$list = "1,2,4,10,8,0,20,30,9";
$token = strtok($list, ",");
while($token)
{
print $token."\n";
$token = strtok(",");
}
?>
Using the code we get this output:
1
2
4
10
8
Where are the other four integers? Actually when the value of $token is zero (0) - the sixth integer in the list, while ($token) evaluates to False and the loop is broken there. Lets use while($token != FALSE) instead.
$token = strtok($list, ",");
while($token != FALSE)
{
print $token."\n";
$token = strtok(",");
}
Still the same output. Oh, the mistake is we used the '!=' operator which tests the equality between $token and FALSE. Here zero (0) is equal to FALSE. A stupid way to avoid the problem is to calculate the length - while(strlen($token)) and it will work definitely! as the length of the string '0' is 1. But best solution (to me) is to use the '!==' operator which means not identical. So the following code works fine:
$list = "1,2,4,10,8,0,20,30,9";
$token = strtok($list, ",");
while($token !== FALSE)
{
print $token."\n";
$token = strtok(",");
}
?>
Output:
1
2
4
10
8
0
20
30
9
It's always useful to know details about operators in PHP.
1 comment:
Or you could use explode(',', $string) and just get an array instead of doing your own tokenizing.
Post a Comment