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im writting a twitter mashup service. When i receive the json data, some of the twit ids are greater than 2147483647 (which is the maximum allowed integer on 32bit servers).

I came up with a solution that works, which is converting the integers to strings; that way the json_decode() function won't have any problems when trying to generate the array.

This is what i need to achieve:

Before (original JSON data)

[{"name":"john","id":5932725006},{"name":"max","id":4953467146}]

After (solution applied)

[{"name":"john","id":"5932725006"},{"name":"max","id":"4953467146"}]

I'm thinking of a preg_match implementation, but i have no idea on how to do it bullet-proof. Any help will be much appreciated.

3 Answers 3

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You can use preg_replace to capture the numbers and add the quotes, something like this:

$jsonString = '[{"name":"john","id":5932725006},{"name":"max","id":4953467146}]';

echo preg_replace('/("\w+"):(\d+)/', '\\1:"\\2"', $jsonString);
//prints [{"name":"john","id":"5932725006"},{"name":"max","id":"4953467146"}]

Try the above example here.

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  • 2
    You'll want "id": in that expression, surely? Otherwise it will match any sequence of numbers, badly breaking any string that contains a digit.
    – bobince
    Nov 22, 2009 at 1:08
  • exactly. it works fine... but it would be better if it would only match the digits near "id":
    – Andres SK
    Nov 22, 2009 at 1:11
  • in fact... if there is "name":"junior2" it will become "junior"2"" with your code :s
    – Andres SK
    Nov 22, 2009 at 1:15
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    Yeah, bobince is right. Try preg_replace('/"id":(\d+)/', '"id":"$1"', $jsonString)
    – Benji XVI
    Nov 22, 2009 at 1:16
  • Thx. i think some older PHP version may have this issue, while new do not. becoz i got a working json_decode in one machine, but not the one with php 5.2.3, at least. but the above solution works!
    – joetsuihk
    Jan 20, 2010 at 15:27
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If you use PHP 5.2 those long ids will be parsed into a float, which though not ideal at least gives you another 21 bits of integer precision, which should easily be enough to store those ids. (A 64-bit server would be ideal of course.)

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  • the server where this is running has both php4 and php5 environments. in order to activate php5 i have to set this flag in the .htaccess file: AddType application/x-httpd-php5 .php Maybe this weird setting won't let me get the int2float feature. Thanks for the info though.
    – Andres SK
    Nov 22, 2009 at 1:21
  • That should work, but you may, alas, still be running an older version of PHP5 too.
    – bobince
    Nov 22, 2009 at 1:27
0

If it comes down to it, you can attempt to use the big_int PECL extension. This lets PHP use numbers that are extraordinarily large, should you need to. It's a big leap, but if you're routinely dealing with numbers that border on the edge of mindnumbingness, you'll likely find it helpful.

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