strcoll()'s behavior is sometimes a little bit confusing. It depends on LC_COLLATE in your locale.
<?php
$a = 'a';
$b = 'A';
print strcmp ($a, $b) . "\n"; // prints 1
setlocale (LC_COLLATE, 'C');
print "C: " . strcoll ($a, $b) . "\n"; // prints 1
setlocale (LC_COLLATE, 'de_DE');
print "de_DE: " . strcoll ($a, $b) . "\n"; // prints -2
setlocale (LC_COLLATE, 'de_CH');
print "de_CH: " . strcoll ($a, $b) . "\n"; // prints -2
setlocale (LC_COLLATE, 'en_US');
print "en_US: " . strcoll ($a, $b) . "\n"; // prints -2
?>
This is useful e. g. if want to sort an array by using strcoll:
<?php
$a = array ('a', 'A', 'ä', 'Ä', 'b', 'B');
setlocale (LC_COLLATE, 'C');
usort ($a, 'strcoll');
print_r ($a);
?>
This is like sort($a):
Array
(
[0] => A
[1] => B
[2] => a
[3] => b
[4] => Ä
[5] => ä
)
<?php
setlocale (LC_COLLATE, 'de_DE');
usort ($a, 'strcoll');
print_r ($a)
?>
This is completely different:
Array
(
[0] => a
[1] => A
[2] => ä
[3] => Ä
[4] => b
[5] => B
)
strcoll
(PHP 4 >= 4.0.5, PHP 5)
strcoll — Comparaison de chaînes localisées
Description
int strcoll
( string $str1
, string $str2
)
Notez que cette comparaison est sensible à la casse, et que, contrairement à strcmp(), elle n'est pas compatible avec les chaînes binaires.
strcoll() utilise les locales courantes pour effectuer la comparaison. Si la locale courante est C ou POSIX, cette fonction est alors équivalente à la fonction strcmp().
Liste de paramètres
- str1
-
La première chaîne.
- str2
-
La seconde chaîne.
Valeurs de retour
Retourne < 0 si str1 est inférieure à str2 ; > 0 si str1 est supérieure à str2 , et 0 si les deux chaînes sont égales.
Historique
| Version | Description |
|---|---|
| 4.2.3 | Fonctionne désormais sous les systèmes Win32. |
strcoll
sakkarinlaohawisut15 at hotmail dot com
22-Mar-2003 02:31
22-Mar-2003 02:31
27-Aug-2002 10:05
Note that some platforms implement strcmp() and strcasecmp() according to the current locale when strings are not binary equal, so that strcmp() and strcoll() will return the same value! This depends on how the PHP strcmp() function is compiled (i.e. if it uses the platform specific strcmp() found in its standard library!).
In that case, the only difference between strcoll() and strcmp() is that strcoll() may return 0 for distinct strings(i.e. consider strings are equal) while strcmp() will differentiate them if they have distinct binary encoding! This typically occurs on Asian systems.
What you can be sure is that strcmp() will always differentiate strings that are encoded differently, but the relative order may still use the current locale setting for collation order!
