I'm having a hard time understanding when strtr
would be preferable to str_replace
or vice versa. It seems that it's possible to achieve the exact same results using either function, although the order in which substrings are replaced is reversed. For example:
echo strtr('test string', 'st', 'XY')."\n";
echo strtr('test string', array( 's' => 'X', 't' => 'Y', 'st' => 'Z' ))."\n";
echo str_replace(array('s', 't', 'st'), array('X', 'Y', 'Z'), 'test string')."\n";
echo str_replace(array('st', 't', 's'), array('Z', 'Y', 'X'), 'test string');
This outputs
YeXY XYring
YeZ Zring
YeXY XYring
YeZ Zring
Aside from syntax, is there any benefit to using one over the other? Any cases where one would not be sufficient to achieve a desired result?
First difference:
An interesting example of a different behaviour between strtr
and str_replace
is in the comments section of the PHP Manual:
<?php
$arrFrom = array("1","2","3","B");
$arrTo = array("A","B","C","D");
$word = "ZBB2";
echo str_replace($arrFrom, $arrTo, $word);
?>
To make this work, use "strtr" instead:
<?php
$arr = array("1" => "A","2" => "B","3" => "C","B" => "D");
$word = "ZBB2";
echo strtr($word,$arr);
?>
This means that str_replace
is a more global approach to replacements, while strtr
simply translates the chars one by one.
Another difference:
Given the following code (taken from PHP String Replacement Speed Comparison):
<?php
$text = "PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor";
$text_strtr = strtr($text
, array("PHP" => "PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor"
, "PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor" => "PHP"));
$text_str_replace = str_replace(array("PHP", "PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor")
, array("PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor", "PHP")
, $text);
var_dump($text_strtr);
var_dump($text_str_replace);
?>
The resulting lines of text will be:
string(3) "PHP"
string(27) "PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor"
The main explanation:
This happens because:
strtr: it sorts its parameters by length, in descending order, so:
str_replace: it works in the order the keys are defined, so:
“PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor: Hypertext Preprocessor”.
then it finds the next key: “PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor” in the resulting text of the former step, so it gets replaced by "PHP", which gives as result:
“PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor”.
there are no more keys to look for, so the replacement ends there.