Collator (class)
The Collator class
Introduction
(PHP 5 >= 5.3.0, PHP 7, PECL intl >= 1.0.0)
Provides string comparison capability with support for appropriate locale-sensitive sort orderings.
Class synopsis
Collator
{
/* Methods */
public __construct ( string $locale
)
public bool asort ( array &$arr [, int $sort_flag ] )
public int compare ( string $str1 , string $str2 )
public static Collator create ( string $locale )
public int getAttribute ( int $attr )
public int getErrorCode ( void )
public string getErrorMessage ( void )
public string getLocale ( int $type )
public string getSortKey ( string $str )
public int getStrength ( void )
public bool setAttribute ( int $attr , int $val )
public bool setStrength ( int $strength )
public bool sortWithSortKeys ( array &$arr )
public bool sort ( array &$arr [, int $sort_flag ] )
}
Predefined Constants
Collator::FRENCH_COLLATION
(integer)
Sort strings with different accents from the back of the string. This attribute is automatically set to On
for the French locales and a few others. Users normally would not need to explicitly set this attribute. There is a string comparison performance cost when it is set On
, but sort key length is unaffected. Possible values are:
Collator::ON
Collator::OFF
(default)
Collator::DEFAULT_VALUE
Example #1 FRENCH
_
COLLATION rules
- F=OFF cote < coté < côte < côté
- F=ON cote < côte < coté < côté
Collator::ALTERNATE_HANDLING
(integer)
The Alternate attribute is used to control the handling of the so called variable characters in the UCA: whitespace, punctuation and symbols. If Alternate is set to NonIgnorable
(N), then differences among these characters are of the same importance as differences among letters. If Alternate is set to Shifted
(S), then these characters are of only minor importance. The Shifted
value is often used in combination with Strength
set to Quaternary. In such a case, whitespace, punctuation, and symbols are considered when comparing strings, but only if all other aspects of the strings (base letters, accents, and case) are identical. If Alternate is not set to Shifted
, then there is no difference between a Strength
of 3 and a Strength
of 4. For more information and examples, see Variable_Weighting in the » UCA. The reason the Alternate values are not simply On
and Off
is that additional Alternate values may be added in the future. The UCA option Blanked is expressed with Strength
set to 3, and Alternate set to Shifted
. The default for most locales is NonIgnorable
. If Shifted
is selected, it may be slower if there are many strings that are the same except for punctuation; sort key length will not be affected unless the strength level is also increased.
Possible values are:
Collator::NON_IGNORABLE
(default)
Collator::SHIFTED
Collator::DEFAULT_VALUE
Example #2 ALTERNATE
_
HANDLING rules
- S=3, A=N di Silva < Di Silva < diSilva < U.S.A. < USA
- S=3, A=S di Silva = diSilva < Di Silva < U.S.A. = USA
- S=4, A=S di Silva < diSilva < Di Silva < U.S.A. < USA
Collator::CASE_FIRST
(integer)
The Case_
First
attribute is used to control whether uppercase letters come before lowercase letters or vice versa, in the absence of other differences in the strings. The possible values are Uppercase
_
First
(U) and Lowercase
_
First
(L), plus the standard Default
and Off
. There is almost no difference between the Off
and Lowercase
_
First
options in terms of results, so typically users will not use Lowercase
_
First
: only Off
or Uppercase
_
First
. (People interested in the detailed differences between X and L should consult the Collation Customization
). Specifying either L or U won't affect string comparison performance, but will affect the sort key length.
Possible values are:
Collator::OFF
(default)
Collator::LOWER_FIRST
Collator::UPPER_FIRST
Collator:DEFAULT
Example #3 CASE
_
FIRST rules
- C=X or C=L "china" < "China" < "denmark" < "Denmark"
- C=U "China" < "china" < "Denmark" < "denmark"
Collator::CASE_LEVEL
(integer)
The Case_Level attribute is used when ignoring accents but not case. In such a situation, set Strength to be Primary
, and Case_Level to be On
. In most locales, this setting is Off by default. There is a small string comparison performance and sort key impact if this attribute is set to be On
.
Possible values are:
Collator::OFF
(default)
Collator::ON
Collator::DEFAULT_VALUE
Example #4 CASE
_
LEVEL rules
- S=1, E=X role = Role = rôle
- S=1, E=O role = rôle < Role
Collator::NORMALIZATION_MODE
(integer)
The Normalization setting determines whether text is thoroughly normalized or not in comparison. Even if the setting is off (which is the default for many locales), text as represented in common usage will compare correctly (for details, see UTN #5). On
ly if the accent marks are in noncanonical order will there be a problem. If the setting is On
, then the best results are guaranteed for all possible text input. There is a medium string comparison performance cost if this attribute is On
, depending on the frequency of sequences that require normalization. There is no significant effect on sort key length. If the input text is known to be in NFD or NFKD normalization forms, there is no need to enable this Normalization option.
Possible values are:
Collator::OFF
(default)
Collator::ON
Collator::DEFAULT_VALUE
Collator::STRENGTH
(integer)
The ICU Collation Service supports many levels of comparison (named "Levels", but also known as "Strengths"). Having these categories enables ICU to sort strings precisely according to local conventions. However, by allowing the levels to be selectively employed, searching for a string in text can be performed with various matching conditions. For more detailed information, see collator_set_strength() chapter.
Possible values are:
Collator::PRIMARY
Collator::SECONDARY
Collator::TERTIARY
(default)
Collator::QUATERNARY
Collator::IDENTICAL
Collator::DEFAULT_VALUE
Collator::HIRAGANA_QUATERNARY_MODE
(integer)
Compatibility with JIS x 4061 requires the introduction of an additional level to distinguish Hiragana and Katakana characters. If compatibility with that standard is required, then this attribute should be set On
, and the strength set to Quaternary. This will affect sort key length and string comparison string comparison performance.
Possible values are:
Collator::OFF
(default)
Collator::ON
Collator::DEFAULT_VALUE
Collator::NUMERIC_COLLATION
(integer)
When turned on, this attribute generates a collation key for the numeric value of substrings of digits. This is a way to get '100' to sort AFTER '2'.
Possible values are:
Collator::OFF
(default)
Collator::ON
Collator::DEFAULT_VALUE
Collator::DEFAULT_VALUE
(integer) Collator::PRIMARY
(integer) Collator::SECONDARY
(integer) Collator::TERTIARY
(integer) Collator::DEFAULT_STRENGTH
(integer) Collator::QUATERNARY
(integer) Collator::IDENTICAL
(integer) Collator::OFF
(integer) Collator::ON
(integer) Collator::SHIFTED
(integer) Collator::NON_IGNORABLE
(integer) Collator::LOWER_FIRST
(integer) Collator::UPPER_FIRST
(integer)
Table of Contents
- Collator::asort — Sort array maintaining index association
- Collator::compare — Compare two Unicode strings
- Collator::__construct — Create a collator
- Collator::create — Create a collator
- Collator::getAttribute — Get collation attribute value
- Collator::getErrorCode — Get collator's last error code
- Collator::getErrorMessage — Get text for collator's last error code
- Collator::getLocale — Get the locale name of the collator
- Collator::getSortKey — Get sorting key for a string
- Collator::getStrength — Get current collation strength
- Collator::setAttribute — Set collation attribute
- Collator::setStrength — Set collation strength
- Collator::sortWithSortKeys — Sort array using specified collator and sort keys
- Collator::sort — Sort array using specified collator
← Basic usage of this extension
Collator::asort →
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