var to strip non-printable characters < 32 and > 127, you can do:

Filter ASCII characters below 32

$string = filter_var($input, FILTER_UNSAFE_RAW, FILTER_FLAG_STRIP_LOW);

Filter ASCII characters above 127

$string = filter_var($input, FILTER_UNSAFE_RAW, FILTER_FLAG_STRIP_HIGH);

Strip both:

$string = filter_var($input, FILTER_UNSAFE_RAW, FILTER_FLAG_STRIP_LOW|FILTER_FLAG_STRIP_HIGH);

You can also html-encode low characters (newline, tab, etc.) while stripping high:

$string = filter_var($input, FILTER_UNSAFE_RAW, FILTER_FLAG_ENCODE_LOW|FILTER_FLAG_STRIP_HIGH);

There are also options for stripping HTML, sanitizing e-mails and URLs, etc. So, lots of options for sanitization (strip out data) and even validation (return false if not valid rather than silently stripping).

Sanitization: http://php.net/manual/en/filter.filters.sanitize.php

Validation: http://php.net/manual/en/filter.filters.validate.php

However, there is still the problem, that the FILTER_FLAG_STRIP_LOW will strip out newline and carriage returns, which for a textarea are completely valid characters...so some of the Regex answers, I guess, are still necessary at times, e.g. after reviewing this thread, I plan to do this for textareas:

$string = preg_replace( '/[^[:print:]\r\n]/', '',$input);

This seems more readable than a number of the regexes that stripped out by numeric range.

1
  • Other answers didn't work for me, the "filter_var()" solution did it perfectly. Thanks after 7 years! :) Nov 25, 2022 at 9:45
27

you can use character classes

/[[:cntrl:]]+/
1
  • 1
    doesn't this require me to use ereg though? Jul 24, 2009 at 11:05
24

All of the solutions work partially, and even below probably does not cover all of the cases. My issue was in trying to insert a string into a utf8 mysql table. The string (and its bytes) all conformed to utf8, but had several bad sequences. I assume that most of them were control or formatting.

function clean_string($string) {
  $s = trim($string);
  $s = iconv("UTF-8", "UTF-8//IGNORE", $s); // drop all non utf-8 characters

  // this is some bad utf-8 byte sequence that makes mysql complain - control and formatting i think
  $s = preg_replace('/(?>[\x00-\x1F]|\xC2[\x80-\x9F]|\xE2[\x80-\x8F]{2}|\xE2\x80[\xA4-\xA8]|\xE2\x81[\x9F-\xAF])/', ' ', $s);

  $s = preg_replace('/\s+/', ' ', $s); // reduce all multiple whitespace to a single space

  return $s;
}

To further exacerbate the problem is the table vs. server vs. connection vs. rendering of the content, as talked about a little here

3
  • \xE2\x80[\xA4-\xA8] (or 226.128.[164-168]) - is wrong, the sequence include next printable symbols: Unicode Character 'ONE DOT LEADER' (U+2024), Unicode Character 'TWO DOT LEADER' (U+2025), Unicode Character 'HORIZONTAL ELLIPSIS' (U+2026), Unicode Character 'HYPHENATION POINT' (U+2027). And only one non-printable: Unicode Character 'LINE SEPARATOR' (U+2028). Next one is non-printable too: Unicode Character 'PARAGRAPH SEPARATOR' (U+2029). So replace the sequence with: \xE2\x80[\xA8-\xA9] \xE2\x80[\xA8-\xA9] to remove LINE SEPARATOR and PARAGRAPH SEPARATOR.
    – MingalevME
    Mar 7, 2018 at 9:14
  • 2
    This is the best solution I could find so far, but I laso had to add $s = preg_replace('/(\xF0\x9F[\x00-\xFF][\x00-\xFF])/', ' ', $s); because of all the emoji characters were messing up mysql
    – Joe Black
    May 18, 2019 at 10:35
  • Unfortunately the "bad utf-8" Regex above also removes line breaks!
    – Avatar
    Mar 10, 2022 at 13:52
18

this is simpler:

$string = preg_replace( '/[^[:cntrl:]]/', '',$string);

3
  • 5
    This also strips line feeds, carriage returns, and UTF8 characters.
    – Dalin
    Dec 17, 2011 at 19:26
  • 6
    @Dalin There is no such thing as an “UTF-8 character”. There are Unicode symbols/characters, and UTF-8 is an encoding that can represent all of them. You meant to say this strips characters outside of the ASCII range as well. Dec 31, 2012 at 13:36
  • 2
    Eats up Arabic characters :)
    – Rolf
    Jun 26, 2013 at 15:56
15

To strip all non-ASCII characters from the input string

$result = preg_replace('/[\x00-\x1F\x80-\xFF]/', '', $string);

That code removes any characters in the hex ranges 0-31 and 128-255, leaving only the hex characters 32-127 in the resulting string, which I call $result in this example.

1
  • Why would I want 127, which is DEL ? Wouldn't it be better as [\x00-\x1F\x7F-\xFF] to remove 127 to 255 instead of 128 to 255 ?
    – Volomike
    Feb 9, 2022 at 6:06
13

For UTF-8, try this:

preg_replace('/[^\p{L}\s]/u','', $string);

That was my original answer form 10 years ago, and as the comments are saying this is well suited for feeding a full text search engine, as it removes some non-text printable characters like []!~ etc.

If you also need to remove invalid characters for say, feeding libexpat (sigh.), you can try:

preg_replace('/[^\PCc^\PCn^\PCs]/u', '', $string);

See this answer for more on the method.

3
  • 10
    This well remove characters like quotes, brackets, etc. Those are certainly printable characters.
    – Gajus
    Jan 27, 2014 at 21:37
  • this is wonderful! it saved my life, messed up while printing Arabic characters, worked like champ :)
    – krishna
    May 26, 2016 at 14:33
  • This can be useful when only pure words are needed. For example, for a search engine on the page and an index in the database. Parentheses, periods and commas are then unnecessary.
    – Robert
    Oct 15, 2021 at 9:14
10

You could use a regular express to remove everything apart from those characters you wish to keep:

$string=preg_replace('/[^A-Za-z0-9 _\-\+\&]/','',$string);

Replaces everything that is not (^) the letters A-Z or a-z, the numbers 0-9, space, underscore, hypen, plus and ampersand - with nothing (i.e. remove it).

0
6
preg_replace('/(?!\n)[\p{Cc}]/', '', $response);

This will remove all the control characters (http://uk.php.net/manual/en/regexp.reference.unicode.php) leaving the \n newline characters. From my experience, the control characters are the ones that most often cause the printing issues.

2
  • 1
    It works perfect for me! I added just /u for UTF-8 chars. Could you please explain what the first part (?!\n) does? May 15, 2017 at 19:53
  • Perfect ! I was looking for a way to remove unicode 'useless' characters and keep the important one (letters including accent, numbers, special chars) . Thanks for the answer and the documentation link
    – azerto00
    Oct 26, 2020 at 15:37
5

The answer of @PaulDixon is completely wrong, because it removes the printable extended ASCII characters 128-255! has been partially corrected. I don't know why he still wants to delete 128-255 from a 127 chars 7-bit ASCII set as it does not have the extended ASCII characters.

But finally it was important not to delete 128-255 because for example chr(128) (\x80) is the euro sign in 8-bit ASCII and many UTF-8 fonts in Windows display a euro sign and Android regarding my own test.

And it will kill many UTF-8 characters if you remove the ASCII chars 128-255 from an UTF-8 string (probably the starting bytes of a multi-byte UTF-8 character). So don't do that! They are completely legal characters in all currently used file systems. The only reserved range is 0-31.

Instead use this to delete the non-printable characters 0-31 and 127:

$string = preg_replace('/[\x00-\x1F\x7F]/', '', $string);

It works in ASCII and UTF-8 because both share the same control set range.

The fastest slower¹ alternative without using regular expressions:

$string = str_replace(array(
    // control characters
    chr(0), chr(1), chr(2), chr(3), chr(4), chr(5), chr(6), chr(7), chr(8), chr(9), chr(10),
    chr(11), chr(12), chr(13), chr(14), chr(15), chr(16), chr(17), chr(18), chr(19), chr(20),
    chr(21), chr(22), chr(23), chr(24), chr(25), chr(26), chr(27), chr(28), chr(29), chr(30),
    chr(31),
    // non-printing characters
    chr(127)
), '', $string);

If you want to keep all whitespace characters \t, \n and \r, then remove chr(9), chr(10) and chr(13) from this list. Note: The usual whitespace is chr(32) so it stays in the result. Decide yourself if you want to remove non-breaking space chr(160) as it can cause problems.

¹ Tested by @PaulDixon and verified by myself.

3

The regex into selected answer fail for Unicode: 0x1d (with php 7.4)

a solution:

<?php
        $ct = 'différents'."\r\n test";

        // fail for Unicode: 0x1d
        $ct = preg_replace('/[\x00-\x1F\x7F]$/u', '',$ct);

        // work for Unicode: 0x1d
        $ct =  preg_replace( '/[^\P{C}]+/u', "",  $ct);

        // work for Unicode: 0x1d and allow line break
        $ct =  preg_replace( '/[^\P{C}\n]+/u', "",  $ct);

        echo $ct;

from: UTF 8 String remove all invisible characters except newline

2

how about:

return preg_replace("/[^a-zA-Z0-9`_.,;@#%~'\"\+\*\?\[\^\]\$\(\)\{\}\=\!\<\>\|\:\-\s\\\\]+/", "", $data);

gives me complete control of what I want to include

1

For anyone that is still looking how to do this without removing the non-printable characters, but rather escaping them, I made this to help out. Feel free to improve it! Characters are escaped to \\x[A-F0-9][A-F0-9].

Call like so:

$escaped = EscapeNonASCII($string);

$unescaped = UnescapeNonASCII($string);

<?php 
  function EscapeNonASCII($string) //Convert string to hex, replace non-printable chars with escaped hex
    {
        $hexbytes = strtoupper(bin2hex($string));
        $i = 0;
        while ($i < strlen($hexbytes))
        {
            $hexpair = substr($hexbytes, $i, 2);
            $decimal = hexdec($hexpair);
            if ($decimal < 32 || $decimal > 126)
            {
                $top = substr($hexbytes, 0, $i);
                $escaped = EscapeHex($hexpair);
                $bottom = substr($hexbytes, $i + 2);
                $hexbytes = $top . $escaped . $bottom;
                $i += 8;
            }
            $i += 2;
        }
        $string = hex2bin($hexbytes);
        return $string;
    }
    function EscapeHex($string) //Helper function for EscapeNonASCII()
    {
        $x = "5C5C78"; //\x
        $topnibble = bin2hex($string[0]); //Convert top nibble to hex
        $bottomnibble = bin2hex($string[1]); //Convert bottom nibble to hex
        $escaped = $x . $topnibble . $bottomnibble; //Concatenate escape sequence "\x" with top and bottom nibble
        return $escaped;
    }

    function UnescapeNonASCII($string) //Convert string to hex, replace escaped hex with actual hex.
    {
        $stringtohex = bin2hex($string);
        $stringtohex = preg_replace_callback('/5c5c78([a-fA-F0-9]{4})/', function ($m) { 
            return hex2bin($m[1]);
        }, $stringtohex);
        return hex2bin(strtoupper($stringtohex));
    }
?>
0

Marked anwser is perfect but it misses character 127(DEL) which is also a non-printable character

my answer would be

$string = preg_replace('/[\x00-\x1F\x7f-\xFF]/', '', $string);
2
0

"cedivad" solved the issue for me with persistent result of Swedish chars ÅÄÖ.

$text = preg_replace( '/[^\p{L}\s]/u', '', $text );

Thanks!

0

I wonder why no one has been mentioned this:

  1. as PHP functions just suppose every byte is one character. we have to use the mb_ counterpart.

and if you have users from all over the world, you have to consider this, because it just drops the CJK, Arabic, Georgian characters if you stick to the PHP's preg_replace

  1. another issue I have faced with the mb_ was it does required pattern to be just a string & not wrapped in the start/stop modifier like/pattern/im .

  2. another note: if you use ^[:print:] it will just preserve everything in between 0x20-0x7e so dropping all the characters above 0x800but if you use [:cntrl:] it will just dropping 0x00 - 0x1f & 0x7f (The 'DEL' character) . so you can easily preserve all the extended ASCII chars with this.

my working piece of code is like this:

$pattern = "[[:cntrl:]".PHP_EOL."]";
mb_ereg_replace($pattern, '', $text);
-1

I solved problem for UTF8 using https://github.com/neitanod/forceutf8

use ForceUTF8\Encoding;

$string = Encoding::fixUTF8($string);
1
  • 2
    This lib converts UTF-8 accented characters and UTF-8 emoticons to "?" symbols. Fairly serious issue unfortunately. Sep 17, 2018 at 23:15

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