0

I have a function that returns the current folder name:

function the_page_title()
{
    $page_name = dirname(__FILE__);
    $each_page_name = explode('/', $page_name);
    $len_page_dir = count($each_page_name);
    $c_i_p_n = 0;
    while($len_page_dir != $c_i_p_n)
    {
        $c_i_p_n++;
    }
    echo $each_page_name[$c_i_p_n];
}

However, this returns what $page_name holds and not the folder I am currently in.

When I print_r($each_page_name) I get this:

Array ( [0] => [1] => home [2] => kyleport [3] => public_html [4] => inc ) /home/kyleport/public_html/inc

Could anyone point me in the right direction because I have no clue where this is going wrong :( Thank-you!

In this case, I want it to display inc

1
  • 1
    Better turn warnings on. I suspect you'll see more clues.
    – apokryfos
    Feb 18, 2016 at 13:46

7 Answers 7

5

You just want the last element of an array:

$page_name = dirname(__FILE__);
$each_page_name = explode('/', $page_name);
echo end($each_page_name);
4

You can use;

echo getcwd();

This returns the current working directory on success, or FALSE on failure.

2

As said before, you should use getcwd() or, otherwise, your function will always return the folder where it's located instead of the current script directory.

Instead of explode, you could use basename;

function the_page_title()
{
    $page_name = getcwd(); // current script folder
    return basename($page_name);
}
<title><?php echo the_page_title(); ?></title>
1

You should be able to get the current directory with the predefined constant

__DIR__

which is the equivalent of

dirname(__FILE__)

so you should use

$each_page_name = explode('/', __DIR__);
$dir = end($each_page_name);
echo $dir;
1

This little line of code did it for me.

echo basename(getcwd());

I just got the name of the folder I was looking for.

0

I fixed my code:

function the_page_title()
{
    $page_name = getcwd(); // getcwd() gets the directory of the file you call the function from
    $each_page_name = explode('/', $page_name);
    $len_page_dir = count($each_page_name) -1;
    return $each_page_name[$len_page_dir];
}

use:

<title><?php echo the_page_title(); ?></title>
2
  • Instead of showing the answer you accepted by writing it in a new answer, you should use the tick next to that answer.
    – worldofjr
    Feb 19, 2016 at 11:40
  • I cannot accept my answer until tomorrow, I usually do... @worldofjr
    – Jaquarh
    Feb 19, 2016 at 11:41
0

Just to add my suggestion to this list. If you simply want to get the current folder name. You could just use __DIR__ in combination with basename()

<?php $current_directory = basename(__DIR__); ?>

An example of structure and returned content, if the above was added to the file.php:

../directory-top/directory-sub/file.php output > directory-sub

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