How to Switching tabs and spaces in PHP
Posted by admin | Posted in PHP, Software Programs, Theory Subjects | Posted on 20-11-2009
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Use str_replace( ) to switch spaces to tabs or tabs to spaces
Example
<?php
$r = mysql_query(“SELECT message FROM messages WHERE id = 1″) or die();
$ob = mysql_fetch_object($r);
$tabbed = str_replace(‘ ‘,”\t”,$ob->message);
$spaced = str_replace(“\t”,’ ‘,$ob->message);
print “With Tabs: <pre>$tabbed</pre>”;
print “With Spaces: <pre>$spaced</pre>”;
?>
Using str_replace( ) for conversion, however, doesn’t respect tab stops. If
you want tab stops every eight characters, a line beginning with a five-letter
word and a tab should have that tab replaced with three spaces, not one.
Use the pc_tab_expand( ) function
pc_tab_expand( )
<?php
function pc_tab_expand($text) {
while (strstr($text,”\t”)) {
$text = preg_replace_callback(‘/^([^\t\n]*)(\t+)/m’,'pc_tab_expand_helper’, $text);
}
return $text;
}
function pc_tab_expand_helper($matches) {
$tab_stop = 8;
return $matches[1] .
str_repeat(‘ ‘,strlen($matches[2]) *
$tab_stop – (strlen($matches[1]) % $tab_stop));
}
$spaced = pc_tab_expand($ob->message);
?>
You can use the pc_tab_unexpand( ) function to turn spaces back to tabs
pc_tab_unexpand( )
<?php
function pc_tab_unexpand($text) {
$tab_stop = 8;
$lines = explode(“\n”,$text);
foreach ($lines as $i => $line) {
// Expand any tabs to spaces
$line = pc_tab_expand($line);
$chunks = str_split($line, $tab_stop);
$chunkCount = count($chunks);
// Scan all but the last chunk
for ($j = 0; $j < $chunkCount – 1; $j++) {
$chunks[$j] = preg_replace(‘/ {2,}$/’,”\t”,$chunks[$j]);
}
// If the last chunk is a tab-stop’s worth of spaces
// convert it to a tab; Otherwise, leave it alone
if ($chunks[$chunkCount-1] == str_repeat(‘ ‘, $tab_stop)) {
$chunks[$chunkCount-1] = “\t”;
}
// Recombine the chunks
$lines[$i] = implode(”,$chunks);
}
// Recombine the lines
return implode(“\n”,$lines);
}
$tabbed = pc_tab_unexpand($ob->message);
?>
Both functions take a string as an argument and return the string appropriately modified.
Each function assumes tab stops are every eight spaces, but that can be modified by changing the setting of the $tab_stop variable.
The regular expression in pc_tab_expand( ) matches both a group of tabs and all the text in a line before that group of tabs. It needs to match the text before the tabs because the length of that text affects how many spaces the tabs should be replaced with so that subsequent text is aligned with the next tab stop. The function doesn’t just replace each tab with eight spaces; it adjusts text after tabs to line up with tab stops.
Similarly, pc_tab_unexpand( ) doesn’t just look for eight consecutive spaces and then replace them with one tab character. It divides up each line into eight-character chunks and then substitutes ending whitespace in those chunks (at least two spaces) with tabs. This not only preserves text alignment with tab stops; it also saves space in the string.
