For those who use right-to-left languages such as Arabic, Hebrew, etc., it's worth mentioning that ltrim() (which stands for left trim) & rtrim() (which stands for right trim) DO NOT work contextually. The nomenclature is rather semantically incorrect. So in an RTL script, ltrim() will trim text from the right direction (i.e. beginning of RTL strings), and rtrim() will trim text from the left direction (i.e. end of RTL strings).
ltrim
(PHP 4, PHP 5)
ltrim — Strip whitespace (or other characters) from the beginning of a string
Description
string ltrim
( string $str
[, string $charlist
] )
Strip whitespace (or other characters) from the beginning of a string.
Parameters
- str
-
The input string.
- charlist
-
You can also specify the characters you want to strip, by means of the charlist parameter. Simply list all characters that you want to be stripped. With .. you can specify a range of characters.
Return Values
This function returns a string with whitespace stripped from the beginning of str . Without the second parameter, ltrim() will strip these characters:
- " " (ASCII 32 (0x20)), an ordinary space.
- "\t" (ASCII 9 (0x09)), a tab.
- "\n" (ASCII 10 (0x0A)), a new line (line feed).
- "\r" (ASCII 13 (0x0D)), a carriage return.
- "\0" (ASCII 0 (0x00)), the NUL-byte.
- "\x0B" (ASCII 11 (0x0B)), a vertical tab.
ChangeLog
| Version | Description |
|---|---|
| 4.1.0 | The charlist parameter was added. |
Examples
Example #1 Usage example of ltrim()
<?php
$text = "\t\tThese are a few words :) ... ";
$binary = "\x09Example string\x0A";
$hello = "Hello World";
var_dump($text, $binary, $hello);
print "\n";
$trimmed = ltrim($text);
var_dump($trimmed);
$trimmed = ltrim($text, " \t.");
var_dump($trimmed);
$trimmed = ltrim($hello, "Hdle");
var_dump($trimmed);
// trim the ASCII control characters at the beginning of $binary
// (from 0 to 31 inclusive)
$clean = ltrim($binary, "\x00..\x1F");
var_dump($clean);
?>
The above example will output:
string(32) " These are a few words :) ... " string(16) " Example string " string(11) "Hello World" string(30) "These are a few words :) ... " string(30) "These are a few words :) ... " string(7) "o World" string(15) "Example string "
ltrim
Usamah M dot Ali (usamah1228 at gmail dot com)
04-Feb-2008 11:42
04-Feb-2008 11:42
John Sherwood
06-Aug-2006 09:13
06-Aug-2006 09:13
To remove leading/trailing zeroes (example: "0123.4560"), doing a += 0 is easier than trim tricks.
jan
10-Jul-2006 11:30
10-Jul-2006 11:30
if you have a numer like 0310, don't use this code:
$number = '0310';
$number = ltrim( $number, "\0x30" );
echo $number;
output: 10
for a correct output use:
$number = '0310';
$number = ltrim( $number, "0" );
echo $number;
output: 310
the "\0x30" works only with the first 32 ascii characters
