25

I have a string which is combination of letters and digits. For my application i have to separate a string with letters and digits: ex:If my string is "12jan" i hav to get "12" "jan" separately..

1
  • a more general regex for word and number split may be useful, link.
    – tinystone
    Sep 6 at 2:42

7 Answers 7

32
$numbers = preg_replace('/[^0-9]/', '', $str);
$letters = preg_replace('/[^a-zA-Z]/', '', $str);
4
19

You can make use of preg_split to split your string at the point which is preceded by digit and is followed by letters as:

$arr = preg_split('/(?<=[0-9])(?=[a-z]+)/i',$str);

Code in Action

<?php
$str = '12jan';
$arr = preg_split('/(?<=[0-9])(?=[a-z]+)/i',$str);                                                               
print_r($arr);

Result:

Array
(
    [0] => 12
    [1] => jan
)
4
  • your code is not working if there is whitespace. $str = 12 Jan like that Jun 22, 2015 at 6:39
  • 5
    If there's a whitespace, wouldn't it be easier to use explode using the space itself as a delimiter? Aug 10, 2016 at 16:28
  • @PrashantTapase just add space in the character set [a-z] : [\sa-z]
    – sglessard
    Mar 2, 2018 at 17:51
  • 3
    This code works only if digits are first. If You will change $str to 'jan12' it will output [0] => 'jan12' May 16, 2018 at 6:41
10
$string = "12312313sdfsdf24234";
preg_match_all('/([0-9]+|[a-zA-Z]+)/',$string,$matches);
print_r($matches);

this might work alot better

2
  • 1
    givng out put Array ( [0] => Array ( ) [1] => Array ( ) [2] => Array ( ) )
    – user319198
    Nov 30, 2010 at 6:47
  • Why bother with the capture grouping? I'd probably use a case insensitively flag. This answer is missing its educational explanation. Jul 22, 2021 at 23:55
9
preg_match_all('/^(\d+)(\w+)$/', $str, $matches);

var_dump($matches);

$day = $matches[1][0];
$month = $matches[2][0];

Of course, this only works when your strings are exactly as described "abc123" (with no whitespace appended or prepended).

If you want to get all numbers and characters, you can do it with one regex.

preg_match_all('/(\d)|(\w)/', $str, $matches);

$numbers = implode($matches[1]);
$letters = implode($matches[2]);

var_dump($numbers, $letters);

See it!

3
  • 1
    This presumes that the string won't be jan12 or fg1dg34sdf.
    – Mike C
    Nov 30, 2010 at 7:00
  • preg_match_all('/(\d)|(.)|(\w)/', $str, $matches); will also respect strings like '12-jan' or 'jan-12', if you want to reuse the extracted characters too.
    – MrMacvos
    Feb 20, 2020 at 13:34
  • 1
    The commented code by MrMacvos is misleading/bad, but I cannot dv it. Do not use it. 3v4l.org/9tDfr and 3v4l.org/INJ1H Jul 22, 2021 at 23:52
4

You can split the string by matching sequences of digits or non-digits, then "forgetting" the matched characters with \K.

preg_split(
    '~(?:\d+|\D+)\K~',
    $string,
    0,
    PREG_SPLIT_NO_EMPTY
)

Or you could use matched digits as the delimiter and retain the delimiters in the output.

preg_split(
    '~(\d+)~',
    $string,
    0,
    PREG_SPLIT_NO_EMPTY | PREG_SPLIT_DELIM_CAPTURE 
)

A demonstration of both techniques.


If you know the order of your numeric and alphabetic substrings, then sscanf() is a perfect tool.

Code: (Demo)

var_export(sscanf('12jan', '%d%s'));

Output:

array (
  0 => 12,
  1 => 'jan',
)

Notice how 12 is conveniently cast as an integer as well.

sscanf() also allows individual variables to be assigned if desired ($day and $month) as the 3rd and 4th parameters.

2
  • This will produce many groups when the numbers and letters are interwoven.
    – Dharman
    Jul 23, 2021 at 17:41
  • Of course it will. What's the alternative? The minimal reproducible example is so narrowly scoped that I have no way to guess how the desired output should differ if the input is extended. Jul 23, 2021 at 22:00
2

This works for me as per my requirement, you can edit as per yours

function stringSeperator($string,$type_return){

    $numbers =array();
    $alpha = array();
    $array = str_split($string);
    for($x = 0; $x< count($array); $x++){
        if(is_numeric($array[$x]))
            array_push($numbers,$array[$x]);
        else
            array_push($alpha,$array[$x]);
    }// end for         

    $alpha = implode($alpha);
    $numbers = implode($numbers);

    if($type_return == 'number')    
    return $numbers;
    elseif($type_return == 'alpha')
    return $alpha;

}// end function
1
  • This answer is missing its educational explanation. Why not just use iterated string concatenating techniques if you are going to return strings? Using temporary arrays and imploding seems unnecessarily wasteful. Jul 23, 2021 at 0:03
-1

Try This :

$string="12jan";
$chars = '';
$nums = '';
for ($index=0;$index<strlen($string);$index++) {
    if(isNumber($string[$index]))
        $nums .= $string[$index];
    else    
        $chars .= $string[$index];
}
echo "Chars: -$chars-<br>Nums: -$nums-";


function isNumber($c) {
    return preg_match('/[0-9]/', $c);
} 
2
  • in some versions it is is_numeric()
    – Yan.D
    Feb 4, 2018 at 21:26
  • Calling preg_match() inside of a custom function for EVERY character in a string -- that's WAY too much overhead for this task. I would not recommend that any researchers use this option. As a result, I have dv'ed and voted to delete this answer. Jul 22, 2021 at 23:25

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

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