(PHP 4 >= 4.0.4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
ctype_alpha — Check for alphabetic character(s)
Checks if all of the characters in the provided string,
text
, are alphabetic.
In the standard C
locale letters are just
[A-Za-z]
and ctype_alpha() is
equivalent to (ctype_upper($text) || ctype_lower($text))
if $text is just a single character, but other languages have letters that
are considered neither upper nor lower case.
text
The tested string.
Note:
If an int between -128 and 255 inclusive is provided, it is interpreted as the ASCII value of a single character (negative values have 256 added in order to allow characters in the Extended ASCII range). Any other integer is interpreted as a string containing the decimal digits of the integer.
As of PHP 8.1.0, passing a non-string argument is deprecated. In the future, the argument will be interpreted as a string instead of an ASCII codepoint. Depending on the intended behavior, the argument should either be cast to string or an explicit call to chr() should be made.
Returns true
if every character in text
is
a letter from the current locale, false
otherwise.
Example #1 A ctype_alpha() example (using the default locale)
<?php
$strings = array('KjgWZC', 'arf12');
foreach ($strings as $testcase) {
if (ctype_alpha($testcase)) {
echo "The string $testcase consists of all letters.\n";
} else {
echo "The string $testcase does not consist of all letters.\n";
}
}
?>
The above example will output:
The string KjgWZC consists of all letters. The string arf12 does not consist of all letters.