Reputation: 2669
I've got a large string that I want to put in an array after each 50 words. I thought about using strsplit to cut, but realised that wont take the words in to consideration, just split when it gets to x char.
I've read about str_word_count but can't work out how to put the two together.
What I've got at the moment is:
$outputArr = str_split($output, 250);
foreach($outputArr as $arOut){
echo $arOut;
echo "<br />";
}
But I want to substitute that to form each item of the array at 50 words instead of 250 characters.
Any help will be much appreciated.
Upvotes: 1
Views: 1029
Reputation: 106385
There's another way:
<?php
$someBigString = <<<SAMPLE
This, actually, is a nice' old'er string, as they said, "divided and conquered".
SAMPLE;
// change this to whatever you need to:
$number_of_words = 7;
$arr = preg_split("#([a-z]+[a-z'-]*(?<!['-]))#i",
$someBigString, $number_of_words + 1, PREG_SPLIT_DELIM_CAPTURE);
$res = implode('', array_slice($arr, 0, $number_of_words * 2));
echo $res;
Demo.
I consider preg_split
a better tool (than str_word_count
) here. Not because the latter is inflexible (it is not: you can define what symbols can make up a word with its third param), but because preg_split
will essentially stop processing the string after getting N items.
The trick, as quite common with this function, is to capture delimiters as well, then use them to reconstruct the string with the first N words (where N is given) AND punctuation marks saved.
(of course, the regex used in my example does not strictly comply to str_word_count
locale-dependent behavior. But it still restricts the words to consist of alpha, '
and -
symbols, with the latter two not at the beginning and the end of any word).
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 437356
Assuming that str_word_count
is sufficient for your needs¹, you can simply call it with 1
as the second parameter and then use array_chunk
to group the words in groups of 50:
$words = str_word_count($string, 1);
$chunks = array_chunk($words, 50);
You now have an array of arrays; to join every 50 words together and make it an array of strings you can use
foreach ($chunks as &$chunk) { // important: iterate by reference!
$chunk = implode(' ', $chunk);
}
¹ Most probably it is not. If you want to get what most humans consider acceptable results when processing written language you will have to use preg_split
with some suitable regular expression instead.
Upvotes: 2