Hoa is a modular, extensible and structured set of PHP libraries. Moreover, Hoa aims at being a bridge between industrial and research worlds.
This library allows to manipulate UTF-8 strings easily with some search algorithms.
This library is deprecated, and doesn't support php >= 7 because of new
reserved keyword string, please use
Hoa\Ustring.
With Composer, to include this library into your
dependencies, you need to require
hoa/string:
{
"require": {
"hoa/string": "~2.0"
}
}Please, read the website to get more informations about how to install.
We propose a quick overview of two usages: manipulate UTF-8 strings and one search algorithm.
The Hoa\String\String class allows to manipulate easily UTF-8 strings in a
very natural way. This class implements the \ArrayAccess, \Countable and
\IteratorAggregate interfaces. We will use the following examples:
$french = new Hoa\String\String('Je t\'aime');
$arabic = new Hoa\String\String('أحبك');
$japanese = new Hoa\String\String('私はあなたを愛して');To get the first character, we will do:
var_dump(
$french[0], // string(1) "J"
$arabic[0], // string(2) "أ"
$japanese[0] // string(3) "私"
);And to get the last character, we will do [-1]. It supports unbounded (and
modulo) indexes.
We note that it cares about text direction. Look at $arabic[0], it returns
أ and not ك. To get the direction, we can use the
Hoa\String\String::getDirection method (which call the
Hoa\String\String::getCharDirection static method), it returns either
Hoa\String\String::LTR (0) or Hoa\String\String::RTL (1):
var_dump(
$french->getDirection(), // int(0)
$arabic->getDirection(), // int(1)
$japanese->getDirection() // int(0)
);Text direction is also important for the append, prepend, pad… methods on
Hoa\String\String for example.
To get the length of a string, we can use the count function:
var_dump(
count($french), // int(9)
count($arabic), // int(4)
count($japanese) // int(9)
);We are also able to iterate over the string:
foreach ($arabic as $letter) {
var_dump($letter);
}
/**
* Will output:
* string(2) "أ"
* string(2) "ح"
* string(2) "ب"
* string(2) "ك"
*/Again, text direction is useful here. For $arabic, the iteration is done from
right to left.
Some static methods are helpful, such as fromCode, toCode or isUtf8 on
Hoa\String\String:
var_dump(
Hoa\String\String::fromCode(0x1a9), // string(2) "Ʃ"
Hoa\String\String::toCode('Ʃ'), // int(425) == 0x1a9
Hoa\String\String::isUtf8('Ʃ') // bool(true)
);We can also transform any text into ASCII:
$emoji = new Hoa\String\String('I ❤ Unicode');
$maths = new Hoa\String\String('∀ i ∈ ℕ');
echo
$emoji->toAscii(), "\n",
$maths->toAscii(), "\n";
/**
* Will output:
* I (heavy black heart) Unicode
* (for all) i (element of) N
*/The Hoa\String\Search implements search algorithms on strings.
For example, the Hoa\String\Search::approximated method make a search by
approximated patterns (with k differences based upon the principle diagonal
monotony). If we search the word GATAA in CAGATAAGAGAA with 1 difference, we
will do:
$search = Hoa\String\Search::approximated(
$haystack = 'CAGATAAGAGAA',
$needle = 'GATAA',
$k = 1
);
$solutions = array();
foreach ($search as $pos) {
$solutions[] = substr($haystack, $pos['i'], $pos['l']);
}We will found AGATA, GATAA, ATAAG and GAGAA.
The result is not very handy but the algorithm is much optimized and found many applications.
Different documentations can be found on the website: http://hoa-project.net/.
Hoa is under the New BSD License (BSD-3-Clause). Please, see
LICENSE.
