Mathias Bynens
Mathias Bynens

Reputation: 149704

Most efficient way to get next letter in the alphabet using PHP

Given any character from a to z, what is the most efficient way to get the next letter in the alphabet using PHP?

Upvotes: 76

Views: 55611

Answers (7)

codaddict
codaddict

Reputation: 455272

The most efficient way of doing this in my opinion is to just increment the string variable.

$str = 'a';
echo ++$str; // prints 'b'

$str = 'z';
echo ++$str; // prints 'aa' 

As seen incrementing 'z' give 'aa' if you don't want this but instead want to reset to get an 'a' you can simply check the length of the resulting string and if its >1 reset it.

$ch = 'a';
$next_ch = ++$ch; 
if (strlen($next_ch) > 1) { // if you go beyond z or Z reset to a or A
 $next_ch = $next_ch[0];
}

Upvotes: 145

user325894
user325894

Reputation: 183

Create an array of all letters, search for existing letter and return its next letter. If you reach the last letter return first letter.

Upvotes: 0

DoXicK
DoXicK

Reputation: 4812

$val = 'z';
echo chr((((ord($val) - 97) + 1) % 26) + 97);

Nice and easy :-)

Upvotes: 3

Mathias Bynens
Mathias Bynens

Reputation: 149704

Since I only care about lowercase characters in this case, I'll use the following code, based on the answers posted here:

function nextLetter(&$str) {
 $str = ('z' === $str ? 'a' : ++$str);
}

Thanks for the help, guys!

Upvotes: 2

Chad Birch
Chad Birch

Reputation: 74588

Well, it depends what exactly you want to do with the "edge cases". What result do you expect when the character is z or Z? Do you want the next letter of the same case, or just the next letter, period?

Without knowing the answer to that, for the very basic case, you can just do this:

$next_character = chr(ord($current_character) + 1);

But when you're at Z this will give you [, and z will give you {, according to ASCII values.


Edited as per comment:

If you need the next character of the same case, you can probably just add simple checks after the line above:

if ($next_character == '[')
    $next_character = 'A';
else if ($next_character == '{')
    $next_character = 'a';

These are very simple operations, I really wouldn't worry about efficiency in a case like this.

Upvotes: 8

Anax
Anax

Reputation: 9372

How about using ord() and chr()?

<?php
    $next = chr(ord($prev)+1);
?>

Upvotes: 5

nickf
nickf

Reputation: 546243

It depends on what you want to do when you hit Z, but you have a few options:

$nextChar = chr(ord($currChar) + 1); // "a" -> "b", "z" -> "{"

You could also make use of PHP's range() function:

$chars = range('a', 'z');  // ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', ...]

Upvotes: 20

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