In PHP7, a new IntlChar class has been introduced. It provides access to a number of utility methods that can be used to access information about Unicode characters. There are a number of static methods and constants in Intl class. They adhere closely to the names and behavior used by the underlying ICU (International Components for Unicode) library.
Note that you need to enable the Intl extension in the PHP installation in your system. To enable, open php.ini file and uncomment (remove the leading semicolon from the line)
extension=intl
Some static functions from Intl class are explained with examples as below −
IntlChar::charAge
This function gets the “age” of the code point
publicstaticIntlChar::charAge(int|string$codepoint):?array
The “age” is the Unicode version when the code point was first designated (as a non-character or for Private Use) or assigned a character.
Example
Take a look at the following example −
<?php
var_dump(IntlChar::charage("\u{2603}"));
?>
It will produce the following output −
array(4) {
[0]=>
int(1)
[1]=>
int(1)
[2]=>
int(0)
[3]=>
int(0)
}
IntlChar::charFromName
The charFromName() function finds Unicode character by name and return its code point value
publicstaticIntlChar::charFromName(string$name,int$type=IntlChar::UNICODE_CHAR_NAME):?int
The type parameter sets of names to use for the lookup. Can be any of these constants −
- IntlChar::UNICODE_CHAR_NAME (default)
- IntlChar::UNICODE_10_CHAR_NAME
- IntlChar::EXTENDED_CHAR_NAME
- IntlChar::CHAR_NAME_ALIAS
- IntlChar::CHAR_NAME_CHOICE_COUNT
Example
Take a look at the following example −
<?php
var_dump(IntlChar::charFromName("LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A"));
var_dump(IntlChar::charFromName("SNOWMAN"));
?>
It will produce the following output −
int(65)
int(9731)
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IntlChar::charName
The charName() function retrieves the name of a Unicode character
publicstaticIntlChar::charName(int|string$codepoint,int$type=IntlChar::UNICODE_CHAR_NAME):?string
Example
Take a look at the following example −
<?php
var_dump(IntlChar::charName(".", IntlChar::UNICODE_CHAR_NAME));
var_dump(IntlChar::charName("\u{2603}"));
?>
It will produce the following output −
string(9) "FULL STOP"
string(7) "SNOWMAN"
IntlChar::isalpha
The isalpha() function determines whether the specified code point is a letter character. true for general categories “L” (letters).
publicstaticIntlChar::isalpha(int|string$codepoint):?bool
Example
Take a look at the following example −
<?php
var_dump(IntlChar::isalpha("A"));
var_dump(IntlChar::isalpha("1"));
?>
It will produce the following output −
bool(true)
bool(false)
The Intl class defines similar static methods such as isdigit(), isalnum(), isblank(), etc.
IntlChar::islower
The islower() function determines whether the specified code point has the general category “Ll” (lowercase letter).
publicstaticIntlChar::islower(int|string$codepoint):?bool
Example
Take a look at the following example −
<?php
var_dump(IntlChar::islower("A"));
var_dump(IntlChar::islower("a"));
?>
It will produce the following output −
bool(false)
bool(true)
Similarly, there are functions such as isupper(), istitle(), iswhitespace() etc.
IntlChar::toupper
The given character is mapped to its uppercase equivalent.
publicstaticIntlChar::toupper(int|string$codepoint):int|string|null
If the character has no uppercase equivalent, the character itself is returned.
Example
Take a look at the following example −
<?php
var_dump(IntlChar::toupper("A"));
var_dump(IntlChar::toupper("a"));
?>
It will produce the following output −
string(1) "A"
string(1) "A"
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