309

I have a input string like:

$str = ':this is a applepie :) ';

How can I remove the first occurring : with PHP?

Desired output: this is a applepie :)

2

10 Answers 10

630

The substr() function will probably help you here:

 $str = substr($str, 1);

Strings are indexed starting from 0, and this functions second parameter takes the cutstart. So make that 1, and the first char is gone.

3
  • 38
    Be aware of unicode. If you're dealing with an arbitrary string (e.g. "Ål <- danish for eel"), you should use mb_substr and specify the encoding. Jun 17, 2012 at 11:22
  • this is not a correct implementation, it not working with single character string "a". if you try single character string, substr return a boolean value
    – anru
    Oct 26, 2015 at 2:20
  • 2
    @anru The manual states if the string length is equal to the start parameter, an empty string will be returned. Prior to version 7, false was returned. So you would need to check if they're equal if that is not the behaviour you want.
    – rybo111
    Feb 15, 2016 at 16:18
357

To remove every : from the beginning of a string, you can use ltrim:

$str = '::f:o:';
$str = ltrim($str, ':');
var_dump($str); //=> 'f:o:'
4
  • 122
    Note that lrtim will remove all :::::. Sometimes this is not desired behavior.
    – CoR
    Nov 20, 2013 at 14:02
  • 5
    note that this is only intended for single characters. ltrim will trim all of the characters in the provided string: ltrim('prefixprefix_postfix', 'prefix') results in '_postfix'; Apr 5, 2017 at 22:19
  • 2
    "How to remove the first character of string in PHP" was the question and this comment doesn't actually answer that.
    – Luke
    Sep 8, 2020 at 13:00
  • Its replacing all when searching for "0" zero. Apr 14, 2022 at 8:52
99

Use substr:

$str = substr($str, 1); // this is a applepie :)
0
71

Exec time for the 3 answers :

Remove the first letter by replacing the case

$str = "hello";
$str[0] = "";
// $str[0] = false;
// $str[0] = null;
// replaced by �, but ok for echo

Exec time for 1.000.000 tests : 0.39602184295654 sec


Remove the first letter with substr()

$str = "hello";
$str = substr($str, 1);

Exec time for 1.000.000 tests : 5.153294801712 sec


Remove the first letter with ltrim()

$str = "hello";
$str= ltrim ($str,'h');

Exec time for 1.000.000 tests : 5.2393000125885 sec


Remove the first letter with preg_replace()

$str = "hello";
$str = preg_replace('/^./', '', $str);

Exec time for 1.000.000 tests : 6.8543920516968 sec

6
  • Thanks. See my update, though. It caused a problem for me when using the updated string in an SQL query.
    – rybo111
    Mar 19, 2014 at 23:16
  • 6
    I just tried the $str[0] = ''; solution and it didn't work. well it does however if you then plan on using the variable for example to compare > or < it won't work. It still counts ` ` as +` for example $str = 'hello'; $str[0] = ''; var_dump($str); // string(5) 'ello'
    – Ian
    Aug 7, 2014 at 15:44
  • @Ian: I came across the same issue while fetching records from an API using a keyword, tried var_dump($keyword) which was showing the previous character length.. then I tried trimming the keyword and then it worked fine var_dump(trim($keyword)).. Hope this helps someone.. :) Mar 8, 2015 at 7:45
  • 3
    This does not work. The "removed" position is replaced with null byte, so you get "\0hello" instead of "hello". Apr 24, 2015 at 17:18
  • 1
    I get "Warning: Cannot assign an empty string to a string offset" for $str[0] = ""; Apr 30, 2019 at 5:05
20

The accepted answer:

$str = ltrim($str, ':');

works but will remove multiple : when there are more than one at the start.

$str = substr($str, 1);

will remove any character from the start.

However,

if ($str[0] === ':')
    $str = substr($str, 1);

works perfectly.

9

Update

After further tests, I don't recommend using this any more. It caused a problem for me when using the updated string in a MySQL query, and changing to substr fixed the problem. I thought about deleting this answer, but comments suggest it is quicker somehow so someone might have a use for it. You may find trimming the updated string resolves string length issues.


Sometimes you don't need a function:

$str[0] = '';

For example:

$str = 'AHello';
$str[0] = '';
echo $str; // 'Hello'

This method modifies the existing string rather than creating another.

11
  • This seems to be quicker too. Jan 16, 2014 at 19:21
  • @EmanuilRusev how so? Just curious if you mean it's quicker to type or it runs quicker.
    – rybo111
    Jan 16, 2014 at 23:27
  • 2
    Gotta be careful with this. The code below outputs bool(false). $foo = 'book'; $bar = 'book'; $bar = substr($bar, 1); $foo[0] = ''; var_dump($foo === $bar); Mar 12, 2014 at 17:16
  • 2
    This doesn't remove the first character. It replaces it with a non printable chr(0). It's equivalent to $str[0] = chr(0);. You can check the string code with var_dump(bin2hex($str)); You will get 0048656c6c6f. See that first 00 byte? May 17, 2018 at 7:31
  • 1
    it's 17.61% faster then substr($str, 1)
    – OzzyCzech
    Dec 10, 2020 at 10:02
8
$str = substr($str, 1);

See PHP manual example 3

echo substr('abcdef', 1);     // bcdef

Note:

unset($str[0]) 

will not work as you cannot unset part of a string:-

Fatal error: Cannot unset string offsets
2

use mb_substr function

    mb_substr("我abc", 1);
1
  • Useful if the character is a currency symbol.
    – Raymie
    Dec 22, 2019 at 17:27
0

Trims occurrences of every word in an array from the beginning and end of a string + whitespace and optionally extra single characters as per normal trim()

<?php
function trim_words($what, $words, $char_list = '') {
    if(!is_array($words)) return false;
    $char_list .= " \t\n\r\0\x0B"; // default trim chars
    $pattern = "(".implode("|", array_map('preg_quote', $words)).")\b";
    $str = trim(preg_replace('~'.$pattern.'$~i', '', preg_replace('~^'.$pattern.'~i', '', trim($what, $char_list))), $char_list);
    return $str;
}

// for example:
$trim_list = array('AND', 'OR');

$what = ' OR x = 1 AND b = 2 AND ';
print_r(trim_words($what, $trim_list)); // => "x = 1 AND b = 2"

$what = ' ORDER BY x DESC, b ASC, ';
print_r(trim_words($what, $trim_list, ',')); // => "ORDER BY x DESC, b ASC"
?>
1
  • This answer seems to be completely ignoring the OP's question requirements and sample string. This is, at most, the correct answer to a different question. Mar 18, 2021 at 22:26
-1

The code works well for me.

$str = substr($str ,-(strlen($str)-1));

Maybe, contribute with answers too.

2
  • 1
    this one is not working with single character string: like "a"
    – anru
    Oct 26, 2015 at 2:14
  • You're right =) So, believe that a possible solution would be to test before it only contains one character. For example: $str = strlen($str) > 1 ? substr($str ,-(strlen($str)-1)) : $str; Or $str = strlen($str) > 1 ? substr($str ,-(strlen($str)-1)) : ''; because the idea is to remove the last character, if you only have one ... :P
    – calraiden
    Nov 12, 2015 at 12:24

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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