11

I know how to list from A to Z:

foreach (range('A', 'Z') as $char) {
  echo $char . "\n";
}

But how do I go on from there to list AA, AB, AC, AD, ... AZ, BA, BB, BC and so on?

I did a quick Google search and couldn't find anything, though I guess the approach will be different.

I think I can do it by using a for loop and an array with the letters inside, though that way seems a bit uncouth.

Any other way?

Thanks.

1
  • How about a recursive function using the your code example as an embryo?
    – John P
    Sep 21, 2014 at 11:06

6 Answers 6

26

PHP has the string increment operator that does exactly that:

for($x = 'A'; $x < 'ZZ'; $x++)
    echo $x, ' ';

Result:

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z AA AB AC AD AE AF... 

Ref:

PHP follows Perl's convention when dealing with arithmetic operations on character variables and not C's. For example, in PHP and Perl $a = 'Z'; $a++; turns $a into 'AA', while in C a = 'Z'; a++; turns a into '[' (ASCII value of 'Z' is 90, ASCII value of '[' is 91). Note that character variables can be incremented but not decremented and even so only plain ASCII alphabets and digits (a-z, A-Z and 0-9) are supported. Incrementing/decrementing other character variables has no effect, the original string is unchanged.

http://php.net/manual/en/language.operators.increment.php

6
  • have to say, it works fine for the above case, but when you try to use for ($x = 'A'; $x < 'AZ'; $x++) for example, it breaks.
    – Zerium
    Sep 21, 2014 at 11:14
  • 1
    @think123: just replace < with !=
    – georg
    Sep 21, 2014 at 11:15
  • Not sure why setting <= does not work expectedly, there are many more results printed. Anyway we have to print the last ZZ if using <.
    – King King
    Sep 21, 2014 at 11:23
  • @KingKing <= works exactly as expected, because you're comparing alphabetically (like in a dictionary), and B comes after AZ in the dictionary.... if you need to print the last ZZ, then you compare !== 'AAA'
    – Mark Baker
    Sep 21, 2014 at 11:38
  • 1
    I didn't try any code, I know how it works, I've answered this question many times over, and use this type of character incrementing in real code on an almost daily basis..... I'm telling you not to use <, <=, > or >= with alphabetic comparisons like this, but always to use !== instead
    – Mark Baker
    Sep 21, 2014 at 12:33
2

Try

foreach (range('A', 'Z') as $char) {
    foreach (range('A', 'Z') as $char1) {
        echo $char . $char1. "\n";
    }
}
2
  • I think you missed the last part and so on?.
    – King King
    Sep 21, 2014 at 11:08
  • hmm, sorta works - but how would this give me A, B, C ... Z first?
    – Zerium
    Sep 21, 2014 at 11:09
1

PHP follows Perl's convention when dealing with arithmetic operations on character variables.

Hence it is possible to increment alphabets in php

$limit = "AZ";

for($x = "A", $limit++; $x != $limit; $x++) {

    echo "$x ";

}

will give you result

A
B
C
.
.
.
AX
AY
AZ

Hope this will help.

0

I made a constant time function as follows

This function gives the Alphabetic representation of a numeric index

public static $alpha = ['A', 'B', 'C', 'D', 'E', 'F', 'G', 'H', 'I', 'J', 'K', 'L', 'M', 'N', 'O', 'P', 'Q', 'R', 'S', 'T', 'U', 'V', 'W', 'X', 'Y', 'Z'];

public static function getColName($index){
  $index--;
  $nAlphabets = 26;
  $f = floor($index/pow($nAlphabets,0)) % $nAlphabets;
  $s = (floor($index/pow($nAlphabets,1)) % $nAlphabets)-1;
  $t = (floor($index/pow($nAlphabets,2)) % $nAlphabets)-1;

  $f = $f < 0 ? '' : self::$alpha[$f];
  $s = $s < 0 ? '' : self::$alpha[$s];
  $t = $t < 0 ? '' : self::$alpha[$t];

  return trim("{$t}{$s}{$f}");

}

Now if you want to use it create a range. you can call this function in a loop pushing your values to an array.

As for most of the time, we need the representation rather than a range this function would work just fine.

HOW TO USE

Just enclose these static functions in a class and use it as

className::getColName(47);

Making a range in my case was a waste of memory.

For Your Case

for($i = 1; $i < 1000; $i++) $range[] = className::getColName($i);
0

As @Abhijit Srivastava shows, but this is a general way.

function alphaIndex($index) {
    $column = "";
    $nAlphabets = 26;
    $times = (int)($index/$nAlphabets);
    $times = $index%$nAlphabets > 0 ? ($times+1):($times);
    $index--;

    for ($i=0; $i < $times; $i++) { 
        $less = $i > 0 ? 1:0;
        $key = (floor($index/pow($nAlphabets,$i)) % $nAlphabets)-$less;

        $column = ( $key<0 ? '':chr(65+$key) ).$column;
    }

    return $column;
}
-1

I made a custom function that returns an alphabetical range of letters consecutive with a specified amount of letters pass (for example: if you set $pass=2, the function returns [A, C, E, ... AA, AC, AE]).

Another useful option can be $pairs=true that groups all letters into pairs (for example: if you set $pairs=true, the function returns a range of consecutive groups like [[A,B],[C,D],[E,F],...[AA,AB],[AC,AD]] for $pass=1 or [[A,C],[D,F],...[AA,AC],[AD,AF]] for $pass=2).

Call examples:

$myRange = $this->AlphaRange('A','AAZ'); // returns all combinations from A to AAZ,

$myRange = $this->AlphaRange('A','AAZ',2); // returns consecutive combinations from A to AAZ with letters skiped from 2 to 2,

$myRange = $this->AlphaRange('A','AAZ',5,true); // returns consecutive pairs of two letters that contains first and last letter of a group of 5 letters

Hope to be useful.

    public function AlphaRange($from, $to, $pass=1, $pairs=false) {
        $range = [];
        $currStep = 1;
        $nextStep = $pass+1;
        $currPair = 0;

        for($i=$from; $i<'ZZZ'; $i++) {

            if ($currStep == 1) {
                if (false !== $pairs) {
                    $range[$currPair][] = $i;
                }
                else {
                    $range[] = $i;
                }
            }
            else {
                if ($currStep == $nextStep) {

                    if (false !== $pairs) {

                        // $range[count($range[$currPair]) == 2 ? ++$currPair : $currPair][] = $i;

                        $range[$currPair][] = $lastI; 
                        $range[++$currPair][] = $i;

                    }
                    else {
                        $range[]  = $i;
                    }

                    $currStep = 1;
                    $nextStep = $pass+1;
                }
                else {
                    $lastI = $i;
                }                           
            }

            if ($i == $to) {
                if (false !== $pairs) {
                    if (count($range[$currPair]) == 1) {
                        $range[$currPair][] = $i;
                    }
                }
                break;
            }

            $currStep++;
        }

        return $range;
    }

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