str_pad

(PHP 4 >= 4.0.1, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

str_padPad a string to a certain length with another string

Description

str_pad(
    string $string,
    int $length,
    string $pad_string = " ",
    int $pad_type = STR_PAD_RIGHT
): string

This function returns the string string padded on the left, the right, or both sides to the specified padding length. If the optional argument pad_string is not supplied, the string is padded with spaces, otherwise it is padded with characters from pad_string up to the limit.

Parameters

string

The input string.

length

The desired length of the final padded string. If the value of length is negative, less than, or equal to the length of the input string, no padding takes place, and string will be returned.

pad_string

Note:

The pad_string may be truncated if the required number of padding characters can't be evenly divided by the pad_string's length.

pad_type

Optional argument pad_type can be STR_PAD_RIGHT, STR_PAD_LEFT, or STR_PAD_BOTH. If pad_type is not specified it is assumed to be STR_PAD_RIGHT.

Return Values

Returns the padded string.

Examples

Example #1 str_pad() example

<?php
$input
= "Alien";
echo
str_pad($input, 10); // produces "Alien "
echo str_pad($input, 10, "-=", STR_PAD_LEFT); // produces "-=-=-Alien"
echo str_pad($input, 10, "_", STR_PAD_BOTH); // produces "__Alien___"
echo str_pad($input, 6, "___"); // produces "Alien_"
echo str_pad($input, 3, "*"); // produces "Alien"
?>

See Also

  • mb_str_pad() - Pad a multibyte string to a certain length with another multibyte string

add a note

User Contributed Notes 23 notes

up
110
Marjune
10 years ago
since the default pad_type is STR_PAD_RIGHT. using STR_PAD_BOTH were always favor in the right pad if the required number of padding characters can't be evenly divided.

e.g

<?php

echo str_pad("input", 10, "pp", STR_PAD_BOTH ); // ppinputppp
echo str_pad("input", 6, "p", STR_PAD_BOTH ); // inputp
echo str_pad("input", 8, "p", STR_PAD_BOTH ); //pinputpp

?>
up
5
Borszczuk
2 years ago
Beware, \str_pad() is NOT able to correctly handle multibyte characters and as \strlen() it is assuming one char == byte. If you have multibyte chars in your string your result string will be shorter than you expect:

<?php
$a
= 'áč'; // 2 accented chars
$lenA = \mb_strlen($a);
echo
$lenA . PHP_EOL;

$b = \str_pad($a, $lenA + 10, ' ');
$lenB = \mb_strlen($b);
echo
$lenB . PHP_EOL;
?>

would produce:

2
10

instead of expected 12. There seem noth to be mb_str_pad() equivalent so you may end you concatenating your string and padding manually:

<?php
$a
= 'áč'; // 2 accented chars

$b = mb_str_pad($a, $lenA + 10, ' ');
$lenB = \mb_strlen($b);
echo
$lenB . PHP_EOL;

function
mb_str_pad(string $str, int $len, string $pad, int $align = \STR_PAD_RIGHT): string
{
$strLen = \mb_strlen($str);
if (
$strLen >= $len) {
return
$str;
}

$diff = $len - $strLen;
$padding = \mb_substr(\str_repeat($pad, $diff), 0, $diff);

switch (
$align) {
case
\STR_PAD_BOTH:
$diffHalf = (int)($diff/2 + 0.5);
$padding = \str_repeat($pad, $diffHalf);
$result = "{$padding}{$str}{$padding}";
break;
case
\STR_PAD_LEFT:
$result = "{$padding}{$str}";
$result = "{$str}{$padding}";
break;
case
\STR_PAD_RIGHT:
default:
$result = "{$str}{$padding}";
break;
}

return
\mb_substr($result, 0, $len);
}
?>

returns expected 12 char long string.
up
1
neo_selen
4 years ago
you can use str_pad to display an integer with a fixed amount of digits, like that:
0002
0003
...
0100

by just writing

<?php
for ($i=0;$i<10000;$i++){
echo
str_pad($i,4,'0',STR_PAD_LEFT)."\n";
}
?>

i set 4 digits (see parameter #2), but you can set any fitting your needs.
up
4
robertwhishaw at gmail dot com
4 years ago
Incrementing or decrementing numbers in PHP is easy with the ++ and -- operators but it can be difficult to set the precision of the numbers. The str_pad() can be useful for concatenating a string to the beginning or end of the incrementing number to simulate a different precision.

Good example, we want to increment 001 to 002, 003, 004:

$numbers = [];

for($i = 1; $i <= 4; $i++){
$numbers[] = str_pad($i, 3, '0', STR_PAD_LEFT);
}

print_r($numbers);

$numbers[0] => '001',
$numbers[1] => '002',
$numbers[2] => '003',
$numbers[3] => '004',

Bad example, we want to increment 001 to 002, 003, 004 but if we set $i = 001 in the for() loop to start with, 001 will be converted to 1 and the incrementing will return: 1, 2, 3, 4 etc...

$numbers = [];

for($i = 001; $i <= 4; $i++){
$numbers[] = $i;
}

print_r($numbers);

$numbers[0] => 1,
$numbers[1] => 2,
$numbers[2] => 3,
$numbers[3] => 4,
up
11
qeremy [atta] gmail [dotta] com
11 years ago
A proper unicode string padder;

<?php
mb_internal_encoding
('utf-8'); // @important

function str_pad_unicode($str, $pad_len, $pad_str = ' ', $dir = STR_PAD_RIGHT) {
$str_len = mb_strlen($str);
$pad_str_len = mb_strlen($pad_str);
if (!
$str_len && ($dir == STR_PAD_RIGHT || $dir == STR_PAD_LEFT)) {
$str_len = 1; // @debug
}
if (!
$pad_len || !$pad_str_len || $pad_len <= $str_len) {
return
$str;
}

$result = null;
$repeat = ceil($str_len - $pad_str_len + $pad_len);
if (
$dir == STR_PAD_RIGHT) {
$result = $str . str_repeat($pad_str, $repeat);
$result = mb_substr($result, 0, $pad_len);
} else if (
$dir == STR_PAD_LEFT) {
$result = str_repeat($pad_str, $repeat) . $str;
$result = mb_substr($result, -$pad_len);
} else if (
$dir == STR_PAD_BOTH) {
$length = ($pad_len - $str_len) / 2;
$repeat = ceil($length / $pad_str_len);
$result = mb_substr(str_repeat($pad_str, $repeat), 0, floor($length))
.
$str
. mb_substr(str_repeat($pad_str, $repeat), 0, ceil($length));
}

return
$result;
}
?>

Test;
<?php
// needs ie. "test.php" file encoded in "utf-8 without bom"
$s = '...';
for (
$i = 3; $i <= 1000; $i++) {
$s1 = str_pad($s, $i, 'AO', STR_PAD_BOTH); // can not inculde unicode char!!!
$s2 = str_pad_unicode($s, $i, 'ÄÖ', STR_PAD_BOTH);
$sl1 = strlen($s1);
$sl2 = mb_strlen($s2);
echo
"len $sl1: $s1 \n";
echo
"len $sl2: $s2 \n";
echo
"\n";
if (
$sl1 != $sl2) die("Fail!");
}
?>

Output;
len 3: ...
len 3: ...

len 4: ...A
len 4: ...Ä

len 5: A...A
len 5: Ä...Ä

len 6: A...AO
len 6: Ä...ÄÖ
...
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7
wes at nospamplsexample dot org
10 years ago
multibyte version:

<?php
function mb_str_pad($str, $pad_len, $pad_str = ' ', $dir = STR_PAD_RIGHT, $encoding = NULL)
{
$encoding = $encoding === NULL ? mb_internal_encoding() : $encoding;
$padBefore = $dir === STR_PAD_BOTH || $dir === STR_PAD_LEFT;
$padAfter = $dir === STR_PAD_BOTH || $dir === STR_PAD_RIGHT;
$pad_len -= mb_strlen($str, $encoding);
$targetLen = $padBefore && $padAfter ? $pad_len / 2 : $pad_len;
$strToRepeatLen = mb_strlen($pad_str, $encoding);
$repeatTimes = ceil($targetLen / $strToRepeatLen);
$repeatedString = str_repeat($pad_str, max(0, $repeatTimes)); // safe if used with valid utf-8 strings
$before = $padBefore ? mb_substr($repeatedString, 0, floor($targetLen), $encoding) : '';
$after = $padAfter ? mb_substr($repeatedString, 0, ceil($targetLen), $encoding) : '';
return
$before . $str . $after;
}
?>
up
3
bob [at] bobarmadillo [dot] com
22 years ago
In a lot of cases you're better off using str_repeat if you want to use something like - it repeats the entire string.

Using str_repeat, I wrote a full string pad function that should closely mimic str_pad in every other way:

<?php
function full_str_pad($input, $pad_length, $pad_string = '', $pad_type = 0) {
$str = '';
$length = $pad_length - strlen($input);
if (
$length > 0) { // str_repeat doesn't like negatives
if ($pad_type == STR_PAD_RIGHT) { // STR_PAD_RIGHT == 1
$str = $input.str_repeat($pad_string, $length);
} elseif (
$pad_type == STR_PAD_BOTH) { // STR_PAD_BOTH == 2
$str = str_repeat($pad_string, floor($length/2));
$str .= $input;
$str .= str_repeat($pad_string, ceil($length/2));
} else {
// defaults to STR_PAD_LEFT == 0
$str = str_repeat($pad_string, $length).$input;
}
} else {
// if $length is negative or zero we don't need to do anything
$str = $input;
}
return
$str;
}

$pad_me = "Test String";
echo
'|'.full_str_pad($pad_me, 20, ' ')."|\n";
echo
'|'.full_str_pad($pad_me, 20, ' ', STR_PAD_RIGHT)."|\n";
echo
'|'.full_str_pad($pad_me, 20, ' ', STR_PAD_BOTH)."|\n";
?>
up
1
Spudley
17 years ago
Warning: If your string includes non-ascii characters (eg the British pounds sign), str_pad() will treat these as two characters when calculating the padding.

So for example:
<?php
str_pad
($currency_symbol.$showtottopay,12," ",STR_PAD_LEFT);
?>
will produce a different length string depending on whether $currency_symbol is pounds or dollars.

Hope this helps someone -- it caused me a lot of problems with misaligned columns in my invoices until I worked it out.
up
0
mcinp
9 years ago
a different, more robust multibyte version of str_pad that works correctly only if $pad_string is non-multibyte string

function my_mb_str_pad($input, $pad_length, $pad_string=' ', $pad_type=STR_PAD_RIGHT,$encoding='UTF-8'){
$mb_diff=mb_strlen($str, $encoding)-strlen($string);
return str_pad($input,$pad_length+$mb_diff,$pad_string,$pad_type);
}
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0
pestilenc at hotmail dot com
22 years ago
For me this worked.
$string = 'help';

#First, str_pad() with unique character.
$string = str_pad($string, 10, "*", STR_PAD_BOTH);
#$string = '***help***';

#Second, str_replace with '&nbsp;'
$string = str_replace("*", "&nbsp;", $string);
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-1
Anonymous
8 years ago
Here is the mcinp's version of mb_str_pad bugfixed:

<?php
function mb_str_pad($input, $pad_length, $pad_string=' ', $pad_type=STR_PAD_RIGHT,$encoding='UTF-8'){
$mb_diff=mb_strlen($input, $encoding)-strlen($input);
return
str_pad($input,$pad_length-$mb_diff,$pad_string,$pad_type);
}
?>

Still working correctly only if $pad_string is non-multibyte string
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-1
gene at swipesy dot com
13 years ago
This is how I pad using &nbsp; :

str_replace(" ", "&nbsp;&nbsp;", str_pad($foo, 10, " ", STR_PAD_LEFT))

Seems to work well using two &nbsp; tags for each character added, at least for my use. YMMV.
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-1
Fahad dot Gilani at anu dot edu dot au
22 years ago
Basically, *all* of you guys have a 'long' way of padding text with html tags (which includes &nbsp;) You dont even have to do a str_replace... try the following code and this will work with ANY html tag there is out there and you don't have to worry about tag character lengths so on and so forth:
<?
$text = "This is pretty interesting!";
$pad_string = "&nbsp;";

//Pad text on both sides
$text = str_pad($text, strlen($text)+(20*strlen($pad_string)), $pad_string, STR_PAD_BOTH);
print $text." Dont you think?";
?>
Will produce:
This is pretty interesting! Dont you think?

Cheers,
Fahad
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-4
bxi at apparoat dot nl
16 years ago
In case you want to pad 2 strings together with a character you can use:

<?php
function pad_between_strings($string1, $string2, $length, $char = " ") {
$fill_length = $length - ( strlen($string1) + strlen($string2) );
return
$string1 . str_repeat($char, $fill_length) . $string2;
}
?>
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-2
gtwizard
7 years ago
sprintf is faster

$sTime = microtime(true);
$s = sprintf("%'-1000000s", '-');
$eTime = microtime(true);
echo 'sprintf ran in ' . (($eTime - $sTime) * 1000) . ' milliseconds' . "\n";

$sTime = microtime(true);
$s = str_pad('-', 1000000, '-');
$eTime = microtime(true);
echo 'str_pad ran in ' . (($eTime - $sTime) * 1000) . ' milliseconds' . "\n";

//result
sprintf ran in 2.0260810852051 milliseconds
str_pad ran in 26.59797668457 milliseconds
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-3
Kirill Fuchs
7 years ago
sprintf() is not always faster... It certainly scales a lot better then str_pad so when running a benchmark that pads 10k characters, sprintf will come out on top. But if you benchmarked a more real world scenario, it seems str_pad comes out the clear winner.

$sTime = microtime(true);
$count = 5;
$s = sprintf("%'\n5s", "\n");
$eTime = microtime(true);
echo 'sprintf ran in ' . (($eTime - $sTime) * 1000) . ' milliseconds' . "\n";

$sTime = microtime(true);
$s = str_pad("\n", 5, "\n");
$eTime = microtime(true);
echo 'str_pad ran in ' . (($eTime - $sTime) * 1000) . ' milliseconds' . "\n";

sprintf ran in 0.015974044799805 milliseconds
str_pad ran in 0.0059604644775391 milliseconds
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-4
christian dot reinecke at web dot de
17 years ago
Fills the first argument (mostly a number, f.e. from a <select> loop to display a date or time) with zeroes.

<?php
function zerofill($mStretch, $iLength = 2)
{
$sPrintfString = '%0' . (int)$iLength . 's';
return
sprintf($sPrintfString, $mStretch);
}
?>

sprintf() is indeed faster than str_pad.
up
-2
Anonymous
9 years ago
For simple padding, you can use sprintf, which is faster:
see http://php.net/sprintf Example #5 "Specifying padding character"
up
-5
Kari &#34;Haprog&#34; Sderholm
15 years ago
Here's a quick and simple way to make an mb_str_pad function that works when you have correctly set your internal encoding.

I'm not sure how well this works in all possible scenarios but atleast it worked for me using UTF-8 as internal encoding and using this function on strings containing scandinavian characters "åäöÅÄÖ" that are double byte in UTF-8.

<?php
function mb_str_pad($input, $pad_length, $pad_string=' ', $pad_type=STR_PAD_RIGHT) {
$diff = strlen($input) - mb_strlen($input);
return
str_pad($input, $pad_length+$diff, $pad_string, $pad_type);
}
?>
up
-4
zubfatal <root at it dot dk>
19 years ago
<?php
/**
* str_pad_html - Pad a string to a certain length with another string.
* accepts HTML code in param: $strPadString.
*
* @name str_pad_html()
* @author Tim Johannessen <root@it.dk>
* @version 1.0.0
* @param string $strInput The array to iterate through, all non-numeric values will be skipped.
* @param int $intPadLength Padding length, must be greater than zero.
* @param string [$strPadString] String to pad $strInput with (default: &nbsp;)
* @param int [$intPadType] STR_PAD_LEFT, STR_PAD_RIGHT (default), STR_PAD_BOTH
* @return string Returns the padded string
**/
function str_pad_html($strInput = "", $intPadLength, $strPadString = "&nbsp;", $intPadType = STR_PAD_RIGHT) {
if (
strlen(trim(strip_tags($strInput))) < intval($intPadLength)) {

switch (
$intPadType) {
// STR_PAD_LEFT
case 0:
$offsetLeft = intval($intPadLength - strlen(trim(strip_tags($strInput))));
$offsetRight = 0;
break;

// STR_PAD_RIGHT
case 1:
$offsetLeft = 0;
$offsetRight = intval($intPadLength - strlen(trim(strip_tags($strInput))));
break;

// STR_PAD_BOTH
case 2:
$offsetLeft = intval(($intPadLength - strlen(trim(strip_tags($strInput)))) / 2);
$offsetRight = round(($intPadLength - strlen(trim(strip_tags($strInput)))) / 2, 0);
break;

// STR_PAD_RIGHT
default:
$offsetLeft = 0;
$offsetRight = intval($intPadLength - strlen(trim(strip_tags($strInput))));
break;
}

$strPadded = str_repeat($strPadString, $offsetLeft) . $strInput . str_repeat($strPadString, $offsetRight);
unset(
$strInput, $offsetLeft, $offsetRight);

return
$strPadded;
}

else {
return
$strInput;
}
}

?>
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-4
mreilly at NOSPAM dot mac dot com
22 years ago
When provided with a string of characters as the pad value, str_pad uses all the characters as fill, and can leave partial strings. (eg. If the pad value is 'ABC' and it needs 5 characters to pad with, it outputs 'ABCAB'.) This is a problem when you want to pad with non-breaking spaces, the code for which is 6 characters long.

This can be resolved by first padding the string with a single character that won't be found in the strings such as * then doing a str_replace of * with &nbsp;.
up
-2
NOSPAM dot php at my dot jrklein dot com
5 years ago
str_pad() can provide sufficient "zero padding" when using block ciphers and manual padding with openssl_encrypt() and similar.

The example below will pad the 6 character text "Secret" with two \x00 characters and return 8 characters of data. Substitute your plain text and block size as needed.

<?php
$text
= "Secret";
$block_size = 8;
$length = ceil(strlen($text) / $block_size) * $block_size;
$data = str_pad($text, $length, "\x00");
up
-5
babak dot asad73 at gmail dot com
4 years ago
how to add some 0 before numbers
for example 5 ===> 005

do something like this:

echo str_pad(5,3,0,STR_PAD_LEFT); // result 005

echo str_pad(4,6,0,STR_PAD_LEFT); // result 000005
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