59

How to iterate a UTF-8 string character by character using indexing?

When you access a UTF-8 string with the bracket operator $str[0] the utf-encoded character consists of 2 or more elements.

For example:

$str = "Kąt";
$str[0] = "K";
$str[1] = "�";
$str[2] = "�";
$str[3] = "t";

but I would like to have:

$str[0] = "K";
$str[1] = "ą";
$str[2] = "t";

It is possible with mb_substr but this is extremely slow, ie.

mb_substr($str, 0, 1) = "K"
mb_substr($str, 1, 1) = "ą"
mb_substr($str, 2, 1) = "t"

Is there another way to interate the string character by character without using mb_substr?

8
  • 2
    define "extremely slow". Did you profile your application and found that these mb_substr calls is a certain bottleneck? Sep 8, 2010 at 9:31
  • After reading your question 2nd time I realized you wanted a way to do it without mb_substr. I have deleted my answer. Sep 8, 2010 at 9:40
  • 1
    @Col. Shrapnel: Yes, 50% of processing time was made by mb_substr.
    – czuk
    Sep 8, 2010 at 9:50
  • 50% of what processing? of whole user request to web-server, from connect to disconnect? I can't believe. Your whole script being parsed the same way on each request. Nobody ever notice that. What part your mb parsing does take of whole request time? Sep 8, 2010 at 10:00
  • 10
    I'm surprised no one else suggested this, but if you wanted the fastest solution, and can live with up to 4 x memory overhead for the string, converting to UTF-32 will give you fixed-width characters of 4 bytes each - if you need random access to any character in a string, this is probably the most efficient solution, and unless you're processing very large files, the memory overhead is likely acceptable. Jun 25, 2014 at 10:49

8 Answers 8

79

Use preg_split. With "u" modifier it supports UTF-8 unicode.

$chrArray = preg_split('//u', $str, -1, PREG_SPLIT_NO_EMPTY);
12
  • 3
    This is very elegant, but I'm having a hard time imagining this faster than mb_substr().
    – Pekka
    Sep 8, 2010 at 9:40
  • 4
    @Pekka It probably is. Using mb_substr is quadratic on the length of the string; this is linear even though there's the overhead of building an array. Of course, it takes a lot more memory than your method.
    – Artefacto
    Sep 8, 2010 at 9:53
  • 6
    I've just tested it. For string of length 100 characters, the preg_split is 50% faster.
    – vartec
    Sep 8, 2010 at 9:58
  • 8
    Even more, I have tested on more than 1000 'long' documents and it is 40 times faster :-) (see my answer).
    – czuk
    Sep 8, 2010 at 10:06
  • 1
    @Andrew: and what makes you think above code would need recursion? PCRE uses recursion when looking for longer matches. Except there can be no longer matches for an empty regexp.
    – vartec
    Jun 18, 2013 at 15:34
44

Preg split will fail over very large strings with a memory exception and mb_substr is slow indeed, so here is a simple, and effective code, which I'm sure, that you could use:

function nextchar($string, &$pointer){
    if(!isset($string[$pointer])) return false;
    $char = ord($string[$pointer]);
    if($char < 128){
        return $string[$pointer++];
    }else{
        if($char < 224){
            $bytes = 2;
        }elseif($char < 240){
            $bytes = 3;
        }else{
            $bytes = 4;
        }
        $str =  substr($string, $pointer, $bytes);
        $pointer += $bytes;
        return $str;
    }
}

This I used for looping through a multibyte string char by char and if I change it to the code below, the performance difference is huge:

function nextchar($string, &$pointer){
    if(!isset($string[$pointer])) return false;
    return mb_substr($string, $pointer++, 1, 'UTF-8');
}

Using it to loop a string for 10000 times with the code below produced a 3 second runtime for the first code and 13 seconds for the second code:

function microtime_float(){
    list($usec, $sec) = explode(' ', microtime());
    return ((float)$usec + (float)$sec);
}

$source = 'árvíztűrő tükörfúrógépárvíztűrő tükörfúrógépárvíztűrő tükörfúrógépárvíztűrő tükörfúrógépárvíztűrő tükörfúrógép';

$t = Array(
    0 => microtime_float()
);

for($i = 0; $i < 10000; $i++){
    $pointer = 0;
    while(($chr = nextchar($source, $pointer)) !== false){
        //echo $chr;
    }
}

$t[] = microtime_float();

echo $t[1] - $t[0].PHP_EOL.PHP_EOL;
7
  • 1
    Upvoted and added a change I was required to make due to mbstring.func_overload being set to 7 in my environment.
    – Andrew
    Jun 17, 2013 at 20:44
  • 3
    elseif($char = 252){ should probably be elseif($char == 252){
    – user23127
    May 4, 2014 at 10:23
  • That missing "=" is the very reason I have shifted to Yoda notation for comparisons of variables.
    – Kafoso
    May 30, 2016 at 6:43
  • After reading about what Yoda notation is, I would say that it sounds really useful. Thanks for mentioning it. May 30, 2016 at 15:32
  • About code readability this is also a nice case to use the switch(true) "trick". e.g: switch (true) { case ($char < 224): $bytes=2; break; case ($char < 240): $bytes=3; break; case ($char < 248): $bytes=4; break; case ($char == 252): $bytes=5; break; default: $bytes = 6; break; }
    – Yuval A.
    Jun 9, 2017 at 23:38
29

In answer to comments posted by @Pekla and @Col. Shrapnel I have compared preg_split with mb_substr.

alt text

The image shows, that preg_split took 1.2s, while mb_substr almost 25s.

Here is the code of the functions:

function split_preg($str){
    return preg_split('//u', $str, -1);     
}

function split_mb($str){
    $length = mb_strlen($str);
    $chars = array();
    for ($i=0; $i<$length; $i++){
        $chars[] = mb_substr($str, $i, 1);
    }
    $chars[] = "";
    return $chars;
}
11

Using Lajos Meszaros' wonderful function as inspiration I created a multi-byte string iterator class.

// Multi-Byte String iterator class
class MbStrIterator implements Iterator
{
    private $iPos   = 0;
    private $iSize  = 0;
    private $sStr   = null;

    // Constructor
    public function __construct(/*string*/ $str)
    {
        // Save the string
        $this->sStr     = $str;

        // Calculate the size of the current character
        $this->calculateSize();
    }

    // Calculate size
    private function calculateSize() {

        // If we're done already
        if(!isset($this->sStr[$this->iPos])) {
            return;
        }

        // Get the character at the current position
        $iChar  = ord($this->sStr[$this->iPos]);

        // If it's a single byte, set it to one
        if($iChar < 128) {
            $this->iSize    = 1;
        }

        // Else, it's multi-byte
        else {

            // Figure out how long it is
            if($iChar < 224) {
                $this->iSize = 2;
            } else if($iChar < 240){
                $this->iSize = 3;
            } else if($iChar < 248){
                $this->iSize = 4;
            } else if($iChar == 252){
                $this->iSize = 5;
            } else {
                $this->iSize = 6;
            }
        }
    }

    // Current
    public function current() {

        // If we're done
        if(!isset($this->sStr[$this->iPos])) {
            return false;
        }

        // Else if we have one byte
        else if($this->iSize == 1) {
            return $this->sStr[$this->iPos];
        }

        // Else, it's multi-byte
        else {
            return substr($this->sStr, $this->iPos, $this->iSize);
        }
    }

    // Key
    public function key()
    {
        // Return the current position
        return $this->iPos;
    }

    // Next
    public function next()
    {
        // Increment the position by the current size and then recalculate
        $this->iPos += $this->iSize;
        $this->calculateSize();
    }

    // Rewind
    public function rewind()
    {
        // Reset the position and size
        $this->iPos     = 0;
        $this->calculateSize();
    }

    // Valid
    public function valid()
    {
        // Return if the current position is valid
        return isset($this->sStr[$this->iPos]);
    }
}

It can be used like so

foreach(new MbStrIterator("Kąt") as $c) {
    echo "{$c}\n";
}

Which will output

K
ą
t

Or if you really want to know the position of the start byte as well

foreach(new MbStrIterator("Kąt") as $i => $c) {
    echo "{$i}: {$c}\n";
}

Which will output

0: K
1: ą
3: t
1
6

You could parse each byte of the string and determine whether it is a single (ASCII) character or the start of a multi-byte character:

The UTF-8 encoding is variable-width, with each character represented by 1 to 4 bytes. Each byte has 0–4 leading consecutive '1' bits followed by a '0' bit to indicate its type. 2 or more '1' bits indicates the first byte in a sequence of that many bytes.

you would walk through the string and, instead of increasing the position by 1, read the current character in full and then increase the position by the length that character had.

The Wikipedia article has the interpretation table for each character [retrieved 2010-10-01]:

   0-127 Single-byte encoding (compatible with US-ASCII)
 128-191 Second, third, or fourth byte of a multi-byte sequence
 192-193 Overlong encoding: start of 2-byte sequence, 
         but would encode a code point ≤ 127
  ........
0
3

I had the same issue as OP and I try to avoid regex in PHP since it fails or even crashes with long strings. I used Mészáros Lajos' answer with some changes since I have mbstring.func_overload set to 7.

function nextchar($string, &$pointer, &$asciiPointer){
   if(!isset($string[$asciiPointer])) return false;
    $char = ord($string[$asciiPointer]);
    if($char < 128){
        $pointer++;
        return $string[$asciiPointer++];
    }else{
        if($char < 224){
            $bytes = 2;
        }elseif($char < 240){
            $bytes = 3;
        }elseif($char < 248){
            $bytes = 4;
        }elseif($char = 252){
            $bytes = 5;
        }else{
            $bytes = 6;
        }
        $str =  substr($string, $pointer++, 1);
        $asciiPointer+= $bytes;
        return $str;
    }
}

With mbstring.func_overload set to 7, substr actually calls mb_substr. So substr gets the right value in this case. I had to add a second pointer. One keeps track of the multi-byte char in the string, the other keeps track of the single-byte char. The multi-byte value is used for substr (since it's actually mb_substr), while the single-byte value is used for retrieving the byte in this fashion: $string[$index].

Obviously if PHP ever decides to fix the [] access to work properly with multi-byte values, this will fail. But also, this fix wouldn't be needed in the first place.

2

I think the most efficient solution would be to work through the string using mb_substr. In each iteration of the loop, mb_substr would be called twice (to find the next character and the remaining string). It would pass only the remaining string to the next iteration. This way, the main overhead in each iteration would be finding the next character (done twice), which takes only one to five or so operations, depending on the byte length of the character.

If this description is not clear, let me know and I'll provide a working PHP function.

2
  • In my testing, using preg_split is faster than this
    – Chris
    Nov 24, 2020 at 12:17
  • I think this would be correct. One would use "[.]" as the regular expression representing one character, which I hope means one Unicode character (haven't tested). But of course the fastest way to iterate through a string in PHP is to consider the string just an array of bytes. It is rarely needed to isolate each Unicode character in the string. Note that control characters such as newline are always one byte in UTF-8. Also, token separators are frequently the same as in English, and hence also one byte. UTF-8 is safe for such one-byte recognition. Nov 25, 2020 at 13:34
1

Since PHP 7.4 You can use mb_str_split.

https://www.php.net/manual/en/function.mb-str-split.php

$str = 'Kąt';
$chars = mb_str_split($str);
var_dump($chars);

array(3) {
  [0] =>
  string(1) "K"
  [1] =>
  string(2) "ą"
  [2] =>
  string(1) "t"
}

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