From b73eb19aed66190c10c9cad476da7c36c271d6dc Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Andrey Andreev Date: Thu, 19 Sep 2019 15:08:45 +0300 Subject: [ci skip] 3.1.11 release --- user_guide_src/source/libraries/uri.rst | 233 -------------------------------- 1 file changed, 233 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 user_guide_src/source/libraries/uri.rst (limited to 'user_guide_src/source/libraries/uri.rst') diff --git a/user_guide_src/source/libraries/uri.rst b/user_guide_src/source/libraries/uri.rst deleted file mode 100644 index 4d38c1d22..000000000 --- a/user_guide_src/source/libraries/uri.rst +++ /dev/null @@ -1,233 +0,0 @@ -######### -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. - -.. contents:: - :local: - -.. raw:: html - -
- -*************** -Class Reference -*************** - -.. php:class:: CI_URI - - .. php:method:: segment($n[, $no_result = NULL]) - - :param int $n: Segment index number - :param mixed $no_result: What to return if the searched segment is not found - :returns: Segment value or $no_result value if not found - :rtype: 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 = $this->uri->segment(3); - } - - .. php:method:: rsegment($n[, $no_result = NULL]) - - :param int $n: Segment index number - :param mixed $no_result: What to return if the searched segment is not found - :returns: Routed segment value or $no_result value if not found - :rtype: mixed - - This method is identical to ``segment()``, except that it lets you retrieve - a specific segment from your re-routed URI in the event you are - using CodeIgniter's :doc:`URI Routing <../general/routing>` feature. - - .. php:method:: slash_segment($n[, $where = 'trailing']) - - :param int $n: Segment index number - :param string $where: Where to add the slash ('trailing' or 'leading') - :returns: Segment value, prepended/suffixed with a forward slash, or a slash if not found - :rtype: 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'); - $this->uri->slash_segment(3, 'both'); - - Returns: - - #. segment/ - #. /segment - #. /segment/ - - .. php:method:: slash_rsegment($n[, $where = 'trailing']) - - :param int $n: Segment index number - :param string $where: Where to add the slash ('trailing' or 'leading') - :returns: Routed segment value, prepended/suffixed with a forward slash, or a slash if not found - :rtype: string - - This method is identical to ``slash_segment()``, except that it lets you - add slashes a specific segment from your re-routed URI in the event you - are using CodeIgniter's :doc:`URI Routing <../general/routing>` - feature. - - .. php:method:: uri_to_assoc([$n = 3[, $default = array()]]) - - :param int $n: Segment index number - :param array $default: Default values - :returns: Associative URI segments array - :rtype: 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, $default); - - If the URI does not contain a value in your default, an array index will - be set to that name, with a value of NULL. - - Lastly, if a corresponding value is not found for a given key (if there - is an odd number of URI segments) the value will be set to NULL. - - .. php:method:: ruri_to_assoc([$n = 3[, $default = array()]]) - - :param int $n: Segment index number - :param array $default: Default values - :returns: Associative routed URI segments array - :rtype: array - - This method is identical to ``uri_to_assoc()``, except that it creates - an associative array using the re-routed URI in the event you are using - CodeIgniter's :doc:`URI Routing <../general/routing>` feature. - - .. php:method:: assoc_to_uri($array) - - :param array $array: Input array of key/value pairs - :returns: URI string - :rtype: 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 - - .. php:method:: uri_string() - - :returns: URI string - :rtype: 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 - - .. php:method:: ruri_string() - - :returns: Routed URI string - :rtype: string - - This method is identical to ``uri_string()``, except that it returns - the re-routed URI in the event you are using CodeIgniter's :doc:`URI - Routing <../general/routing>` feature. - - .. php:method:: total_segments() - - :returns: Count of URI segments - :rtype: int - - Returns the total number of segments. - - .. php:method:: total_rsegments() - - :returns: Count of routed URI segments - :rtype: 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 :doc:`URI Routing <../general/routing>` feature. - - .. php:method:: segment_array() - - :returns: URI segments array - :rtype: array - - Returns an array containing the URI segments. For example:: - - $segs = $this->uri->segment_array(); - - foreach ($segs as $segment) - { - echo $segment; - echo '
'; - } - - .. php:method:: rsegment_array() - - :returns: Routed URI segments array - :rtype: 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 :doc:`URI Routing <../general/routing>` feature. -- cgit v1.2.3-24-g4f1b