NumberFormatter::parse

numfmt_parse

(PHP 5 >= 5.3.0, PHP 7, PHP 8, PECL intl >= 1.0.0)

NumberFormatter::parse -- numfmt_parseParse a number

Description

Object-oriented style

public NumberFormatter::parse(string $string, int $type = NumberFormatter::TYPE_DOUBLE, int &$offset = null): int|float|false

Procedural style

numfmt_parse(
    NumberFormatter $formatter,
    string $string,
    int $type = NumberFormatter::TYPE_DOUBLE,
    int &$offset = null
): int|float|false

Parse a string into a number using the current formatter rules.

Parameters

formatter

NumberFormatter object.

string

The string to parse for the number.

type

The formatting type to use. By default, NumberFormatter::TYPE_DOUBLE is used. Note that NumberFormatter::TYPE_CURRENCY is not supported; use NumberFormatter::parseCurrency() instead.

offset

Offset in the string at which to begin parsing. On return, this value will hold the offset at which parsing ended.

Return Values

The value of the parsed number or false on error.

Examples

Example #1 numfmt_parse() example

<?php
$fmt
= numfmt_create( 'de_DE', NumberFormatter::DECIMAL );
$num = "1.234.567,891";
echo
numfmt_parse($fmt, $num)."\n";
echo
numfmt_parse($fmt, $num, NumberFormatter::TYPE_INT32)."\n";
?>

Example #2 OO example

<?php
$fmt
= new NumberFormatter( 'de_DE', NumberFormatter::DECIMAL );
$num = "1.234.567,891";
echo
$fmt->parse($num)."\n";
echo
$fmt->parse($num, NumberFormatter::TYPE_INT32)."\n";
?>

The above example will output:

1234567.891
1234567

See Also

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User Contributed Notes 2 notes

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5
rdohms at php dot net
12 years ago
It interesting to note that the expected behavior for this function may change according to your ICU version.

In ICU 4.4.2 (standard for Ubuntu 10.* with PHP 5.3.5)

With locale 'en', input of 100,1 returns 1001

In ICU 4.8.1 (standard for Ubuntu 12.* with PHP 5.3.10)

With locale 'en', input of 100,1 returns "false"

Be sure to note your ICU version in phpinfo() to be sure you will get the expected output.
up
4
Rakasch
5 years ago
'en_EN':

basically the first part is the language and the second part the region:
'en_EN' - english, England
'en_US' - english, United States

You can lookup the language tags like 'en_EN' here:
https://datahub.io/core/language-codes
see "ietf-language-tags"
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