udioron - exactly right. That reversed the string.
Thank you.
hebrev
(PHP 4, PHP 5)
hebrev — Converte texto lógico Hebraico para texto visual
Descrição
string hebrev
( string $hebrew_text
[, int $max_chars_per_line
] )
Converte texto lógico Hebraico para texto visual.
A função tenta evitar quebra de palavras.
Parâmetros
- hebrew_text
-
A string de entrada em Hebraico.
- max_chars_per_line
-
Este parâmetro opcional indica o número máximo de caracteres por linha que será retornado.
Valor Retornado
Retorna uma string visual.
Veja Também
- hebrevc() - Converte um texto lógico Hebráico para um texto visual com conversão newline
hebrev
udioron at geeee mmmaaaaiiillll dotcom
01-Jan-2009 11:14
01-Jan-2009 11:14
This might work for unicode strings:
<?php
$s = iconv("ISO-8859-8", "UTF-8", hebrev(iconv("UTF-8", "ISO-8859-8", $s)));
?>
Udi
socket at quotez dot org
29-Apr-2008 05:58
29-Apr-2008 05:58
hebrev/hebrevc does not support unicode strings.
when using the GD lib and imagettftext() with hebrew text you must reverse the chars before sending it to the function.
so there is a need for hebrev/c with unicode support.
nis at superlativ dot dk
04-Dec-2006 06:34
04-Dec-2006 06:34
In response to the user talking of "characters in the range of ASCII 224-251". These codes are not defined in ASCII. You are probably talking about one of the extensions to ASCII, probably ISO-8859-8
tinko
14-Dec-2004 09:46
14-Dec-2004 09:46
From my experience in using hebrev text in HTML, I prefer using
<html dir="rtl" lang="he">
over mentioned PHP functions. It works perfectly with IE 6 ... needs some tweaking in Mozilla though.
I found this site http://tlt.its.psu.edu/suggestions/international/web/tips/align.html useful.
socket at linuxloony dot net
03-Apr-2004 12:17
03-Apr-2004 12:17
The hebrev function changes the string order to RTL.
Use fribidi_log2vis insted if you need LTR text direction
$text = fribidi_log2vis($text,FRIBIDI_LTR, FRIBIDI_CHARSET_CP1255)
php2eran at tromer dot org
01-Jun-2001 09:35
01-Jun-2001 09:35
As of PHP 4.05 there's a problem in the handling of the characters '{}[]<>' compared to MSIE. Note that normal parenthesis '()' are OK.
For further information see http://www.php.net/bugs.php?id=11244 .
zak at php dot net
09-Jan-2001 09:39
09-Jan-2001 09:39
hebrev() changes the flow of any Hebrew characters in a string from right-to-left to left-to-right.
It only affects characters within the range of ASCII 224-251 (except for punctuation).
