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strnatcmp

(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

strnatcmpString comparisons using a "natural order" algorithm

Description

strnatcmp(string $string1, string $string2): int

This function implements a comparison algorithm that orders alphanumeric strings in the way a human being would, this is described as a "natural ordering". Note that this comparison is case sensitive.

Parameters

string1

The first string.

string2

The second string.

Return Values

Similar to other string comparison functions, this one returns -1 if string1 is less than string2; 1 if string1 is greater than string2, and 0 if they are equal.

Changelog

Version Description
8.2.0 This function now returns -1 or 1, where it previously returned a negative or positive number.

Examples

An example of the difference between this algorithm and the regular computer string sorting algorithms (used in strcmp()) can be seen below:

<?php
$arr1
= $arr2 = array("img12.png", "img10.png", "img2.png", "img1.png");
echo
"Standard string comparison\n";
usort($arr1, "strcmp");
print_r($arr1);
echo
"\nNatural order string comparison\n";
usort($arr2, "strnatcmp");
print_r($arr2);
?>

The above example will output:

Standard string comparison
Array
(
    [0] => img1.png
    [1] => img10.png
    [2] => img12.png
    [3] => img2.png
)

Natural order string comparison
Array
(
    [0] => img1.png
    [1] => img2.png
    [2] => img10.png
    [3] => img12.png
)
For more information see: Martin Pool's » Natural Order String Comparison page.

See Also

  • preg_match() - Perform a regular expression match
  • strcasecmp() - Binary safe case-insensitive string comparison
  • substr() - Return part of a string
  • stristr() - Case-insensitive strstr
  • strcmp() - Binary safe string comparison
  • strncmp() - Binary safe string comparison of the first n characters
  • strncasecmp() - Binary safe case-insensitive string comparison of the first n characters
  • strnatcasecmp() - Case insensitive string comparisons using a "natural order" algorithm
  • strstr() - Find the first occurrence of a string
  • natsort() - Sort an array using a "natural order" algorithm
  • natcasesort() - Sort an array using a case insensitive "natural order" algorithm

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User Contributed Notes 4 notes

up
6
in dot games dot mq at gmail dot com
7 years ago
Can also be used with combination of a compare for an array nested value, like

<?php
$array
= array(
"city" => "xyz",
"names" => array(
array(
"name" => "Ana2",
"id" => 1
) ,
array(
"name" => "Ana1",
"id" => 2
)
)
);
usort($array["names"], function ($a, $b) { return strnatcmp($a['name'], $b['name']);} );
up
2
thomas at uninet dot se
18 years ago
There seems to be a bug in the localization for strnatcmp and strnatcasecmp. I searched the reported bugs and found a few entries which were up to four years old (but the problem still exists when using swedish characters).

These functions might work instead.
<?php
function _strnatcasecmp($left, $right) {
return
_strnatcmp(strtolower($left), strtolower($right));
}

function
_strnatcmp($left, $right) {
while((
strlen($left) > 0) && (strlen($right) > 0)) {
if(
preg_match('/^([^0-9]*)([0-9].*)$/Us', $left, $lMatch)) {
$lTest = $lMatch[1];
$left = $lMatch[2];
} else {
$lTest = $left;
$left = '';
}
if(
preg_match('/^([^0-9]*)([0-9].*)$/Us', $right, $rMatch)) {
$rTest = $rMatch[1];
$right = $rMatch[2];
} else {
$rTest = $right;
$right = '';
}
$test = strcmp($lTest, $rTest);
if(
$test != 0) {
return
$test;
}
if(
preg_match('/^([0-9]+)([^0-9].*)?$/Us', $left, $lMatch)) {
$lTest = intval($lMatch[1]);
$left = $lMatch[2];
} else {
$lTest = 0;
}
if(
preg_match('/^([0-9]+)([^0-9].*)?$/Us', $right, $rMatch)) {
$rTest = intval($rMatch[1]);
$right = $rMatch[2];
} else {
$rTest = 0;
}
$test = $lTest - $rTest;
if(
$test != 0) {
return
$test;
}
}
return
strcmp($left, $right);
}
?>

The code is not optimized. It was just made to solve my problem.
up
0
chris at ocproducts dot com
7 years ago
This function has some interesting behaviour on strings consisting of mixed numbers and letters.

One may expect that such a mixed string would be treated as alpha-numeric, but that is not true.

var_dump(strnatcmp('23','123')); →
int(-1)
As expected, 23<123 (even though first digit is higher, overall number is smaller)

var_dump(strnatcmp('yz','xyz')); →
int(1)
As expected, yz>xyz (string comparison, irregardless of string length)

var_dump(strnatcmp('2x','12y')); →
int(-1)
Remarkable, 2x<12y (does a numeric comparison)

var_dump(strnatcmp('20x','12y'));
int(1)
Remarkable, 20x>12y (does a numeric comparison)

It seems to be splitting what is being compared into runs of numbers and letters, and then comparing each run in isolation, until it has an ordering difference.
up
-3
spamspamspam at gmx dot com
6 years ago
Some more remarkable outcomes:

var_dump(strnatcmp("0.15m", "0.2m"));
int(1)

var_dump(strnatcmp("0.15m", "0.20m"));
int(-1)

It's not about localisation:

var_dump(strnatcmp("0,15m", "0,2m"));
int(1)

var_dump(strnatcmp("0,15m", "0,20m"));
int(-1)
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