I'm using below code for triming titles and show it recent posts section on my blog:
<?php global $post;
$releaseDate = get_post_meta($post->ID, "gosterim_tarihi", true);
foreach( $images as $image ) {
$title = get_the_title();
if (strlen($title) > 20) { $title = substr($title, 0, 20) . '…'; }
$attachmentimage=wp_get_attachment_image_src( $image->ID, 'large' );
echo '<li><a href="'. get_permalink() .'" title="' . $title . '"><img src="'. $attachmentimage[0] .'" alt="'. $title .'" />'. $title .'<span>Gösterim Tarihi: ' . $releaseDate . '</span></a></li>';
} ?>
But there are problem with HTML character entities. When i use substr
function for trim a title, substr
function trimming HTML character entities too.
So i tried to use html_entity_decode
function but i can't do it very well.
Anyone can help me?
Try this:
$output = htmlentities(substr(html_entity_decode($input), 0, 20));
This will decode all entities so substr
won't break anything. After that you can encode all characters back to their entities.
I think you can use the strip_tags function there eg:
substr(strip_tags($title), 0, 20);
This will deal only with the title excluding any html chars.
Use This Function
<?php
function keephtml($string){
$res = htmlentities($string);
$res = str_replace("<","<",$res);
$res = str_replace(">",">",$res);
$res = str_replace(""",'"',$res);
$res = str_replace("&",'&',$res);
return $res;
}
?>
It would be cleaner if you can leave the html-encoding until the last minute, e.g. when you actually echo the $title string. Of course, that means you have to remember to encode all the strings yourself.
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