I want to convert these types of values, '3'
, '2.34'
, '0.234343'
, etc. to a number. In JavaScript we can use Number()
, but is there any similar method available in PHP?
Input Output
'2' 2
'2.34' 2.34
'0.3454545' 0.3454545
转载于:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8529656/how-do-i-convert-a-string-to-a-number-in-php
You don't typically need to do this, since PHP will coerce the type for you in most circumstances. For situations where you do want to explicitly convert the type, cast it:
$num = "3.14";
$int = (int)$num;
$float = (float)$num;
PHP will do it for you within limits
<?php
$str="3.148";
$num=$str;
printf("%f\n", $num);
?>
In PHP you can use intval(string) or floatval(string)
functions to convert strings to numbers.
There are a few ways to do so:
Cast the strings to numeric primitive data types:
$num = (int) "10";
$num = (double) "10.12"; // same as (float) "10.12";
Perform math operations on the strings:
$num = "10" + 1;
$num = floor("10.1");
Use intval()
or floatval()
:
$num = intval("10");
$num = floatval("10.1");
Use settype()
.
$a = "10";
$b = (int)$a;
You can use this to convert a string to an int in PHP.
You can use:
(int)(your value);
Or you can use:
intval(string)
In whatever (loosely-typed) language you can always cast a string to a number by adding a zero to it.
However, there is very little sense in this as PHP will do it automatically at the time of using this variable, and it will be cast to a string anyway at the time of output.
Note that you may wish to keep dotted numbers as strings, because after casting to float it may be changed unpredictably, due to float numbers' nature.
$a = "7.2345";
$b = round(((float)$a),0);
Just a little note to the answers that can be useful and safer in some cases. You may want to check if the string actually contains a valid numeric value first and only then convert it to a numeric type (for example if you have to manipulate data coming from a db that converts ints to strings). You can use is_numeric()
and then floatval()
:
$a = "whatever"; // any variable
if (is_numeric($a))
var_dump(floatval($a)); // type is float
else
var_dump($a); // any type
You can change the data type as follows
$number = "1.234";
echo gettype ($number) . "\n"; //Returns string
settype($number , "float");
echo gettype ($number) . "\n"; //Returns float
For historical reasons "double" is returned in case of a float.
You can use:
((int) $var) ( but in big number it return 2147483647 :-) )
But the best solution is to use:
if (is_numeric($var))
$var = (isset($var)) ? $var : 0;
else
$var = 0;
Or
if (is_numeric($var))
$var = (trim($var) == '') ? 0 : $var;
else
$var = 0;
Here is a function I wrote to simplify things for myself:
It also returns shorthand versions of boolean, integer, double and real.
function type($mixed, $parseNumeric = false)
{
if ($parseNumeric && is_numeric($mixed)) {
//Set type to relevant numeric format
$mixed += 0;
}
$t = gettype($mixed);
switch($t) {
case 'boolean': return 'bool'; //shorthand
case 'integer': return 'int'; //shorthand
case 'double': case 'real': return 'float'; //equivalent for all intents and purposes
default: return $t;
}
}
Calling type with parseNumeric set to true will convert numeric strings before checking type.
Thus:
type("5", true) will return int
type("3.7", true) will return float
type("500") will return string
Just be careful since this is a kind of false checking method and your actual variable will still be a string. You will need to convert the actual variable to the correct type if needed. I just needed it to check if the database should load an item id or alias, thus not having any unexpected effects since it will be parsed as string at run time anyway.
Edit
If you would like to detect if objects are functions add this case to the switch:
case 'object': return is_callable($mixed)?'function':'object';
I've found that in JavaScript a simple way to convert a string to a number is to multiply it by 1. It resolves the concatenation problem, because the "+" symbol has multiple uses in JavaScript, while the "*" symbol is purely for mathematical multiplication.
Based on what I've seen here regarding PHP automatically being willing to interpret a digit-containing string as a number (and the comments about adding, since in PHP the "+" is purely for mathematical addition), this multiply trick works just fine for PHP, also.
I have tested it, and it does work... Although depending on how you acquired the string, you might want to apply the trim() function to it, before multiplying by 1.
Try using something like this:
<?php
$string='5';// $ string is a variable to hold string '5'
$int=intval($string);// $int is the converted string to integer $int=intval('5');
echo$int;//5
?>
To avoid problems try intval($var)
. Some examples:
<?php
echo intval(42); // 42
echo intval(4.2); // 4
echo intval('42'); // 42
echo intval('+42'); // 42
echo intval('-42'); // -42
echo intval(042); // 34 (octal as starts with zero)
echo intval('042'); // 42
echo intval(1e10); // 1410065408
echo intval('1e10'); // 1
echo intval(0x1A); // 26 (hex as starts with 0x)
echo intval(42000000); // 42000000
echo intval(420000000000000000000); // 0
echo intval('420000000000000000000'); // 2147483647
echo intval(42, 8); // 42
echo intval('42', 8); // 34
echo intval(array()); // 0
echo intval(array('foo', 'bar')); // 1
?>
For your specific case, you could just multiply by 1 to convert string to number in php. PHP takes care of the floating and integer automatically.
$num = "2.12";
var_dump(is_float($num)); //bool(false)
var_dump(is_int($num)); //bool(false)
var_dump(is_string($num)); //bool(true)
$num = $num*1;
var_dump(is_float($num)); //bool(true)
var_dump(is_int($num)); //bool(false)
var_dump(is_string($num)); //bool(false)
If you want get float for $value = '0.4'
, but int for $value = '4'
, you can write:
$number = ($value == (int) $value) ? (int) $value : (float) $value;
Little bit dirty, but it works.
$num = "3.14";
$int = (int)$num; // output = 3
$float = (float)$num; // output = 3.14
$double = (double)$num; // output = 3.14
you can convert a string to a number in PHP using cast .
all suggestions loose the numeric type this seems to me a best practice
function str2num($s){
//returns a num or FALSE
$return_value = !is_numeric($s) ? false : (intval($s)==floatval($s)) ? intval($s) :floatval($s);
print "\nret=$return_value type=".gettype($return_value)."\n";
}
Instead of having to choose weather to convert the string
to int
or float
. You can simply add a 0
to it and PHP will automatically convert the result to a numeric type.
// being sure the string is actually a number
if( is_numeric($string) )
$number = $string + 0;
else // let's the number be 0 if the string is not a number
$number = 0;
Different Approach:
json_encode($your_array, JSON_NUMERIC_CHECK );
optionally decode it backHere is the function that achieves what you are looking for. First we check if the value can be understood as a number, if so we turn it into an int and a float. If the int and float are the same (e.g., 5 == 5.0) then we return the int value. If the int and float are not the same (e.g., 5 != 5.3) then we assume you need the precision of the float and return that value. If the value isn't numeric we throw a warning and return null.
function toNumber($val) {
if (is_numeric($val)) {
$int = (int)$val;
$float = (float)$val;
$val = ($int == $float) ? $int : $float;
return $val;
} else {
trigger_error("Cannot cast $val to a number", E_USER_WARNING);
return null;
}
}
You can always add zero to it!
Input Output
'2' + 0 2 (int)
'2.34' + 0 2.34 (float)
'0.3454545' + 0 0.3454545 (float)
In addition to Boykodev answer I suggest this:
Input Output
'2' * 1 2 (int)
'2.34' * 1 2.34 (float)
'0.3454545' * 1 0.3454545 (float)
I got the question "say you were writing the built in function for casting an integer to a string in PHP, how would you write that function" in a programming interview. Here's a solution.
$nums = ["0","1","2","3","4","5","6","7","8","9"];
$int = 15939;
$string = "";
while ($int) {
$string .= $nums[$int % 10];
$int = (int)($int / 10);
}
$result = strrev($string);
you can simply use intval() function to convert string to int
Yes, there is a similar method in PHP, but it is so little known that you will rarely hear about it. It is an arithmetic operators called "identity", as described here:
To convert a numeric string to a number, do as follows:
$a = +$a;
Simply you can write like this:
<?php
$data = ["1","2","3","4","5"];
echo json_encode($data, JSON_NUMERIC_CHECK);
?>