Tell me more ×
Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers. It's 100% free, no registration required.

I need a function that will correctly parse NVP into PHP array. I have been using code provided by paypal but it did not work for when string length was specified next to the name.

Here is what i have so far.

private function parseNVP($nvpstr)
{
    $intial=0;
    $nvpArray = array();

    while(strlen($nvpstr))
    {
        //postion of Key
        $keypos= strpos($nvpstr,'=');
        //position of value
        $valuepos = strpos($nvpstr,'&') ? strpos($nvpstr,'&'): strlen($nvpstr);

        /*getting the Key and Value values and storing in a Associative Array*/
        $keyval=substr($nvpstr,$intial,$keypos);
        $vallength=$valuepos-$keypos-1;
        // check if the length is explicitly specified
        if($braketpos = strpos($keyval,'['))
        {
            // override value length
            $vallength = substr($keyval,$braketpos+1,strlen($keyval)-$braketpos-2);
            // get rid of brackets from key name
            $keyval = substr($keyval,0,$braketpos);
        }
        $valval=substr($nvpstr,$keypos+1,$vallength);
        //decoding the respose
        if (isValidXMLString("<".urldecode($keyval).">".urldecode( $valval)."</".urldecode($keyval).">"))
            $nvpArray[urldecode($keyval)] =urldecode( $valval);
        $nvpstr=substr($nvpstr,$keypos+$vallength+2,strlen($nvpstr));
     }
    return $nvpArray;
}

This function works most of the time.

share|improve this question

1 Answer

The best way is the parse_str function. It will parse a URLencoded string into a PHP array.

So your code would look like:

private function parseNVP($nvpstr)
{
  $paypalResponse = array();
  parse_str($nvpstr,$paypalResponse);
  return $paypalResponse;
}
share|improve this answer
This is incorrect since parse_str on "note[6]=aaaaa stuff=2" will result in array('note'=>array(5=>'aaaaa '),'stuff'=>2) the result should be array('note'=>'aaaaa ', 'stuff'=>2) – Mike Starov Mar 31 '10 at 17:29
2  
No. The result should not be array('note'=>'aaaaa ', 'stuff'=>2). for that you'd have "note=aaaaa&stuff=2". My answer is not incorrect. I have built a paypal payment gateway integration in PHP using the code I sent. It processes thousands of transactions a month just fine. – Josh Mar 31 '10 at 19:19
2  
The string length should not be specified next to the string like that. It's not how PayPal NVP works. Read their manual. "The request and response are URL-encoded" cms.paypal.com/us/cgi-bin/… – Josh Mar 31 '10 at 19:22
1  
The result for note[6]=aaaaa &stuff=2 should be array('note'=>'aaaaa ', 'stuff'=>2). What you use works 99% of the time. And the manuals are great but they don't match code at times. I know for a fact that PayPal sometimes sends NVP with length specified, Usually it happens when customers enter notes on PayPal page. – Mike Starov Jul 15 '10 at 23:28
2  
I've been using the code supplied in production for years with no issues whatsoever... – Josh Jul 17 '10 at 14:04

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.