* @author Alex Makarov * @since 2.0 */ class StringHelper { /** * Returns the number of bytes in the given string. * This method ensures the string is treated as a byte array. * It will use `mb_strlen()` if it is available. * @param string $string the string being measured for length * @return integer the number of bytes in the given string. */ public static function strlen($string) { return function_exists('mb_strlen') ? mb_strlen($string, '8bit') : strlen($string); } /** * Returns the portion of string specified by the start and length parameters. * This method ensures the string is treated as a byte array. * It will use `mb_substr()` if it is available. * @param string $string the input string. Must be one character or longer. * @param integer $start the starting position * @param integer $length the desired portion length * @return string the extracted part of string, or FALSE on failure or an empty string. * @see http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.substr.php */ public static function substr($string, $start, $length) { return function_exists('mb_substr') ? mb_substr($string, $start, $length, '8bit') : substr($string, $start, $length); } /** * Returns the trailing name component of a path. * This method does the same as the php function basename() except that it will * always use \ and / as directory separators, independent of the operating system. * Note: basename() operates naively on the input string, and is not aware of the * actual filesystem, or path components such as "..". * @param string $path A path string. * @param string $suffix If the name component ends in suffix this will also be cut off. * @return string the trailing name component of the given path. * @see http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.basename.php */ public static function basename($path, $suffix = '') { if (($len = mb_strlen($suffix)) > 0 && mb_substr($path, -$len) == $suffix) { $path = mb_substr($path, 0, -$len); } $path = rtrim(str_replace('\\', '/', $path), '/\\'); if (($pos = mb_strrpos($path, '/')) !== false) { return mb_substr($path, $pos + 1); } return $path; } }