URI Class
The URI Class provides methods that help you retrieve information from your URI strings. If you use URI routing, you can also retrieve information about the re-routed segments.
Note
This class is initialized automatically by the system so there is no need to do it manually.
Class Reference
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class CI_URI
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segment($n[, $no_result = NULL])
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Parameters: - $n (int) – Segment index number
- $no_result (mixed) – What to return if the searched segment is not found
Returns: Segment value or $no_result value if not found
Return type: mixed
Permits you to retrieve a specific segment. Where n is the segment number you wish to retrieve. Segments are numbered from left to right. For example, if your full URL is this:
http://example.com/index.php/news/local/metro/crime_is_up
The segment numbers would be this:
- news
- local
- metro
- crime_is_up
The optional second parameter defaults to NULL and allows you to set the return value of this method when the requested URI segment is missing. For example, this would tell the method to return the number zero in the event of failure:
$product_id = $this->uri->segment(3, 0);
It helps avoid having to write code like this:
if ($this->uri->segment(3) === FALSE) { $product_id = 0; } else { $product_id = $this->uri->segment(3); }
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rsegment($n[, $no_result = NULL])
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Parameters: - $n (int) – Segment index number
- $no_result (mixed) – What to return if the searched segment is not found
Returns: Routed segment value or $no_result value if not found
Return type: mixed
This method is identical to
segment()
, except that it lets you retrieve a specific segment from your re-routed URI in the event you are using CodeIgniter’s URI Routing feature.
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slash_segment($n[, $where = 'trailing'])
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Parameters: - $n (int) – Segment index number
- $where (string) – Where to add the slash (‘trailing’ or ‘leading’)
Returns: Segment value, prepended/suffixed with a forward slash, or a slash if not found
Return type: string
This method is almost identical to
segment()
, except it adds a trailing and/or leading slash based on the second parameter. If the parameter is not used, a trailing slash added. Examples:$this->uri->slash_segment(3); $this->uri->slash_segment(3, 'leading'); $this->uri->slash_segment(3, 'both');
Returns:
- segment/
- /segment
- /segment/
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slash_rsegment($n[, $where = 'trailing'])
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Parameters: - $n (int) – Segment index number
- $where (string) – Where to add the slash (‘trailing’ or ‘leading’)
Returns: Routed segment value, prepended/suffixed with a forward slash, or a slash if not found
Return type: string
This method is identical to
slash_segment()
, except that it lets you add slashes a specific segment from your re-routed URI in the event you are using CodeIgniter’s URI Routing feature.
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uri_to_assoc([$n = 3[, $default = array()]])
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Parameters: - $n (int) – Segment index number
- $default (array) – Default values
Returns: Associative URI segments array
Return type: array
This method lets you turn URI segments into an associative array of key/value pairs. Consider this URI:
index.php/user/search/name/joe/location/UK/gender/male
Using this method you can turn the URI into an associative array with this prototype:
[array] ( 'name' => 'joe' 'location' => 'UK' 'gender' => 'male' )
The first parameter lets you set an offset, which defaults to 3 since your URI will normally contain a controller/method pair in the first and second segments. Example:
$array = $this->uri->uri_to_assoc(3); echo $array['name'];
The second parameter lets you set default key names, so that the array returned will always contain expected indexes, even if missing from the URI. Example:
$default = array('name', 'gender', 'location', 'type', 'sort'); $array = $this->uri->uri_to_assoc(3, $default);
If the URI does not contain a value in your default, an array index will be set to that name, with a value of NULL.
Lastly, if a corresponding value is not found for a given key (if there is an odd number of URI segments) the value will be set to NULL.
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ruri_to_assoc([$n = 3[, $default = array()]])
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Parameters: - $n (int) – Segment index number
- $default (array) – Default values
Returns: Associative routed URI segments array
Return type: array
This method is identical to
uri_to_assoc()
, except that it creates an associative array using the re-routed URI in the event you are using CodeIgniter’s URI Routing feature.
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assoc_to_uri($array)
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Parameters: - $array (array) – Input array of key/value pairs
Returns: URI string
Return type: string
Takes an associative array as input and generates a URI string from it. The array keys will be included in the string. Example:
$array = array('product' => 'shoes', 'size' => 'large', 'color' => 'red'); $str = $this->uri->assoc_to_uri($array); // Produces: product/shoes/size/large/color/red
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uri_string()
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Returns: URI string Return type: string Returns a string with the complete URI. For example, if this is your full URL:
http://example.com/index.php/news/local/345
The method would return this:
news/local/345
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ruri_string()
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Returns: Routed URI string Return type: string This method is identical to
uri_string()
, except that it returns the re-routed URI in the event you are using CodeIgniter’s URI Routing feature.
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total_segments()
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Returns: Count of URI segments Return type: int Returns the total number of segments.
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total_rsegments()
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Returns: Count of routed URI segments Return type: int This method is identical to
total_segments()
, except that it returns the total number of segments in your re-routed URI in the event you are using CodeIgniter’s URI Routing feature.
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segment_array()
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Returns: URI segments array Return type: array Returns an array containing the URI segments. For example:
$segs = $this->uri->segment_array(); foreach ($segs as $segment) { echo $segment; echo '<br />'; }
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rsegment_array()
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Returns: Routed URI segments array Return type: array This method is identical to
segment_array()
, except that it returns the array of segments in your re-routed URI in the event you are using CodeIgniter’s URI Routing feature.
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© 2014–2020 British Columbia Institute of Technology
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://codeigniter.com/userguide3/libraries/uri.html