Note that when using FILTER_VALIDATE_INT along with the FILTER_FLAG_ALLOW_HEX flag, the string "2f", for example, is not validated successfully, because you must use the "0x" prefix, otherwise, it treats the data as base 10.
The range options are also smart enough to recognize when the boundaries are exceeded in different bases.
Here's an example:
<?php
$foo = '256';
$bar = '0x100';
var_dump(validate_int($foo)); // false, too large
var_dump(validate_int($bar)); // false, too large
function validate_int($input)
{
return filter_var(
$input,
FILTER_VALIDATE_INT,
// We must pass an associative array
// to include the range check options.
array(
'flags' => FILTER_FLAG_ALLOW_HEX,
'options' => array('min_range' => 1, 'max_range' => 0xff)
)
);
}
?>
filter_var
(PHP 5 >= 5.2.0)
filter_var — Filtre une variable avec un filtre spécifique
Liste de paramètres
- variable
-
Valeur à filtrer.
- filter
-
Identifiant du filtre à utiliser. Par défaut, vaut FILTER_SANITIZE_STRING.
- options
-
Tableau associatif d'options ou des drapeaux. Si le filtre accepte les options, les drapeaux peuvent être fournis dans le champ "flags" du tableau. Pour les fonctions de rappel, le type callback devra être passé.
Valeurs de retour
Retourne les données filtrées, ou FALSE si le filtre échoue.
Exemples
Exemple #1 Exemple avec filter_var()
<?php
var_dump(filter_var('bob@example.com', FILTER_VALIDATE_EMAIL));
var_dump(filter_var('example.com', FILTER_VALIDATE_URL, FILTER_FLAG_SCHEME_REQUIRED));
?>
L'exemple ci-dessus va afficher :
string(15) "bob@example.com" bool(false)
Voir aussi
- filter_var_array()
- filter_input()
- filter_input_array()
- information à propos de callback type
filter_var
dyer85 at gmail dot com
03-Nov-2008 11:00
03-Nov-2008 11:00
visseraj at gmail dot com
28-Aug-2008 07:31
28-Aug-2008 07:31
Here are the other possible flags that you can use:
http://us3.php.net/manual/hu/ref.filter.php
dale dot liszka at gmail dot com
09-Jul-2008 07:15
09-Jul-2008 07:15
Here is how to use multiple flags (for those who learn better by example, like me):
<?php
echo "|asdf".chr(9).chr(128)."_123|";
echo "\n";
// "bitwise conjunction" means logic OR / bitwise |
echo filter_var("|asdf".chr(9).chr(128)."_123\n|" ,FILTER_SANITIZE_STRING, FILTER_FLAG_STRIP_LOW | FILTER_FLAG_STRIP_HIGH);
/*
Results:
|asdf �_123|
|asdf_123|
*/
?>
dale dot liszka at gmail dot com
09-Jul-2008 06:54
09-Jul-2008 06:54
Using the FILTER_CALLBACK requires an array to be passed as the options:
<?php
function toDash($x){
return str_replace("_","-",$x);
}
echo filter_var("asdf_123",FILTER_CALLBACK,array("options"=>"toDash"));
// returns 'asdf-123'
?>
John
26-Jul-2007 09:35
26-Jul-2007 09:35
I managed to get this to work with PHP 5.1.6 on CentOS 5 with minor difficulty.
1) Download the PECL filter package
2) Extract the tarball
3) phpize the directory
4) ./configure
5) make
6) filter-0.11.0/logical_filters.c:25:31: error: ext/pcre/php_pcre.h: No such file or directory
7) find / -name php_pcre.h
8) Make sure php-devel is installed
9) Edit filter-0.11.0/logical_filters.c and replace "ext/pcre/php_pcre.h" with the absolute path of php_pcre.h
10) make
11) make install
12) add "extension=filter.so" to php.ini
13) Restart Apache
