-4

I got a function to validate if a character is white or not. But it is not working. It always returns false. What I am doing wrong?

function is_white($char)
{
$white_list = array(9,10,13,32);
return in_array($char,$white_list);
}
var_dump(is_white("\n"));

Thank you for you help.

1

4 Answers 4

2

You could use a built-in function for this.

var_dump(ctype_space("\n"));

It takes a string of characters, but of course it will still work with a single character.

3
  • +1 I honestly can't believe a function like that even exists. The use case seems to me to be way too specific.
    – Mike
    Feb 15, 2018 at 1:47
  • This does not fix OP's code ("What I am doing wrong?")
    – tevemadar
    Feb 15, 2018 at 11:29
  • @tevemadar That's true, but it doesn't make this answer invalid, if that's what you're implying. Showing an alternate way to accomplish the stated goal is always a valid answer, and often a more useful answer than just fixing the OP's code. Based on the text in the question, other people who find it in the future won't be looking for ord, and others had already answered "What am I doing wrong?" so it wouldn't be useful for me to restate it for the OP's benefit. I would have voted to close rather than answering if I knew that duplicate existed, and the dup isn't related to ord either. Feb 15, 2018 at 16:46
2

You're trying to compare a string with a list of integers.

You could just use trim() to check if the string is empty.

function is_white($char) {
    return !trim($char) ;
}
var_dump(is_white("\n")) ; // true

But if you want to compare characters you have to use ord() that convert a character to its integer equivalent.

function is_white($char)
{
    $white_list = array(9,10,13,32);
    return in_array(ord($char),$white_list);
}
1
  • Using trim() is what I would do too, however you might want to include a check to make sure the length of the original string is 1 to make sure it's a single character.
    – Mike
    Feb 15, 2018 at 0:01
1

You need the ASCII integer value of the character, before checking if it's in the white list array:

You can use ord for it:

function is_white($char)
{
    $white_list = array(9,10,13,32);
    return in_array(ord($char),$white_list);
}
var_dump(is_white("\n"));

More information: PHP Function ORD

0
1

If you want to handle ALL possible white spaces including unicode:

echo preg_match('~^\p{Z}$~u',$char)?'white':'non-white';

This will cover these entities:

$chars=[
    "\u0009", // CHARACTER TABULATION (\t)
    "\u000A", // LINE FEED (LF) (\n)
    "\u000B", // LINE TABULATION
    "\u000C", // FORM FEED (FF)
    "\u000D", // CARRIAGE RETURN (CR) (\r)
    "\u0020", // SPACE ( )
    "\u0085", // NEXT LINE (NEL) 
    "\u00A0", // NO-BREAK SPACE
    "\u1680", // OGHAM SPACE MARK
    "\u180E", // MONGOLIAN VOWEL SEPARATOR
    "\u2000", // EN QUAD 
    "\u2001", // EM QUAD 
    "\u2002", // EN SPACE
    "\u2003", // EM SPACE
    "\u2004", // THREE-PER-EM SPACE
    "\u2005", // FOUR-PER-EM SPACE
    "\u2006", // SIX-PER-EM SPACE
    "\u2007", // FIGURE SPACE
    "\u2008", // PUNCTUATION SPACE
    "\u2009", // THIN SPACE
    "\u200A", // HAIR SPACE
    "\u2028", // LINE SEPARATOR
    "\u2029", // PARAGRAPH SEPARATOR
    "\u202F", // NARROW NO-BREAK SPACE
    "\u205F", // MEDIUM MATHEMATICAL SPACE
    "\u3000"  // IDEOGRAPHIC SPACE 
];
0

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