106

I have a string with a full URL including GET variables. Which is the best way to remove the GET variables? Is there a nice way to remove just one of them?

This is a code that works but is not very beautiful (I think):

$current_url = explode('?', $current_url);
echo $current_url[0];

The code above just removes all the GET variables. The URL is in my case generated from a CMS so I don't need any information about server variables.

4
  • 1
    I would stick with what you have unless performance is not an issue. The regex solution supplied by Gumbo is going to be be as pretty as it gets.
    – MitMaro
    Commented Aug 9, 2009 at 15:44
  • It Doesn't need to be beautiful if it's going in functions.php or whereever you hide your ugly bits, you'll only need to see qs_build() to call it Commented Aug 9, 2009 at 15:56
  • Here's a way to do this via a nice anonymous function. stackoverflow.com/questions/4937478/…
    – doublejosh
    Commented Jun 25, 2013 at 1:18
  • How about the url fragment? The solutions I see below all discard the fragment as well, just as your code does. Commented Jun 10, 2019 at 13:11

12 Answers 12

270

Ok, to remove all variables, maybe the prettiest is

$url = strtok($url, '?');

See about strtok here.

Its the fastest (see below), and handles urls without a '?' properly.

To take a url+querystring and remove just one variable (without using a regex replace, which may be faster in some cases), you might do something like:

function removeqsvar($url, $varname) {
    list($urlpart, $qspart) = array_pad(explode('?', $url), 2, '');
    parse_str($qspart, $qsvars);
    unset($qsvars[$varname]);
    $newqs = http_build_query($qsvars);
    return $urlpart . '?' . $newqs;
}

A regex replace to remove a single var might look like:

function removeqsvar($url, $varname) {
    return preg_replace('/([?&])'.$varname.'=[^&]+(&|$)/','$1',$url);
}

Heres the timings of a few different methods, ensuring timing is reset inbetween runs.

<?php

$number_of_tests = 40000;

$mtime = microtime();
$mtime = explode(" ",$mtime);
$mtime = $mtime[1] + $mtime[0];
$starttime = $mtime;

for($i = 0; $i < $number_of_tests; $i++){
    $str = "http://www.example.com?test=test";
    preg_replace('/\\?.*/', '', $str);
}
$mtime = microtime();
$mtime = explode(" ",$mtime);
$mtime = $mtime[1] + $mtime[0];
$endtime = $mtime;
$totaltime = ($endtime - $starttime);
echo "regexp execution time: ".$totaltime." seconds; ";

$mtime = microtime();
$mtime = explode(" ",$mtime);
$mtime = $mtime[1] + $mtime[0];
$starttime = $mtime;
for($i = 0; $i < $number_of_tests; $i++){
    $str = "http://www.example.com?test=test";
    $str = explode('?', $str);
}
$mtime = microtime();
$mtime = explode(" ",$mtime);
$mtime = $mtime[1] + $mtime[0];
$endtime = $mtime;
$totaltime = ($endtime - $starttime);
echo "explode execution time: ".$totaltime." seconds; ";

$mtime = microtime();
$mtime = explode(" ",$mtime);
$mtime = $mtime[1] + $mtime[0];
$starttime = $mtime;
for($i = 0; $i < $number_of_tests; $i++){
    $str = "http://www.example.com?test=test";
    $qPos = strpos($str, "?");
    $url_without_query_string = substr($str, 0, $qPos);
}
$mtime = microtime();
$mtime = explode(" ",$mtime);
$mtime = $mtime[1] + $mtime[0];
$endtime = $mtime;
$totaltime = ($endtime - $starttime);
echo "strpos execution time: ".$totaltime." seconds; ";

$mtime = microtime();
$mtime = explode(" ",$mtime);
$mtime = $mtime[1] + $mtime[0];
$starttime = $mtime;
for($i = 0; $i < $number_of_tests; $i++){
    $str = "http://www.example.com?test=test";
    $url_without_query_string = strtok($str, '?');
}
$mtime = microtime();
$mtime = explode(" ",$mtime);
$mtime = $mtime[1] + $mtime[0];
$endtime = $mtime;
$totaltime = ($endtime - $starttime);
echo "tok execution time: ".$totaltime." seconds; ";

shows

regexp execution time: 0.14604902267456 seconds; explode execution time: 0.068033933639526 seconds; strpos execution time: 0.064775943756104 seconds; tok execution time: 0.045819044113159 seconds; 
regexp execution time: 0.1408839225769 seconds; explode execution time: 0.06751012802124 seconds; strpos execution time: 0.064877986907959 seconds; tok execution time: 0.047760963439941 seconds; 
regexp execution time: 0.14162802696228 seconds; explode execution time: 0.065848112106323 seconds; strpos execution time: 0.064821004867554 seconds; tok execution time: 0.041788101196289 seconds; 
regexp execution time: 0.14043688774109 seconds; explode execution time: 0.066350221633911 seconds; strpos execution time: 0.066242933273315 seconds; tok execution time: 0.041517972946167 seconds; 
regexp execution time: 0.14228296279907 seconds; explode execution time: 0.06665301322937 seconds; strpos execution time: 0.063700199127197 seconds; tok execution time: 0.041836977005005 seconds; 

strtok wins, and is by far the smallest code.

5
  • Ok, I changed my mind. strtok way looks even better. The other functions did not work that well. I tried the functions on these get variables ?cbyear=2013&test=value and wrote echo removeqsvar($current_url, 'cbyear'); and got the result: amp;test=value Commented Aug 9, 2009 at 18:12
  • 2
    ah yeah... the regex is not complete - it'll need to replace the trailing delimiter and miss the leading one (wrote it blind). The longer function should still work fine though. preg_replace('/([?&])'.$varname.'=[^&]+(&|$)/','$1',$url) should work
    – Justin
    Commented Aug 9, 2009 at 21:29
  • 1
    PHP 5.4 seems to complain about @unset - it doesn't like the @ symbol, oddly. Commented Jan 7, 2014 at 7:58
  • 1
    not surprising - the @ operator (hide errors) is sort of evil anyway - theres probably a better way of doing it in PHP 5.4 now, but I haven't been writing PHP for almost 2 years now so I'm a bit out of practice.
    – Justin
    Commented Jan 8, 2014 at 21:22
  • strtok rocks, +1 Commented Mar 16, 2017 at 16:47
36

How about:

preg_replace('/\\?.*/', '', $str)
3
  • 1
    Definitely prettier. I wonder which one would perform better though. +1
    – MitMaro
    Commented Aug 9, 2009 at 15:42
  • This saved me a few rows and for me this is short and beautiful. Thank you! Commented Aug 9, 2009 at 16:06
  • 6
    Use /(\\?|&)the-var=.*?(&|$)/ to remove only a specific variable (the-var here).
    – user1544337
    Commented Nov 15, 2014 at 14:35
11

If the URL that you are trying to remove the query string from is the current URL of the PHP script, you can use one of the previously mentioned methods. If you just have a string variable with a URL in it and you want to strip off everything past the '?' you can do:

$pos = strpos($url, "?");
$url = substr($url, 0, $pos);
3
  • +1 because its the only other answer here that answers the question and provides an alternative.
    – MitMaro
    Commented Aug 9, 2009 at 15:48
  • 2
    You should consider that the URL might not contain a ?. Your code will then return an empty string.
    – Gumbo
    Commented Aug 9, 2009 at 16:11
  • Yeah to back what @Gumbo said, I would change the second line to: $url = ($pos)? substr($url, 0, $pos) : $url; Commented Aug 10, 2018 at 17:08
9

Another solution... I find this function more elegant, it will also remove the trailing '?' if the key to remove is the only one in the query string.

/**
 * Remove a query string parameter from an URL.
 *
 * @param string $url
 * @param string $varname
 *
 * @return string
 */
function removeQueryStringParameter($url, $varname)
{
    $parsedUrl = parse_url($url);
    $query = array();

    if (isset($parsedUrl['query'])) {
        parse_str($parsedUrl['query'], $query);
        unset($query[$varname]);
    }

    $path = isset($parsedUrl['path']) ? $parsedUrl['path'] : '';
    $query = !empty($query) ? '?'. http_build_query($query) : '';

    return $parsedUrl['scheme']. '://'. $parsedUrl['host']. $path. $query;
}

Tests:

$urls = array(
    'http://www.example.com?test=test',
    'http://www.example.com?bar=foo&test=test2&foo2=dooh',
    'http://www.example.com',
    'http://www.example.com?foo=bar',
    'http://www.example.com/test/no-empty-path/?foo=bar&test=test5',
    'https://www.example.com/test/test.test?test=test6',
);

foreach ($urls as $url) {
    echo $url. '<br/>';
    echo removeQueryStringParameter($url, 'test'). '<br/><br/>';
}

Will output:

http://www.example.com?test=test
http://www.example.com

http://www.example.com?bar=foo&test=test2&foo2=dooh
http://www.example.com?bar=foo&foo2=dooh

http://www.example.com
http://www.example.com

http://www.example.com?foo=bar
http://www.example.com?foo=bar

http://www.example.com/test/no-empty-path/?foo=bar&test=test5
http://www.example.com/test/no-empty-path/?foo=bar

https://www.example.com/test/test.test?test=test6
https://www.example.com/test/test.test

» Run these tests on 3v4l

7

Inspired by the comment of @MitMaro, I wrote a small benchmark to test the speed of solutions of @Gumbo, @Matt Bridges and @justin the proposal in the question:

function teststrtok($number_of_tests){
    for($i = 0; $i < $number_of_tests; $i++){
      $str = "http://www.example.com?test=test";
      $str = strtok($str,'?');
    }
}
function testexplode($number_of_tests){
    for($i = 0; $i < $number_of_tests; $i++){
      $str = "http://www.example.com?test=test";
      $str = explode('?', $str);
    }
}
function testregexp($number_of_tests){
    for($i = 0; $i < $number_of_tests; $i++){
      $str = "http://www.example.com?test=test";
      preg_replace('/\\?.*/', '', $str);
    }
}
function teststrpos($number_of_tests){
    for($i = 0; $i < $number_of_tests; $i++){
      $str = "http://www.example.com?test=test";
      $qPos = strpos($str, "?");
      $url_without_query_string = substr($str, 0, $qPos);
    }
}

$number_of_runs = 10;
for($runs = 0; $runs < $number_of_runs; $runs++){

  $number_of_tests = 40000;
  $functions = array("strtok", "explode", "regexp", "strpos");
  foreach($functions as $func){
    $starttime = microtime(true);
    call_user_func("test".$func, $number_of_tests);
    echo $func.": ". sprintf("%0.2f",microtime(true) - $starttime).";";
  }
  echo "<br />";
}
strtok: 0.12;explode: 0.19;regexp: 0.31;strpos: 0.18;
strtok: 0.12;explode: 0.19;regexp: 0.31;strpos: 0.18;
strtok: 0.12;explode: 0.19;regexp: 0.31;strpos: 0.18;
strtok: 0.12;explode: 0.19;regexp: 0.31;strpos: 0.18;
strtok: 0.12;explode: 0.19;regexp: 0.31;strpos: 0.18;
strtok: 0.12;explode: 0.19;regexp: 0.31;strpos: 0.18;
strtok: 0.12;explode: 0.19;regexp: 0.31;strpos: 0.18;
strtok: 0.12;explode: 0.19;regexp: 0.31;strpos: 0.18;
strtok: 0.12;explode: 0.19;regexp: 0.31;strpos: 0.18;
strtok: 0.12;explode: 0.19;regexp: 0.31;strpos: 0.18;

Result: @justin's strtok is the fastest.

Note: tested on a local Debian Lenny system with Apache2 and PHP5.

3
  • regexp execution time: 0.14591598510742 seconds; explode execution time: 0.07137393951416 seconds; strpos execution time: 0.080883026123047 seconds; tok execution time: 0.042459011077881 seconds;
    – Justin
    Commented Aug 9, 2009 at 16:15
  • Very nice! I think speed is important. It's not the only thing that is going to happen. A web application could have hundreds of functions. "It's all in the details". Thanks, vote up! Commented Aug 9, 2009 at 16:17
  • Justin, thanks. The script is now cleaned up and takes your solution into account.
    – Scharrels
    Commented Aug 9, 2009 at 17:08
4

Couldn't you use the server variables to do this?

Or would this work?:

unset($_GET['page']);
$url = $_SERVER['SCRIPT_NAME'] ."?".http_build_query($_GET);

Just a thought.

2

You can use the server variables for this, for example $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'], or even better: $_SERVER['PHP_SELF'].

1
  • 4
    This assumes of course that the url he is parsing is the page doing the parsing.
    – MitMaro
    Commented Aug 9, 2009 at 15:40
2
@list($url) = explode("?", $url, 2);
0

How about a function to rewrite the query string by looping through the $_GET array

! Rough outline of a suitable function

function query_string_exclude($exclude, $subject = $_GET, $array_prefix=''){
   $query_params = array;
   foreach($subject as $key=>$var){
      if(!in_array($key,$exclude)){
         if(is_array($var)){ //recursive call into sub array
            $query_params[]  = query_string_exclude($exclude, $var, $array_prefix.'['.$key.']');
         }else{
            $query_params[] = (!empty($array_prefix)?$array_prefix.'['.$key.']':$key).'='.$var;
         }
      }
   }

   return implode('&',$query_params);
}

Something like this would be good to keep handy for pagination links etc.

<a href="?p=3&<?= query_string_exclude(array('p')) ?>" title="Click for page 3">Page 3</a>
0

basename($_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']) returns everything after and including the '?',

In my code sometimes I need only sections, so separate it out so I can get the value of what I need on the fly. Not sure on the performance speed compared to other methods, but it's really useful for me.

$urlprotocol = 'http'; if ($_SERVER["HTTPS"] == "on") {$urlprotocol .= "s";} $urlprotocol .= "://";
$urldomain = $_SERVER["SERVER_NAME"];
$urluri = $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'];
$urlvars = basename($urluri);
$urlpath = str_replace($urlvars,"",$urluri);

$urlfull = $urlprotocol . $urldomain . $urlpath . $urlvars;
0

In my opinion, the best way would be this:

<? if(isset($_GET['i'])){unset($_GET['i']); header('location:/');} ?>

It checks if there is an 'i' GET parameter, and removes it if there is.

0

just use echo'd javascript to rid the URL of any variables with a self-submitting, blank form:

    <?
    if (isset($_GET['your_var'])){
    //blah blah blah code
    echo "<script type='text/javascript'>unsetter();</script>"; 
    ?> 

Then make this javascript function:

    function unsetter() {
    $('<form id = "unset" name = "unset" METHOD="GET"><input type="submit"></form>').appendTo('body');
    $( "#unset" ).submit();
    }

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