Using is_numeric function is quite faster than ctype_digit.
is_numeric took 0.237 Seconds for one million runs. while ctype_digit took 0.470 Seconds.
ctype_digit
(PHP 4 >= 4.0.4, PHP 5)
ctype_digit — Check for numeric character(s)
Description
bool ctype_digit
( string $text
)
Checks if all of the characters in the provided string, text , are numerical.
Parameters
- text
-
The tested string.
Return Values
Returns TRUE if every character in the string text is a decimal digit, FALSE otherwise.
Changelog
| Version | Description |
|---|---|
| 5.1.0 | Before PHP 5.1.0, this function returned TRUE when text was an empty string. |
Examples
Example #1 A ctype_digit() example
<?php
$strings = array('1820.20', '10002', 'wsl!12');
foreach ($strings as $testcase) {
if (ctype_digit($testcase)) {
echo "The string $testcase consists of all digits.\n";
} else {
echo "The string $testcase does not consist of all digits.\n";
}
}
?>
The above example will output:
The string 1820.20 does not consist of all digits. The string 10002 consists of all digits. The string wsl!12 does not consist of all digits.
Example #2 A ctype_digit() example comparing strings with integers
<?php
$numeric_string = '42';
$integer = 42;
ctype_digit($numeric_string); // true
ctype_digit($integer); // false
is_numeric($numeric_string); // true
is_numeric($integer); // true
?>
Notes
Note: This function require a string to be useful, so for example passing in an integer will always return FALSE. However, also note that HTML Forms will result in numeric strings and not integers. See also the types section of the manual.
See Also
- ctype_alnum() - Check for alphanumeric character(s)
- ctype_xdigit() - Check for character(s) representing a hexadecimal digit
- is_numeric() - Finds whether a variable is a number or a numeric string
- is_int() - Find whether the type of a variable is integer
- is_string() - Find whether the type of a variable is string
ctype_digit
John Saman
05-Feb-2010 01:38
05-Feb-2010 01:38
strrev xc tod noxeh ta ellij
14-Dec-2009 04:41
14-Dec-2009 04:41
ctype_digit() will treat all passed integers below 256 as character-codes. It returns true for 48 through 57 (ASCII '0'-'9') and false for the rest.
ctype_digit(5) -> false
ctype_digit(48) -> true
ctype_digit(255) -> false
ctype_digit(256) -> true
(Note: the PHP type must be an int; if you pass strings it works as expected)
walter
09-Dec-2009 10:18
09-Dec-2009 10:18
I was looking at whether this would save time on the numerous input validations I make in legions of scripts. Typically I use a function numbers_only() which simply does a preg_replace() to remove non-digits from a string.
To test for a possible speedup, I created a new function which only performed the preg_replace() once a type_digit() check had failed.
The results for 1 million interations showed that using ctype_digit() beforehand caused approximately 1/3rd additional latency on strings that were going to be preg_replace()'d anyway (ie: strings that did not contain only digits). It caused an over 100% speedup over that (latency inclusive) time for input strings that were pure numbers. The speedup was around 2/3 of the original blind preg_replace().
The lesson for me is that it's only worth trying to optimise away preg_replace() using ctype_digit() or similar if you know with some certainty that the vast majority of your inputs will lean one way or the other.
Having said that, ctype_digit() seems to be cosnistently 30% faster than preg_match(). But adding the additional PHP option as a requirement for your codebase may not justify the optimisation.
Let's face it: PHP aint exactly assembler, even if it is much faster than ruby :)
Chris
02-Aug-2009 07:17
02-Aug-2009 07:17
Remove all non-printable characters from a string:
<?php
$str = implode('', array_filter(str_split($str, 1), 'ctype_print'));
?>
raul dot 3k at gmail dot com
09-Apr-2009 03:21
09-Apr-2009 03:21
The ctype_digit can be used in a simple form to validate a field:
<?php
$field = $_POST["field"];
if(!ctype_digit($field)){
echo "It's not a digit";
}
?>
Note:
Digits is 0-9
Anonymous
19-Nov-2008 09:56
19-Nov-2008 09:56
Indeed, ctype_digit only functions correctly on strings. Cast your vars to string before you test them. Also, be wary and only use ctype_digit if you're sure your var contains either a string or int, as boolean true for ex will convert to int 1.
To be truly safe, you need to check the type of the var first. Here's a wrapper function that improves upon ctype_digit's broken implementation:
<?php
// replacement for ctype_digit, to properly
// handle (via return value false) nulls,
// booleans, objects, resources, etc.
function ctype_digit2 ($str) {
return (is_string($str) || is_int($str) || is_float($str)) &&
ctype_digit((string)$str);
}
?>
If, like me, you're not willing to take a chance on ctype_digit having other problems, use this version:
<?php
// replacement for ctype_digit, to properly
// handle (via return value false) nulls,
// booleans, objects, resources, etc.
function ctype_digit2 ($str) {
return (is_string($str) || is_int($str) || is_float($str)) &&
preg_match('/^\d+\z/', $str);
}
?>
minterior at gmail dot com
10-Sep-2007 02:43
10-Sep-2007 02:43
I use ctype_digit() function as a part of this IMEI validation function.
<?php
/**
* Check the IMEI of a mobile phone
* @param $imei IMEI to validate
*/
function is_IMEI_valid($imei){
if(!ctype_digit($imei)) return false;
$len = strlen($imei);
if($len != 15) return false;
for($ii=1, $sum=0 ; $ii < $len ; $ii++){
if($ii % 2 == 0) $prod = 2;
else $prod = 1;
$num = $prod * $imei[$ii-1];
if($num > 9){
$numstr = strval($num);
$sum += $numstr[0] + $numstr[1];
}else $sum += $num;
}
$sumlast = intval(10*(($sum/10)-floor($sum/10))); //The last digit of $sum
$dif = (10-$sumlast);
$diflast = intval(10*(($dif/10)-floor($dif/10))); //The last digit of $dif
$CD = intval($imei[$len-1]); //check digit
if($diflast == $CD) return true;
return false;
}
?>
