I have a input string like:
$str = ':this is a applepie :) ';
How can I remove the first occurring :
with PHP?
Desired output: this is a applepie :)
I have a input string like:
$str = ':this is a applepie :) ';
How can I remove the first occurring :
with PHP?
Desired output: this is a applepie :)
The substr()
function will probably help you here:
$str = substr($str, 1);
Strings are indexed starting from 0, and this functions second parameter takes the cutstart. So make that 1, and the first char is gone.
false
was returned. So you would need to check if they're equal if that is not the behaviour you want.
To remove every :
from the beginning of a string, you can use ltrim:
$str = '::f:o:';
$str = ltrim($str, ':');
var_dump($str); //=> 'f:o:'
:::::
. Sometimes this is not desired behavior.
ltrim('prefixprefix_postfix', 'prefix')
results in '_postfix';
Commented
Apr 5, 2017 at 22:19
Exec time for the 3 answers :
Remove the first letter by replacing the case
$str = "hello";
$str[0] = "";
// $str[0] = false;
// $str[0] = null;
// replaced by �, but ok for echo
Exec time for 1.000.000 tests : 0.39602184295654
sec
Remove the first letter with substr()
$str = "hello";
$str = substr($str, 1);
Exec time for 1.000.000 tests : 5.153294801712
sec
Remove the first letter with ltrim()
$str = "hello";
$str= ltrim ($str,'h');
Exec time for 1.000.000 tests : 5.2393000125885
sec
Remove the first letter with preg_replace()
$str = "hello";
$str = preg_replace('/^./', '', $str);
Exec time for 1.000.000 tests : 6.8543920516968
sec
$str[0] = '';
solution and it didn't work. well it does however if you then plan on using the variable for example to compare >
or <
it won't work. It still counts ` ` as +` for example $str = 'hello'; $str[0] = ''; var_dump($str); // string(5) 'ello'
var_dump($keyword)
which was showing the previous character length.. then I tried trimming the keyword and then it worked fine var_dump(trim($keyword))
.. Hope this helps someone.. :)
Commented
Mar 8, 2015 at 7:45
The accepted answer:
$str = ltrim($str, ':');
works but will remove multiple :
when there are more than one at the start.
$str = substr($str, 1);
will remove any character from the start.
However,
if ($str[0] === ':')
$str = substr($str, 1);
works perfectly.
After further tests, I don't recommend using this any more. It caused a problem for me when using the updated string in a MySQL query, and changing to substr
fixed the problem. I thought about deleting this answer, but comments suggest it is quicker somehow so someone might have a use for it. You may find trimming the updated string resolves string length issues.
Sometimes you don't need a function:
$str[0] = '';
For example:
$str = 'AHello';
$str[0] = '';
echo $str; // 'Hello'
This method modifies the existing string rather than creating another.
chr(0)
. It's equivalent to $str[0] = chr(0);
. You can check the string code with var_dump(bin2hex($str));
You will get 0048656c6c6f
. See that first 00
byte?
Commented
May 17, 2018 at 7:31
$str = substr($str, 1);
echo substr('abcdef', 1); // bcdef
Note:
unset($str[0])
will not work as you cannot unset part of a string:-
Fatal error: Cannot unset string offsets
use mb_substr function
mb_substr("我abc", 1);
Trims occurrences of every word in an array from the beginning and end of a string + whitespace and optionally extra single characters as per normal trim()
<?php
function trim_words($what, $words, $char_list = '') {
if(!is_array($words)) return false;
$char_list .= " \t\n\r\0\x0B"; // default trim chars
$pattern = "(".implode("|", array_map('preg_quote', $words)).")\b";
$str = trim(preg_replace('~'.$pattern.'$~i', '', preg_replace('~^'.$pattern.'~i', '', trim($what, $char_list))), $char_list);
return $str;
}
// for example:
$trim_list = array('AND', 'OR');
$what = ' OR x = 1 AND b = 2 AND ';
print_r(trim_words($what, $trim_list)); // => "x = 1 AND b = 2"
$what = ' ORDER BY x DESC, b ASC, ';
print_r(trim_words($what, $trim_list, ',')); // => "ORDER BY x DESC, b ASC"
?>
The code works well for me.
$str = substr($str ,-(strlen($str)-1));
Maybe, contribute with answers too.