I'm trying to generate invoice numbers. They should always be 4 numbers long, with leading zeros, for example :
- 1 -> Invoice 0001
- 10 -> Invoice 0010
- 150 -> Invoice 0150
etc.
printf
functions is an equally valid way to do it here, but since Invoice IDs won't be used as numbers (mathematically speaking), treating them as strings like this is simply another way to do it. If there were ever non-numeric Invoice IDs (e.g., "order 001F3"), then string it is.
printf('INV%04s',$something);
. Then again: if the invoice if the only fixed width thing you need, this solution is indeed better. If you need more fields on a line to be fixed-width (writing to fixed width files etc.), printf
would probably be a better solution.
Use sprintf
: http://php.net/function.sprintf
$number = 51;
$number = sprintf('%04d',$number);
print $number;
// outputs 0051
$number = 8051;
$number = sprintf('%04d',$number);
print $number;
// outputs 8051
printf()
works fine if you are always printing something, but sprintf()
gives you more flexibility. If you were to use this function, the $threshold
would be 4.
/**
* Add leading zeros to a number, if necessary
*
* @var int $value The number to add leading zeros
* @var int $threshold Threshold for adding leading zeros (number of digits
* that will prevent the adding of additional zeros)
* @return string
*/
function add_leading_zero($value, $threshold = 2) {
return sprintf('%0' . $threshold . 's', $value);
}
add_leading_zero(1); // 01
add_leading_zero(5); // 05
add_leading_zero(100); // 100
add_leading_zero(1); // 001
add_leading_zero(5, 3); // 005
add_leading_zero(100, 3); // 100
add_leading_zero(1, 7); // 0000001
Use the str_pad function
//pad to left side of the input
$my_val=str_pad($num, 3, '0', STR_PAD_LEFT)
//pad to right side of the input
$my_val=str_pad($num, 3, '0', STR_PAD_RIGHT)
//pad to both side of the input
$my_val=str_pad($num, 3, '0', STR_PAD_BOTH)
where $num is your number
while ( strlen($invoice_number) < 4 ) $invoice_num = '0' . $invoice_num;