I'm building an ExpressionEngine module in PHP.
In ExpressionEngine, one can access parameters passed to the module in a template using:
$my_param = $this->EE->TMPL->fetch_param('my_param');
However, when I fetch a string that way, explode does not work on it:
public function get_tyres()
{
$tyres = $this->EE->TMPL->fetch_param('tyres');
echo($tyres);
// this shows: '205/55R16M+S|205/55R16|205/55R16'
// now I want to split it into single tyres, using the pipe as a delimiter
$tyre_array = explode("|", $tyres);
foreach($tyre_array as $tyre)
{
echo($tyre . '<br>');
}
// the above produces: '205/55R16M+S|205/55R16|205/55R16',
// where I'd expect it to produce:
// 205/55R16M+S
// 205/55R16
// 205/55R16
}
I've tried to specifically cast to a string using $tyres = (string) $this->EE->TMPL->fetch_param('tyres');
, with no luck.
I've also tried manually creating and exploding a string:
$tyres = '205/55R16M+S|205/55R16|205/55R16';
which worked, but obviously I need to get the param from the template, not hard code it.
Lastly, I tried using preg_split and a regex, with no luck either:
$tyre_array = preg_split('/\|/', $tyres);
which also returned an array with the entire string in it.
What could be at work here? Is this a scope related thing? Is it an encoding-related thing? What to look for next?
Update
Okay, we're getting somewhere. I've added the following to the function:
for($i = 0; $i < strlen($tyres); $i++) {
echo substr($tyres, $i, 1) . ", ";
}
Which returns... {, v, e, r, s, i, o, n, :, t, y, r, e, s, },
and that is in fact the variable passed to PHP in the HTML template:
{exp:my_module:tyres tyres="{version:tyres}"}
<h1>{tyre:name}</h1>
... more irrelevant HTML
{/exp:my_module:tyres}
This means it has something to do with the parsing order of ExpressionEngine. Apparently, the variable {version:tyres}
isn't parsed yet. So I pass that variable to the module, it tries to explode it by the pipe character, but the string {version:tyres}
does not contain a pipe, meaning it can't be exploded. ExpressionEngine then returns {version:tyres}
as a whole, passes it back in to the template and then the variable is parsed as 205/55R16M+S|205/55R16|205/55R16
.
I've tested this, and can confirm that exploding by ':' returns the array:
array (size=2)
0 => string '{version' (length=8)
1 => string 'tyres}' (length=6)
I will now look in to ExpressionEngine parse order. If anyone has an idea on how to work around this, I'd be happy to know ;-).
|
in your string is actually the same|
you're entering? Could be some completely different unicode char that happens to look the same.0
orR
orM
, which are all present in the string, the explode still returns an array with one item: the entire string, unexploded.echo htmlentities($tyres);
or view source for the echo—if you're looking in a rendered browser view, it could be that the string does not contain what you think it does. That said, pipes are not encoded by ExpressionEngine into something different, so your code should work.