Reputation: 5356
I want to truncate some text (loaded from a database or text file), but it contains HTML so as a result the tags are included and less text will be returned. This can then result in tags not being closed, or being partially closed (so Tidy may not work properly and there is still less content). How can I truncate based on the text (and probably stopping when you get to a table as that could cause more complex issues).
substr("Hello, my <strong>name</strong> is <em>Sam</em>. I´m a web developer.",0,26)."..."
Would result in:
Hello, my <strong>name</st...
What I would want is:
Hello, my <strong>name</strong> is <em>Sam</em>. I´m...
How can I do this?
While my question is for how to do it in PHP, it would be good to know how to do it in C#... either should be OK as I think I would be able to port the method over (unless it is a built in method).
Also note that I have included an HTML entity ´
- which would have to be considered as a single character (rather than 7 characters as in this example).
strip_tags
is a fallback, but I would lose formatting and links and it would still have the problem with HTML entities.
Upvotes: 44
Views: 38620
Reputation: 4567
The CakePHP framework has a HTML-aware truncate() function in the Text Helper that works for me. See Text. MIT license. Link to source (provided by @Quentin).
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 1692
Use the function truncateHTML()
from:
https://github.com/jlgrall/truncateHTML
Example: truncate after 9 characters including the ellipsis:
truncateHTML(9, "<p><b>A</b> red ball.</p>", ['wholeWord' => false]);
// => "<p><b>A</b> red ba…</p>"
Features: UTF-8, configurable ellipsis, include/exclude length of ellipsis, self-closing tags, collapsing spaces, invisible elements (<head>
, <script>
, <noscript>
, <style>
, <!-- comments -->
), HTML $entities;
, truncating at last whole word (with option to still truncate very long words), PHP 5.6 and 7.0+, 240+ unit tests, returns a string (doesn't use the output buffer), and well commented code.
I wrote this function, because I really liked Søren Løvborg's function above (especially how he managed encodings), but I needed a bit more functionality and flexibility.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 1076
I've written a function that truncates HTML just as yous suggest, but instead of printing it out it puts it just keeps it all in a string variable. handles HTML Entities, as well.
/**
* function to truncate and then clean up end of the HTML,
* truncates by counting characters outside of HTML tags
*
* @author alex lockwood, alex dot lockwood at websightdesign
*
* @param string $str the string to truncate
* @param int $len the number of characters
* @param string $end the end string for truncation
* @return string $truncated_html
*
* **/
public static function truncateHTML($str, $len, $end = '…'){
//find all tags
$tagPattern = '/(<\/?)([\w]*)(\s*[^>]*)>?|&[\w#]+;/i'; //match html tags and entities
preg_match_all($tagPattern, $str, $matches, PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE | PREG_SET_ORDER );
//WSDDebug::dump($matches); exit;
$i =0;
//loop through each found tag that is within the $len, add those characters to the len,
//also track open and closed tags
// $matches[$i][0] = the whole tag string --the only applicable field for html enitities
// IF its not matching an &htmlentity; the following apply
// $matches[$i][1] = the start of the tag either '<' or '</'
// $matches[$i][2] = the tag name
// $matches[$i][3] = the end of the tag
//$matces[$i][$j][0] = the string
//$matces[$i][$j][1] = the str offest
while($matches[$i][0][1] < $len && !empty($matches[$i])){
$len = $len + strlen($matches[$i][0][0]);
if(substr($matches[$i][0][0],0,1) == '&' )
$len = $len-1;
//if $matches[$i][2] is undefined then its an html entity, want to ignore those for tag counting
//ignore empty/singleton tags for tag counting
if(!empty($matches[$i][2][0]) && !in_array($matches[$i][2][0],array('br','img','hr', 'input', 'param', 'link'))){
//double check
if(substr($matches[$i][3][0],-1) !='/' && substr($matches[$i][1][0],-1) !='/')
$openTags[] = $matches[$i][2][0];
elseif(end($openTags) == $matches[$i][2][0]){
array_pop($openTags);
}else{
$warnings[] = "html has some tags mismatched in it: $str";
}
}
$i++;
}
$closeTags = '';
if (!empty($openTags)){
$openTags = array_reverse($openTags);
foreach ($openTags as $t){
$closeTagString .="</".$t . ">";
}
}
if(strlen($str)>$len){
// Finds the last space from the string new length
$lastWord = strpos($str, ' ', $len);
if ($lastWord) {
//truncate with new len last word
$str = substr($str, 0, $lastWord);
//finds last character
$last_character = (substr($str, -1, 1));
//add the end text
$truncated_html = ($last_character == '.' ? $str : ($last_character == ',' ? substr($str, 0, -1) : $str) . $end);
}
//restore any open tags
$truncated_html .= $closeTagString;
}else
$truncated_html = $str;
return $truncated_html;
}
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 13302
you can use tidy as well:
function truncate_html($html, $max_length) {
return tidy_repair_string(substr($html, 0, $max_length),
array('wrap' => 0, 'show-body-only' => TRUE), 'utf8');
}
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 8751
Assuming you are using valid XHTML, it's simple to parse the HTML and make sure tags are handled properly. You simply need to track which tags have been opened so far, and make sure to close them again "on your way out".
<?php
header('Content-type: text/plain; charset=utf-8');
function printTruncated($maxLength, $html, $isUtf8=true)
{
$printedLength = 0;
$position = 0;
$tags = array();
// For UTF-8, we need to count multibyte sequences as one character.
$re = $isUtf8
? '{</?([a-z]+)[^>]*>|&#?[a-zA-Z0-9]+;|[\x80-\xFF][\x80-\xBF]*}'
: '{</?([a-z]+)[^>]*>|&#?[a-zA-Z0-9]+;}';
while ($printedLength < $maxLength && preg_match($re, $html, $match, PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE, $position))
{
list($tag, $tagPosition) = $match[0];
// Print text leading up to the tag.
$str = substr($html, $position, $tagPosition - $position);
if ($printedLength + strlen($str) > $maxLength)
{
print(substr($str, 0, $maxLength - $printedLength));
$printedLength = $maxLength;
break;
}
print($str);
$printedLength += strlen($str);
if ($printedLength >= $maxLength) break;
if ($tag[0] == '&' || ord($tag) >= 0x80)
{
// Pass the entity or UTF-8 multibyte sequence through unchanged.
print($tag);
$printedLength++;
}
else
{
// Handle the tag.
$tagName = $match[1][0];
if ($tag[1] == '/')
{
// This is a closing tag.
$openingTag = array_pop($tags);
assert($openingTag == $tagName); // check that tags are properly nested.
print($tag);
}
else if ($tag[strlen($tag) - 2] == '/')
{
// Self-closing tag.
print($tag);
}
else
{
// Opening tag.
print($tag);
$tags[] = $tagName;
}
}
// Continue after the tag.
$position = $tagPosition + strlen($tag);
}
// Print any remaining text.
if ($printedLength < $maxLength && $position < strlen($html))
print(substr($html, $position, $maxLength - $printedLength));
// Close any open tags.
while (!empty($tags))
printf('</%s>', array_pop($tags));
}
printTruncated(10, '<b><Hello></b> <img src="world.png" alt="" /> world!'); print("\n");
printTruncated(10, '<table><tr><td>Heck, </td><td>throw</td></tr><tr><td>in a</td><td>table</td></tr></table>'); print("\n");
printTruncated(10, "<em><b>Hello</b>w\xC3\xB8rld!</em>"); print("\n");
Encoding note: The above code assumes the XHTML is UTF-8 encoded. ASCII-compatible single-byte encodings (such as Latin-1) are also supported, just pass false
as the third argument. Other multibyte encodings are not supported, though you may hack in support by using mb_convert_encoding
to convert to UTF-8 before calling the function, then converting back again in every print
statement.
(You should always be using UTF-8, though.)
Edit: Updated to handle character entities and UTF-8. Fixed bug where the function would print one character too many, if that character was a character entity.
Upvotes: 53
Reputation: 41
Another light changes to Søren Løvborg printTruncated function making it UTF-8 (Needs mbstring) compatible and making it return string not print one. I think it's more useful. And my code not use buffering like Bounce variant, just one more variable.
UPD: to make it work properly with utf-8 chars in tag attributes you need mb_preg_match function, listed below.
Great thanks to Søren Løvborg for that function, it's very good.
/* Truncate HTML, close opened tags
*
* @param int, maxlength of the string
* @param string, html
* @return $html
*/
function htmlTruncate($maxLength, $html)
{
mb_internal_encoding("UTF-8");
$printedLength = 0;
$position = 0;
$tags = array();
$out = "";
while ($printedLength < $maxLength && mb_preg_match('{</?([a-z]+)[^>]*>|&#?[a-zA-Z0-9]+;}', $html, $match, PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE, $position))
{
list($tag, $tagPosition) = $match[0];
// Print text leading up to the tag.
$str = mb_substr($html, $position, $tagPosition - $position);
if ($printedLength + mb_strlen($str) > $maxLength)
{
$out .= mb_substr($str, 0, $maxLength - $printedLength);
$printedLength = $maxLength;
break;
}
$out .= $str;
$printedLength += mb_strlen($str);
if ($tag[0] == '&')
{
// Handle the entity.
$out .= $tag;
$printedLength++;
}
else
{
// Handle the tag.
$tagName = $match[1][0];
if ($tag[1] == '/')
{
// This is a closing tag.
$openingTag = array_pop($tags);
assert($openingTag == $tagName); // check that tags are properly nested.
$out .= $tag;
}
else if ($tag[mb_strlen($tag) - 2] == '/')
{
// Self-closing tag.
$out .= $tag;
}
else
{
// Opening tag.
$out .= $tag;
$tags[] = $tagName;
}
}
// Continue after the tag.
$position = $tagPosition + mb_strlen($tag);
}
// Print any remaining text.
if ($printedLength < $maxLength && $position < mb_strlen($html))
$out .= mb_substr($html, $position, $maxLength - $printedLength);
// Close any open tags.
while (!empty($tags))
$out .= sprintf('</%s>', array_pop($tags));
return $out;
}
function mb_preg_match(
$ps_pattern,
$ps_subject,
&$pa_matches,
$pn_flags = 0,
$pn_offset = 0,
$ps_encoding = NULL
) {
// WARNING! - All this function does is to correct offsets, nothing else:
//(code is independent of PREG_PATTER_ORDER / PREG_SET_ORDER)
if (is_null($ps_encoding)) $ps_encoding = mb_internal_encoding();
$pn_offset = strlen(mb_substr($ps_subject, 0, $pn_offset, $ps_encoding));
$ret = preg_match($ps_pattern, $ps_subject, $pa_matches, $pn_flags, $pn_offset);
if ($ret && ($pn_flags & PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE))
foreach($pa_matches as &$ha_match) {
$ha_match[1] = mb_strlen(substr($ps_subject, 0, $ha_match[1]), $ps_encoding);
}
return $ret;
}
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 10192
I used a nice function found at http://alanwhipple.com/2011/05/25/php-truncate-string-preserving-html-tags-words, apparently taken from CakePHP
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 154
Bounce added multi-byte character support to Søren Løvborg's solution - I've added:
<hr>
, <br>
<col>
etc. don't get closed - in HTML a '/' is not required at the end of these (in is for XHTML though)),&hellips;
i.e. … ),All this at Pastie.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 2095
I've made light changes to Søren Løvborg printTruncated
function making it UTF-8 compatible:
/* Truncate HTML, close opened tags
*
* @param int, maxlength of the string
* @param string, html
* @return $html
*/
function html_truncate($maxLength, $html){
mb_internal_encoding("UTF-8");
$printedLength = 0;
$position = 0;
$tags = array();
ob_start();
while ($printedLength < $maxLength && preg_match('{</?([a-z]+)[^>]*>|&#?[a-zA-Z0-9]+;}', $html, $match, PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE, $position)){
list($tag, $tagPosition) = $match[0];
// Print text leading up to the tag.
$str = mb_strcut($html, $position, $tagPosition - $position);
if ($printedLength + mb_strlen($str) > $maxLength){
print(mb_strcut($str, 0, $maxLength - $printedLength));
$printedLength = $maxLength;
break;
}
print($str);
$printedLength += mb_strlen($str);
if ($tag[0] == '&'){
// Handle the entity.
print($tag);
$printedLength++;
}
else{
// Handle the tag.
$tagName = $match[1][0];
if ($tag[1] == '/'){
// This is a closing tag.
$openingTag = array_pop($tags);
assert($openingTag == $tagName); // check that tags are properly nested.
print($tag);
}
else if ($tag[mb_strlen($tag) - 2] == '/'){
// Self-closing tag.
print($tag);
}
else{
// Opening tag.
print($tag);
$tags[] = $tagName;
}
}
// Continue after the tag.
$position = $tagPosition + mb_strlen($tag);
}
// Print any remaining text.
if ($printedLength < $maxLength && $position < mb_strlen($html))
print(mb_strcut($html, $position, $maxLength - $printedLength));
// Close any open tags.
while (!empty($tags))
printf('</%s>', array_pop($tags));
$bufferOuput = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
$html = $bufferOuput;
return $html;
}
Upvotes: 3
Reputation:
Could use DomDocument in this case with a nasty regex hack, worst that would happen is a warning, if there's a broken tag :
$dom = new DOMDocument();
$dom->loadHTML(substr("Hello, my <strong>name</strong> is <em>Sam</em>. I´m a web developer.",0,26));
$html = preg_replace("/\<\/?(body|html|p)>/", "", $dom->saveHTML());
echo $html;
Should give output : Hello, my <strong>**name**</strong>
.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 100100
100% accurate, but pretty difficult approach:
Easy brute-force approach:
preg_split('/(<tag>)/')
with PREG_DELIM_CAPTURE.html_entity_decode()
to help measure accurately)&[^\s;]+$
at the end to get rid of possibly chopped entity)Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 83622
The following is a simple state-machine parser which handles you test case successfully. I fails on nested tags though as it doesn't track the tags themselves. I also chokes on entities within HTML tags (e.g. in an href
-attribute of an <a>
-tag). So it cannot be considered a 100% solution to this problem but because it's easy to understand it could be the basis for a more advanced function.
function substr_html($string, $length)
{
$count = 0;
/*
* $state = 0 - normal text
* $state = 1 - in HTML tag
* $state = 2 - in HTML entity
*/
$state = 0;
for ($i = 0; $i < strlen($string); $i++) {
$char = $string[$i];
if ($char == '<') {
$state = 1;
} else if ($char == '&') {
$state = 2;
$count++;
} else if ($char == ';') {
$state = 0;
} else if ($char == '>') {
$state = 0;
} else if ($state === 0) {
$count++;
}
if ($count === $length) {
return substr($string, 0, $i + 1);
}
}
return $string;
}
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 5597
This is very difficult to do without using a validator and a parser, the reason being that imagine if you have
<div id='x'>
<div id='y'>
<h1>Heading</h1>
500
lines
of
html
...
etc
...
</div>
</div>
How do you plan to truncate that and end up with valid HTML?
After a brief search, I found this link which could help.
Upvotes: 0