sscanf
(PHP 4 >= 4.0.1, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
sscanf — Parses input from a string according to a format
Description
The function sscanf() is the input analog of
printf(). sscanf() reads
from the string string
and interprets it
according to the specified format
.
Any whitespace in the format string matches any whitespace in the input
string. This means that even a tab (\t
) in the format string can match a
single space character in the input string.
Parameters
-
string
-
The input string being parsed.
-
format
-
The interpreted format for
string
, which is described in the documentation for sprintf() with following differences:- Function is not locale-aware.
-
F
,g
,G
andb
are not supported. -
D
stands for decimal number. -
i
stands for integer with base detection. -
n
stands for number of characters processed so far. -
s
stops reading at any whitespace character. -
*
instead ofargnum$
suppresses the assignment of this conversion specification.
-
vars
-
Optionally pass in variables by reference that will contain the parsed values.
Return Values
If only two parameters were passed to this function, the values parsed will be returned as an array. Otherwise, if optional parameters are passed, the function will return the number of assigned values. The optional parameters must be passed by reference.
If there are more substrings expected in the format
than there are available within string
,
null
will be returned.
Examples
Example #1 sscanf() Example
<?php
// getting the serial number
list($serial) = sscanf("SN/2350001", "SN/%d");
// and the date of manufacturing
$mandate = "January 01 2000";
list($month, $day, $year) = sscanf($mandate, "%s %d %d");
echo "Item $serial was manufactured on: $year-" . substr($month, 0, 3) . "-$day\n";
?>
If optional parameters are passed, the function will return the number of assigned values.
Example #2 sscanf() - using optional parameters
<?php
// get author info and generate DocBook entry
$auth = "24\tLewis Carroll";
$n = sscanf($auth, "%d\t%s %s", $id, $first, $last);
echo "<author id='$id'>
<firstname>$first</firstname>
<surname>$last</surname>
</author>\n";
?>
See Also
- printf() - Output a formatted string
- sprintf() - Return a formatted string
- fprintf() - Write a formatted string to a stream
- vprintf() - Output a formatted string
- vsprintf() - Return a formatted string
- vfprintf() - Write a formatted string to a stream
- fscanf() - Parses input from a file according to a format
- number_format() - Format a number with grouped thousands
- date() - Format a Unix timestamp