Add parameter to url php

After searching for many resources/answers on this topic, I decided to code my own. Based on @TaylorOtwell's answer here, this is how I process incoming $_GET request and modify/manipulate each element.

Assuming the url is: http://domain.com/category/page.php?a=b&x=y And I want only one parameter for sorting: either ?desc=column_name or ?asc=column_name. This way, single url parameter is enough to sort and order simultaneously. So the URL will be http://domain.com/category/page.php?a=b&x=y&desc=column_name on first click of the associated table header row.

Then I have table row headings that I want to sort DESC on my first click, and ASC on the second click of the same heading. (Each first click should "ORDER BY column DESC" first) And if there is no sorting, it will sort by "date then id" by default.

You may improve it further, like you may add cleaning/filtering functions to each $_GET component but the below structure lays the foundation.

foreach ($_GET AS $KEY => $VALUE){
    if ($KEY == 'desc'){
        $SORT = $VALUE;
        $ORDER = "ORDER BY $VALUE DESC";
        $URL_ORDER = $URL_ORDER . "&asc=$VALUE";
    } elseif ($KEY == 'asc'){
        $SORT = $VALUE;
        $ORDER = "ORDER BY $VALUE ASC";
        $URL_ORDER = $URL_ORDER . "&desc=$VALUE";
    } else {
        $URL_ORDER .= "&$KEY=$VALUE";
        $URL .= "&$KEY=$VALUE";
    }
}
if (!$ORDER){$ORDER = 'ORDER BY date DESC, id DESC';}
if ($URL_ORDER){$URL_ORDER = $_SERVER[SCRIPT_URL] . '?' . trim($URL_ORDER, '&');}
if ($URL){$URL = $_SERVER[SCRIPT_URL] . '?' . trim($URL, '&');}

(You may use $_SERVER[SCRIPT_URI] for full URL beginning with http://domain.com)

Then I use resulting $ORDER I get above, in the MySQL query:

"SELECT * FROM table WHERE limiter = 'any' $ORDER";

Now the function to look at the URL if there is a previous sorting and add sorting (and ordering) parameter to URL with "?" or "&" according to the sequence:

        function sort_order ($_SORT){
            global $SORT, $URL_ORDER, $URL;
            if ($SORT == $_SORT){
                return $URL_ORDER;
            } else {
                if (strpos($URL, '?') !== false){
                    return "$URL&desc=$_SORT";
                } else {                        
                    return "$URL?desc=$_SORT";
                }
            }
        }

Finally, the table row header to use the function:

        echo "<th><a href='".sort_order('id')."'>ID</a></th>";

Summary: this will read the URL, modify each of the $_GET components and make the final URL with parameters of your choice with the correct form of usage of "?" and "&"

(PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

http_build_queryGenerate URL-encoded query string

Description

http_build_query(
    array|object $data,
    string $numeric_prefix = "",
    ?string $arg_separator = null,
    int $encoding_type = PHP_QUERY_RFC1738
): string

Parameters

data

May be an array or object containing properties.

If data is an array, it may be a simple one-dimensional structure, or an array of arrays (which in turn may contain other arrays).

If data is an object, then only public properties will be incorporated into the result.

numeric_prefix

If numeric indices are used in the base array and this parameter is provided, it will be prepended to the numeric index for elements in the base array only.

This is meant to allow for legal variable names when the data is decoded by PHP or another CGI application later on.

arg_separator

arg_separator.output is used to separate arguments but may be overridden by specifying this parameter.

encoding_type

By default, PHP_QUERY_RFC1738.

If encoding_type is PHP_QUERY_RFC1738, then encoding is performed per » RFC 1738 and the application/x-www-form-urlencoded media type, which implies that spaces are encoded as plus (+) signs.

If encoding_type is PHP_QUERY_RFC3986, then encoding is performed according to » RFC 3986, and spaces will be percent encoded (%20).

Return Values

Returns a URL-encoded string.

Examples

Example #1 Simple usage of http_build_query()

<?php
$data 
= array(
    
'foo' => 'bar',
    
'baz' => 'boom',
    
'cow' => 'milk',
    
'null' => null,
    
'php' => 'hypertext processor'
);

echo

http_build_query($data) . "\n";
echo 
http_build_query($data'''&amp;');?>

The above example will output:

foo=bar&baz=boom&cow=milk&php=hypertext+processor
foo=bar&amp;baz=boom&amp;cow=milk&amp;php=hypertext+processor

Example #2 http_build_query() with numerically index elements.

<?php
$data 
= array('foo''bar''baz'null'boom''cow' => 'milk''php' => 'hypertext processor');

echo

http_build_query($data) . "\n";
echo 
http_build_query($data'myvar_');
?>

The above example will output:

0=foo&1=bar&2=baz&4=boom&cow=milk&php=hypertext+processor
myvar_0=foo&myvar_1=bar&myvar_2=baz&myvar_4=boom&cow=milk&php=hypertext+processor

Example #3 http_build_query() with complex arrays

<?php
$data 
= array(
    
'user' => array(
        
'name' => 'Bob Smith',
        
'age'  => 47,
        
'sex'  => 'M',
        
'dob'  => '5/12/1956'
    
),
    
'pastimes' => array('golf''opera''poker''rap'),
    
'children' => array(
        
'bobby' => array('age'=>12'sex'=>'M'),
        
'sally' => array('age'=>8'sex'=>'F')
    ),
    
'CEO'
);

echo

http_build_query($data'flags_');
?>

this will output : (word wrapped for readability)

user%5Bname%5D=Bob+Smith&user%5Bage%5D=47&user%5Bsex%5D=M&
user%5Bdob%5D=5%2F12%2F1956&pastimes%5B0%5D=golf&pastimes%5B1%5D=opera&
pastimes%5B2%5D=poker&pastimes%5B3%5D=rap&children%5Bbobby%5D%5Bage%5D=12&
children%5Bbobby%5D%5Bsex%5D=M&children%5Bsally%5D%5Bage%5D=8&
children%5Bsally%5D%5Bsex%5D=F&flags_0=CEO

Note:

Only the numerically indexed element in the base array "CEO" received a prefix. The other numeric indices, found under pastimes, do not require a string prefix to be legal variable names.

Example #4 Using http_build_query() with an object

<?php
class parentClass {
    public    
$pub      'publicParent';
    protected 
$prot     'protectedParent';
    private   
$priv     'privateParent';
    public    
$pub_bar  null;
    protected 
$prot_bar null;
    private   
$priv_bar null;

    public function

__construct(){
        
$this->pub_bar  = new childClass();
        
$this->prot_bar = new childClass();
        
$this->priv_bar = new childClass();
    }
}

class

childClass {
    public    
$pub  'publicChild';
    protected 
$prot 'protectedChild';
    private   
$priv 'privateChild';
}
$parent = new parentClass();

echo

http_build_query($parent);
?>

The above example will output:

pub=publicParent&pub_bar%5Bpub%5D=publicChild

See Also

  • parse_str() - Parses the string into variables
  • parse_url() - Parse a URL and return its components
  • urlencode() - URL-encodes string
  • array_walk() - Apply a user supplied function to every member of an array

Ilya Rudenko

16 years ago

Params with null value do not present in result string.

<?php
$arr
= array('test' => null, 'test2' => 1);
echo
http_build_query($arr);
?>

will produce:

test2=1

Sergei S.

3 years ago

Number to string conversion occured in <?php http_build_query() ?> is affected by locale settings, which might not be obvious.

<?php
$params
= ["v" => 5.63];setlocale(LC_ALL, 'us_En');
http_build_query($params) // v=5.63setlocale(LC_ALL, 'ru_RU');
http_build_query($params) // v=5,63 mind the comma
?>

itsadok at gmail dot com

6 years ago

Passing null to $arg_separator is the same as passing an empty string, which is probably not what you want.

If you need to change the enc_type, use this:

    http_build_query($query, null, '&', PHP_QUERY_RFC3986);

Or possibly this:

    http_build_query($query, null, ini_get('arg_separator.output'), PHP_QUERY_RFC3986);

But not this:

    // BAD CODE!
    http_build_query($query, null, null, PHP_QUERY_RFC3986);

flavio at agenciaeme dot com dot br

4 years ago

if you send boolean values it transform in integer :

$a = [teste1= true,teste2=false];
echo http_build_query($a)

//result will be teste1=1&teste2=0

eric dot muyser at gmail dot com

9 years ago

This function makes like this

files[0]=1&files[1]=2&...

To do it like this:

files[]=1&files[]=2&...

Do this:

        $query = http_build_query($query);
        $query = preg_replace('/%5B[0-9]+%5D/simU', '%5B%5D', $query);

Anonymous

11 years ago

As noted before, with php5.3 the separator is &amp; on some servers it seems. Normally if posting to another php5.3 machine this will not be a problem.

But if you post to a tomcat java server or something else the &amp; might not be handled properly.

To overcome this specify:

http_build_query($array, '', '&');

and NOT

http_build_query($array); //gives &amp; to some servers

anonymous

10 years ago

Is it worth noting that if query_data is an associative array and a value is itself an empty array, or an array of nothing but empty array (or arrays containing only empty arrays etc.), the corresponding key will not appear in the resulting query string?
E.g.

$post_data = array('name'=>'miller', 'address'=>array('address_lines'=>array()), 'age'=>23);
echo http_build_query($post_data);

will print
name=miller&age=23

irish [-@-] ytdj [-dot-] ca

12 years ago

When using the http_build_query function to create a URL query from an array for use in something like curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_POSTFIELDS, $post_url), be careful about the url encoding.

In my case, I simply wanted to pass on the received $_POST data to a CURL's POST data, which requires it to be in the URL format.  If something like a space [ ] goes into the http_build_query, it comes out as a +. If you're then sending this off for POST again, you won't get the expected result.  This is good for GET but not POST.

Instead you can make your own simple function if you simply want to pass along the data:

<?php
$post_url
= '';
foreach (
$_POST AS $key=>$value)
   
$post_url .= $key.'='.$value.'&';
$post_url = rtrim($post_url, '&');
?>

You can then use this to pass along POST data in CURL.

<?php
    $ch
= curl_init($some_url);
   
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_POST, true);
   
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_POSTFIELDS, $post_url);
   
curl_exec($ch);
?>

Note that at the final page that processes the POST data, you should be properly filtering/escaping it.

chat dot noir at arcor dot de

5 years ago

If you need the inverse functionality, and (like me) you cannot use pecl_http, you may want to use something akin to the following.

<?php function http_parse_query($Query) {// mimic the behavior of $_GET, see also RFC 1738 and 3986.
$Delimiter = ini_get('arg_separator.input');
$Params    = array();

foreach (

explode($Delimiter, $Query) as $NameValue) {
   
preg_match(
       
'/^(?P<name>[^=\[]*)(?P<indices_present>\[(?P<indices>[^\]]*(\]\[[^\]]*)*)\]?)?(?P<value_present>=(?P<value>.*))?$/',
       
$NameValue,
       
$NameValueParts
   
);

        if (!empty(

$NameValueParts)) {
       
$Param =& $Params[$NameValueParts['name']];

                if (!empty(

$NameValueParts['indices_present'])) {
           
$Indices = explode('][', $NameValueParts['indices']);

                        foreach (

$Indices as $Index) {
                if (!
is_array($Param)) {
                   
$Param = array();
                }

                                if (

$Index === '') {
                   
$Param[] = array();
                   
end($Param);
                   
$Param =& $Param[key($Param)];
                } else {
                    if (
ctype_digit($Index)) { $Index  = (int) $Index;  }

                                        if (!

array_key_exists($Index, $Param)) {
                       
$Param[$Index] = array();
                    }
                   
$Param =& $Param[$Index];
                }
            }
        }

        if (!empty(

$NameValueParts['value_present'])) {
           
$Param = urldecode($NameValueParts['value']);
        } else {
           
$Param = '';
        }
    }
}

return

$Params;

}

?>

james at dimensionengineering dot com

7 years ago

Be careful about Example 1 -- it is exactly how *not* to implement things.

& as a separator is the URL encoding.
&amp; is HTML encoding.

You should HTML encode your URL if embedding it in a web page. This is more involved than just replacing & with &amp;. Doing as this example suggests is a security hole waiting to happen.

Mark Simon

7 years ago

As noted, this function omits keys with null values. This could break some code which treats the key as boolean, and so has no value, or other code expecting the array to be populated regardless of value.

A workaround for this is to replace the null values with an empty string:

    $data=array(
        'a'=>'apple',
        'b'=>2,
        'c'=>null,
        'd'=>'…',
    );

    //    Compensate for fact that http_build_query omits null values
        foreach($data as &$datum) if($datum===null) $datum='';

Losing the null-ness of the original is no real loss if it’s supposed to be a real query string. If the null is important, you could use a dummy value instead.

Mark

netrox at aol dot com

13 years ago

I noticed that even with the magic quotes disabled, http_build_query() automagically adds slashes to strings.

So, I had to add "stripslashes" to every string variable.

Vitaly Dyatlov

9 years ago

Correct implementation of coding the array of params without indexes (valdikks fixed code - didnt work for inner arrays):

<code>
function cr_post($a,$b='',$c=0)
        {
            if (!is_array($a)) return false;
            foreach ((array)$a as $k=>$v)
            {
                if ($c)
                {
                    if( is_numeric($k) )
                        $k=$b."[]";
                    else
                        $k=$b."[$k]";
                }
                else
                {   if (is_int($k))
                        $k=$b.$k;
                }

                if (is_array($v)||is_object($v))
                {
                    $r[]=cr_post($v,$k,1);
                        continue;
                }
                $r[]=urlencode($k)."=".urlencode($v);
            }
            return implode("&",$r);
        }
</code>

rmaslo at archa dot cz

5 years ago

Warning: Different arrays may return the same result

<CODE>
$a1 = array('x[y]' => array('a'=>1));
$a2 = array('x' => array('y' => array('a'=>1)));
$q1 = http_build_query($a1);
$q2 = http_build_query($a2);
var_dump($a1);
echo '<BR>';
var_dump($a2);
echo '<BR>';
echo $q1;
echo '<BR>';
echo $q2;
echo '<BR>';
</CODE>

Result:
array(1) { ["x[y]"]=> array(1) { ["a"]=> int(1) } }
array(1) { ["x"]=> array(1) { ["y"]=> array(1) { ["a"]=> int(1) } } }
x%5By%5D%5Ba%5D=1
x%5By%5D%5Ba%5D=1

drewdeveloperthomas at gmail dot com

2 years ago

It's not mentioned in the documentation, but when calling http_build_query on an object, public null fields are ignored.

<?phpclass A {
    public
int $publicNotNull;
    public ?
int $publicNull;
    private
string $privateNotNull;

    public function

__construct()
    {
       
$this->publicNotNull = 2;
       
$this->privateNotNull = "Test";
    }
}
$a = new A();
echo
http_build_query($a); // publicNotNull=2
?>

v0idnull[try_to_spam_me_now] at gee-mail dot co

12 years ago

on my install of PHP 5.3, http_build_query() seems to use &amp; as the default separator. Kind of interesting when combined with stream_context_create() for a POST request, and getting $_POST['amp;fieldName'] on the receiving end.

valdikss at gmail dot com

15 years ago

This function is wrong for http!
arrays in http is like this:

files[]=1&files[]=2&...

but function makes like this

files[0]=1&files[1]=2&...

Here is normal function:

<?php
function cr_post($a,$b=\'\',$c=0){
if (!is_array($a)) return false;
foreach ((array)$a as $k=>$v){
if ($c) $k=$b.\"[]\"; elseif (is_int($k)) $k=$b.$k;
if (is_array($v)||is_object($v)) {$r[]=cr_post($v,$k,1);continue;}
$r[]=urlencode($k).\"=\".urlencode($v);}return implode(\"&\",$r);}
?>

shaun at slickdesign dot com dot au

4 years ago

While http_build_query can also be used to encode most classes, into a query string, SimpleXML Elements with <![CDATA[]]> values are picked up as empty arrays, and therefore aren't included naturally.

<?php
$xml
= simplexml_load_string( '<wrapper><key><![CDATA[value]]></key><key2>value2</key2></wrapper>' );
var_dump( $xml, http_build_query( $xml ) );
/* Outputs:
object(SimpleXMLElement)#1 (2) {
  ["key"]=>
  object(SimpleXMLElement)#2 (0) {
  }
  ["key2"]=>
  string(6) "value2"
}
string(11) "key2=value2"
*/
?>

joelhy

6 years ago

Params with false value will be changed to zero in result string.

<?php
$arr
= ['foo' => false];
echo
http_build_query($arr);
?>

will produce:

foo=0

joey dot qiang at innomative dot com

7 years ago

Not recommending to eliminate the numeric indices like:
'arg[0]' --> 'arg[]'

The reason is this function will not include null values in the result string:

        $data = array(
            'arg' => array(
                null,
                2,
                3
            )
        );
        echo http_build_query($data);

The output is something like "arg[1]=2&arg[2]=3";

Kirils Solovjovs

9 years ago

instead of some other suggestions that did not work for me, I found that the best way to build POST content (e.g. for stream_context_create) is urldecode(http_build_query($query))

rishad at kaluma dot com

3 years ago

When using http_build_query($args) where $args is an array; note that there is a limit to the size of array. See max_input_vars in your php.ini to increase this size.

stocki dot r at gmail dot com

9 years ago

If you need only key+value pairs, you can use this:

<?php
    $array
= array(
       
"type" => "welcome",
       
"message" => "Hello World!"
   
);
    echo
urldecode(http_build_query($array, '', ';'));
?>

Result: type=welcome;message=Hello World!

How do I add a parameter to a URL?

Any word after the question mark (?) in a URL is considered to be a parameter which can hold values. The value for the corresponding parameter is given after the symbol "equals" (=). Multiple parameters can be passed through the URL by separating them with multiple "&".

How can I get params in PHP?

The parameters from a URL string can be retrieved in PHP using parse_url() and parse_str() functions. Note: Page URL and the parameters are separated by the ? character. parse_url() Function: The parse_url() function is used to return the components of a URL by parsing it.

How manipulate URL in PHP?

The parse_url() function is an inbuilt function in PHP which is used to return the components of a URL by parsing it..
It return an associative array if the component parameter is omitted..
It return a string if the component parameter is specified..
It return false, if the parameter is malformed URL..

What is Http_build_query?

The http_build_query() function is an inbuilt function in PHP which is used to generate URL-encoded query string from the associative (or indexed) array.