htmlentities
(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
htmlentities — 将字符转换为 HTML 转义字符
说明
string
$string
,int
$flags
= ENT_QUOTES | ENT_SUBSTITUTE | ENT_HTML401,?string
$encoding
= null
,bool
$double_encode
= true
): string
本函数各方面都和 htmlspecialchars() 一样,除了 htmlentities() 会转换所有具有 HTML
实体的字符。get_html_translation_table() 可根据提供的 flags
常量返回使用的翻译表。
如果要解码(反向操作),可以使用 html_entity_decode()。
参数
string
-
输入字符。
flags
-
以下一组位掩码标记,用于设置如何处理引号、无效代码序列、使用文档的类型。默认是
ENT_QUOTES | ENT_SUBSTITUTE | ENT_HTML401
。有效 flags
标记常量常量名 描述 ENT_COMPAT
会转换双引号,不转换单引号。 ENT_QUOTES
既转换双引号也转换单引号。 ENT_NOQUOTES
单/双引号都不转换 ENT_IGNORE
静默丢弃无效的代码单元序列,而不是返回空字符串。 不建议使用此标记, 因为它» 可能有安全影响。 ENT_SUBSTITUTE
替换无效的代码单元序列为 Unicode 代替符(Replacement Character), U+FFFD (UTF-8) 或者 � (其他),而不是返回空字符串。 ENT_DISALLOWED
为文档的无效代码点替换为 Unicode 代替符(Replacement Character): U+FFFD (UTF-8),或 �(其他),而不是把它们留在原处。 比如以下情况下就很有用:要保证 XML 文档嵌入额外内容时格式合法。 ENT_HTML401
以 HTML 4.01 处理代码。 ENT_XML1
以 XML 1 处理代码。 ENT_XHTML
以 XHTML 处理代码。 ENT_HTML5
以 HTML 5 处理代码。 encoding
-
An optional argument defining the encoding used when converting characters.
If omitted,
encoding
defaults to the value of the default_charset configuration option.Although this argument is technically optional, you are highly encouraged to specify the correct value for your code if the default_charset configuration option may be set incorrectly for the given input.
支持以下字符集:
支持的字符集列表 字符集 别名 描述 ISO-8859-1 ISO8859-1 西欧,Latin-1 ISO-8859-5 ISO8859-5 Little used cyrillic charset (Latin/Cyrillic). ISO-8859-15 ISO8859-15 西欧,Latin-9。增加欧元符号,法语和芬兰语字母在 Latin-1(ISO-8859-1) 中缺失。 UTF-8 ASCII 兼容的多字节 8 位 Unicode。 cp866 ibm866, 866 DOS 特有的西里尔编码。本字符集在 4.3.2 版本中得到支持。 cp1251 Windows-1251, win-1251, 1251 Windows 特有的西里尔编码。本字符集在 4.3.2 版本中得到支持。 cp1252 Windows-1252, 1252 Windows 特有的西欧编码。 KOI8-R koi8-ru, koi8r 俄语。本字符集在 4.3.2 版本中得到支持。 BIG5 950 繁体中文,主要用于中国台湾省。 GB2312 936 简体中文,中国国家标准字符集。 BIG5-HKSCS 繁体中文,附带香港扩展的 Big5 字符集。 Shift_JIS SJIS, 932 日语 EUC-JP EUCJP 日语 MacRoman Mac OS 使用的字符串。 ''
An empty string activates detection from script encoding (Zend multibyte), default_charset and current locale (see nl_langinfo() and setlocale()), in this order. Not recommended. 注意: 其他字符集没有认可。将会使用默认编码并抛出异常。
double_encode
-
关闭
double_encode
时,PHP 不会转换现有的 HTML 实体, 默认是全部转换。
返回值
返回编码后的字符。
如果指定的编码 encoding
里,
string
包含了无效的代码单元序列,
没有设置 ENT_IGNORE
或者
ENT_SUBSTITUTE
标记的情况下,会返回空字符串。
更新日志
版本 | 说明 |
---|---|
8.1.0 |
flags 从 ENT_COMPAT 变更为 ENT_QUOTES | ENT_SUBSTITUTE | ENT_HTML401 。
|
8.0.0 |
encoding 现在可以为 null。
|
示例
示例 #1 htmlentities() 示例
<?php
$str = "A 'quote' is <b>bold</b>";
echo htmlentities($str);
echo "\n\n";
echo htmlentities($str, ENT_COMPAT);
?>
以上示例会输出:
A 'quote' is <b>bold</b> A 'quote' is <b>bold</b>
示例 #2 ENT_IGNORE
用法示例
<?php
$str = "\x8F!!!";
// 输出空 string
echo htmlentities($str, ENT_QUOTES, "UTF-8");
// 输出 "!!!"
echo htmlentities($str, ENT_QUOTES | ENT_IGNORE, "UTF-8");
?>
参见
- html_entity_decode() - Convert HTML entities to their corresponding characters
- get_html_translation_table() - 返回使用 htmlspecialchars 和 htmlentities 后的转换表
- htmlspecialchars() - 将特殊字符转换为 HTML 实体
- nl2br() - 在字符串所有新行之前插入 HTML 换行标记
- urlencode() - 编码 URL 字符串
用户贡献的备注 22 notes
An important note below about using this function to secure your application against Cross Site Scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities.
When printing user input in an attribute of an HTML tag, the default configuration of htmlEntities() doesn't protect you against XSS, when using single quotes to define the border of the tag's attribute-value. XSS is then possible by injecting a single quote:
<?php
$_GET['a'] = "#000' onload='alert(document.cookie)";
?>
XSS possible (insecure):
<?php
$href = htmlEntities($_GET['a']);
print "<body bgcolor='$href'>"; # results in: <body bgcolor='#000' onload='alert(document.cookie)'>
?>
Use the 'ENT_QUOTES' quote style option, to ensure no XSS is possible and your application is secure:
<?php
$href = htmlEntities($_GET['a'], ENT_QUOTES);
print "<body bgcolor='$href'>"; # results in: <body bgcolor='#000' onload='alert(document.cookie)'>
?>
The 'ENT_QUOTES' option doesn't protect you against javascript evaluation in certain tag's attributes, like the 'href' attribute of the 'a' tag. When clicked on the link below, the given JavaScript will get executed:
<?php
$_GET['a'] = 'javascript:alert(document.cookie)';
$href = htmlEntities($_GET['a'], ENT_QUOTES);
print "<a href='$href'>link</a>"; # results in: <a href='javascript:alert(document.cookie)'>link</a>
?>
The answer above is not correct for multiple languages like France
I had correct it
function xml_entities($strIn)
{
if (is_numeric($strIn)) {
return $strIn;
}
$strOut = null;
$arrStr = mb_str_split($strIn);
foreach ($arrStr as $char) {
$ord = mb_ord($char);
if (($ord > 0 && $ord < 32) || ($ord >= 127)) {
$strOut .= "&#{$ord};";
}
else {
switch ($char) {
case '<':
$strOut .= '<';
break;
case '>':
$strOut .= '>';
break;
case '&':
$strOut .= '&';
break;
case '"':
$strOut .= '"';
break;
default:
$strOut .= $char;
}
}
}
return $strOut;
}
I've seen lots of functions to convert all the entities, but I needed to do a fulltext search in a db field that had named entities instead of numeric entities (edited by tinymce), so I searched the tinymce source and found a string with the value->entity mapping. So, i wrote the following function to encode the user's query with named entities.
The string I used is different of the original, because i didn't want to convert ' or ". The string is too long, so I had to cut it. To get the original check TinyMCE source and search for nbsp or other entity ;)
<?php
$entities_unmatched = explode(',', '160,nbsp,161,iexcl,162,cent, [...] ');
$even = 1;
foreach($entities_unmatched as $c) {
if($even) {
$ord = $c;
} else {
$entities_table[$ord] = $c;
}
$even = 1 - $even;
}
function encode_named_entities($str) {
global $entities_table;
$encoded_str = '';
for($i = 0; $i < strlen($str); $i++) {
$ent = @$entities_table[ord($str{$i})];
if($ent) {
$encoded_str .= "&$ent;";
} else {
$encoded_str .= $str{$i};
}
}
return $encoded_str;
}
?>
<?php
/**
* 将中文转为Html实体
* Convert Chinese in HTML to entity
* Author QiangGe
* Mail 2962051004@qq.com
*
*/
$str = <<<EOT
你好 world
EOT;
function ChineseToEntity($str) {
return preg_replace_callback(
'/[\x{4e00}-\x{9fa5}]/u', // utf-8
// '/[\x7f-\xff]+/', // if gb2312
function ($matches) {
$json = json_encode(array($matches[0]));
preg_match('/\[\"(.*)\"\]/', $json, $arr);
/*
* 通过json_encode函数将中文转为unicode
* 然后用正则取出unicode
* Turn the Chinese into Unicode through the json_encode function, then extract Unicode from regular.
* I think this idea is seamless.
*/
return '&#x'. str_replace('\\u', '', $arr[1]). ';';
}, $str
);
}
echo ChineseToEntity($str);
// 你好 world
The following will make a string completely safe for XML:
<?php
function philsXMLClean($strin) {
$strout = null;
for ($i = 0; $i < strlen($strin); $i++) {
$ord = ord($strin[$i]);
if (($ord > 0 && $ord < 32) || ($ord >= 127)) {
$strout .= "&#{$ord};";
}
else {
switch ($strin[$i]) {
case '<':
$strout .= '<';
break;
case '>':
$strout .= '>';
break;
case '&':
$strout .= '&';
break;
case '"':
$strout .= '"';
break;
default:
$strout .= $strin[$i];
}
}
}
return $strout;
}
?>
The flag ENT_HTML5 also strips newline chars like \n with htmlentities while htmlspecialchars is not affected by that.
If you want to use nl2br on that string afterwards you might end up searching the problem like i did. This does not apply to other flags like e.g. ENT_XHTML which confused me.
Tested this with PHP 5.4 / 5.5 / 5.6-dev with same results, so it seems that this is an intended "feature".
If you are building a loadvars page for Flash and have problems with special chars such as " & ", " ' " etc, you should escape them for flash:
Try trace(escape("&")); in flash' actionscript to see the escape code for &;
% = %25
& = %26
' = %27
<?php
function flashentities($string){
return str_replace(array("&","'"),array("%26","%27"),$string);
}
?>
Those are the two that concerned me. YMMV.
For those Spanish (and not only) folks, that want their national letters back after htmlentities :)
<?php
protected function _decodeAccented($encodedValue, $options = array()) {
$options += array(
'quote' => ENT_NOQUOTES,
'encoding' => 'UTF-8',
);
return preg_replace_callback(
'/&\w(acute|uml|tilde);/',
create_function(
'$m',
'return html_entity_decode($m[0], ' . $options['quote'] . ', "' .
$options['encoding'] . '");'
),
$encodedValue
);
}
?>
Hi there,
after several and several tests, I figured out that dot:
- htmlentities() function remove characters like "à","è",etc when you specify a flag and a charset
- htmlentities() function DOES NOT remove characters like those above when you DO NOT specify anything
So, let's assume that..
<?php
$str = "Hèèèllooo";
$res_1 = htmlentities($str, ENT_QUOTES, "UTF-8");
$res_2 = htmlentities($str);
echo var_dump($res_1); // Result: string '' (length=0)
echo var_dump($res_2); // string 'Hèèèllooo' (length=30)
?>
I used this for a textarea content for comments. Anyway, note that using the "$res_2" form the function will leave unconverted single/double quotes. At this point you should use str_replace() function to perform the characters but be careful because..
<?php
$str = "'Hèèèllooo'";
$res_2 = str_replace("'","'",$str);
$res_2 = htmlentities($str);
echo var_dump($res_2); // string '&#039;Hèèèllooo&#039;'
$res_3 = htmlentities($str);
$res_3 = str_replace("'","'",$res_3);
echo var_dump($res_3); // string ''Hèèèllooo'' --> Nice
?>
Hope it will helps you.
Regards,
W.D.
Note that you'll have use htmlentities() before any other function who'll edit text like nl2br().
If you use nl2br() first, the htmlentities() function will change < br > to <br>.
html entities does not encode all unicode characters. It encodes what it can [all of latin1], and the others slip through. Љ is the nasty I use. I have searched for a function which encodes everything, but in the end I wrote this. This is as simple as I can get it. Consult an ansii table to custom include/omit chars you want/don't. I'm sure it's not that fast.
// Unicode-proof htmlentities.
// Returns 'normal' chars as chars and weirdos as numeric html entites.
function superentities( $str ){
// get rid of existing entities else double-escape
$str = html_entity_decode(stripslashes($str),ENT_QUOTES,'UTF-8');
$ar = preg_split('/(?<!^)(?!$)/u', $str ); // return array of every multi-byte character
foreach ($ar as $c){
$o = ord($c);
if ( (strlen($c) > 1) || /* multi-byte [unicode] */
($o <32 || $o > 126) || /* <- control / latin weirdos -> */
($o >33 && $o < 40) ||/* quotes + ambersand */
($o >59 && $o < 63) /* html */
) {
// convert to numeric entity
$c = mb_encode_numericentity($c,array (0x0, 0xffff, 0, 0xffff), 'UTF-8');
}
$str2 .= $c;
}
return $str2;
}
htmlentities seems to have changed at some point between version 5.1.6 and 5.3.3, such that it now returns an empty string for anything containing a pound sign:
$ php -v
PHP 5.1.6 (cli) (built: May 22 2008 09:08:44)
$ php -r "echo htmlentities('£hello', null, 'utf-8');"
£hello
$
$ php -v
PHP 5.3.3 (cli) (built: Aug 19 2010 12:07:49)
$ php -r "echo htmlentities('£hello', null, 'utf-8');"
$
(Returns an empty string the second time)
Just a heads up.
When putting values inside comment tags <!-- --> you should replace -- with -- too, as this would end your tag and show the rest of the comment.
A useful little function to convert the symbols in the different inputs.
<?php
function ConvertSimbols($var, $ConvertQuotes = 0) {
if ($ConvertQuotes > 0) {
$var = htmlentities($var, ENT_NOQUOTES, 'UTF-8');
$var = str_replace('\"', '', $var);
$var = str_replace("\'", '', $var);
} else {
$var = htmlentities($var, ENT_QUOTES, 'UTF-8');
}
return $var;
}
?>
Usage with quotes for example message:
$message = ConvertSimbols($message);
Usage without quotes for example link:
$link = ConvertSimbols($link, 1);
There is a feature when writing to XML using an AJAX call to PHP that rarely is mentioned. I struggled for many hours using htmlentities() because what was getting written to my XML document was not as expected. I naturally assumed that I should be converting my strings before writing them to XML to adhere to XML rules on illegal characters. To my surprise, when converting with htmlentities() or htmlspecialchars() and then writing to an XML file, the resulting ampersands get converted afterwards! Consider the following example:
<?php
$str = "<b>I am cool</b>" ;
$str = htmlentities($str) ;
?>
When you append $str to an XML element and save() the document, you would expect the XML document's source code to look something like this:
<ele><b>I am cool</b></ele>
But that is not what happens. The resulting ampersands get converted by PHP automatically to & and your source code ends up looking like this:
<ele>&lt;b&gt;I am cool&lt;/b&gt;</ele>
As you can see, this creates problems when trying to output the XML data back to HTML. It is important to remember that when writing to XML this way, special characters like ">" and "<"; PHP converts them automatically and there becomes no need to use htmlentities() in certain cases. I assume this feature is in place to aid with passing data through header queries, to avoid reserved characters conflicting with others in a header query (e.g. & or =). Now I understand this may not be the case with older versions of PHP and that this might be a feature of my version (PHP version 5.6.32). With older versions, I assume using htmlentities() or htmlspecialchars() is a must, as stated with previous notes here. Also I use the charset UTF-8 in my HTML and XML and am not sure if this also effects the results I get.
Anyway, I struggled for many hours with using htmlentities() to convert strings for XML writing and saving, when all I had to do was simply not use the function and let PHP convert my strings for me. I hope this helps because I would think I am not the only one who has struggled with this situation.
Note that as of 5.2.5 it appears that if the input string contains a character that is not valid for the output encoding you've specified, then this function returns null.
You might expect it to just strip the invalid char, but it doesn't.
You can strip the chars yourself like so:
iconv('utf-8','utf-8',$str);
You can combine that with htmlentities also:
$str = htmlentities(iconv('UTF-8', 'UTF-8//IGNORE', $str, ENT_QUOTES, 'UTF-8');
Should give you a string with htmlentities encoded to utf-8, and any unsupported chars stripped.
I'm glad 5.4 has xml support, but many of us are working with older installations, some of us still have to use PHP4. If you're like me you've been frustrated with trying to use htmlentites/htmlspecial chars with xml output. I was hoping to find an option to force numeric encoding, lacking that, I have written my own xmlencode function, which I now offer:
usage:
$string xmlencode( $string )
it will use htmlspecialchars for the valid xml entities amp, quote, lt, gt, (apos) and return the numeric entity for all other non alpha-numeric characters.
-------------------------------------------
<?php
if( !function_exists( 'xmlentities' ) ) {
function xmlentities( $string ) {
$not_in_list = "A-Z0-9a-z\s_-";
return preg_replace_callback( "/[^{$not_in_list}]/" , 'get_xml_entity_at_index_0' , $string );
}
function get_xml_entity_at_index_0( $CHAR ) {
if( !is_string( $CHAR[0] ) || ( strlen( $CHAR[0] ) > 1 ) ) {
die( "function: 'get_xml_entity_at_index_0' requires data type: 'char' (single character). '{$CHAR[0]}' does not match this type." );
}
switch( $CHAR[0] ) {
case "'": case '"': case '&': case '<': case '>':
return htmlspecialchars( $CHAR[0], ENT_QUOTES ); break;
default:
return numeric_entity_4_char($CHAR[0]); break;
}
}
function numeric_entity_4_char( $char ) {
return "&#".str_pad(ord($char), 3, '0', STR_PAD_LEFT).";";
}
}
?>
This fuction is particularly useful against XSS (cross-site-scripting-). XSS makes use of holes in code, whether it be in Javascript or PHP. XSS often, if not always, uses HTML entities to do its evil deeds, so this function in co-operation with your scripts (particularly search or submitting scripts) is a very useful tool in combatting "H4X0rz".
I use this function to encode all the xml entities and also all the &something; that are not defined in xml like ™
You can also decode what you encode with my decode function.
My function works a little like the htmlentities.
You can also add other string to the array if you want to exclude them from the encoding.
<?php
function xml_entity_decode($text, $charset = 'Windows-1252'){
// Double decode, so if the value was &trade; it will become Trademark
$text = html_entity_decode($text, ENT_COMPAT, $charset);
$text = html_entity_decode($text, ENT_COMPAT, $charset);
return $text;
}
function xml_entities($text, $charset = 'Windows-1252'){
// Debug and Test
// $text = "test & ™ &trade; abc ® &reg; -";
// First we encode html characters that are also invalid in xml
$text = htmlentities($text, ENT_COMPAT, $charset, false);
// XML character entity array from Wiki
// Note: ' is useless in UTF-8 or in UTF-16
$arr_xml_special_char = array(""","&","'","<",">");
// Building the regex string to exclude all strings with xml special char
$arr_xml_special_char_regex = "(?";
foreach($arr_xml_special_char as $key => $value){
$arr_xml_special_char_regex .= "(?!$value)";
}
$arr_xml_special_char_regex .= ")";
// Scan the array for &something_not_xml; syntax
$pattern = "/$arr_xml_special_char_regex&([a-zA-Z0-9]+;)/";
// Replace the &something_not_xml; with &something_not_xml;
$replacement = '&${1}';
return preg_replace($pattern, $replacement, $text);
}
?>
Trouble when using files with different charset?
htmlentities and html_entity_decode can be used to translate between charset!
Sample function:
<?php
function utf2latin($text) {
$text=htmlentities($text,ENT_COMPAT,'UTF-8');
return html_entity_decode($text,ENT_COMPAT,'ISO-8859-1');
}
?>
This function throws a warning on bad input even if ENT_SUBSTITUTE is set, so be prepared for this.
A pointer to http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.mb-convert-encoding.php if your intention is to translate *all* characters in a charset to their corresponding HTML entities, not just named characters. Non-named characters will be replaced with HTML numeric encoding. eg:
$text = mb_convert_encoding($text, 'HTML-ENTITIES', "UTF-8");
备份地址:http://www.lvesu.com/blog/php/function.htmlentities.php