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Home/ Questions/Q 349407
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T11:27:20+00:00 2026-05-12T11:27:20+00:00

I am currently looking into spliting a very long string that could contain HTML

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I am currently looking into spliting a very long string that could contain HTML characteristics.

Once example is:

Thiiiissssaaaveryyyylonnngggstringgg

For this I have used this function in the past:

function split($sString, $iCount = 75)
{       
    $text = $sString;
    $new_text = '';
    $text_1 = explode('>',$text);
    $sizeof = sizeof($text_1);
    for ($i=0; $i<$sizeof; ++$i) {
        $text_2 = explode('<',$text_1[$i]);
        if (!empty($text_2[0])) {

                $new_text .= preg_replace('#([^\n\r .]{'. $iCount .'})#iu', '\\1  ', $text_2[0]);
        }
        if (!empty($text_2[1])) {
            $new_text .= '<' . $text_2[1] . '>';
        }
    }
    return $new_text; }

The function works to pick up such characters and split them after X characters. The problem is when HTML or ASCII characters are mixed in there like this:

Thissssiisss<a href="#">lonnnggg</a>sting&#228;&#228;&#228;

I have been trying to figure out how to split this string above and to not count characters within HTML tags and to count each ASCII character as 1.

Any help would be great.

Thank you

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T11:27:20+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 11:27 am

    If you’re worried about UTF-8 support for wordwrap, then you want this:

    function utf8_wordwrap($str, $width = 75, $break = "\n") // wordwrap() with utf-8 support {
        $str = preg_split('#[\s\n\r]+#', $str);
        $len = 0;
        foreach ($str as $val) {
            $val .= ' ';
            $tmp = mb_strlen($val, 'utf-8');
            $len += $tmp;
            if ($len >= $width) {
                $return .= $break . $val;
                $len = $tmp;
            }
            else {
                $return .= $val;
            }
        }
        return $return;
    }
    

    Source: PHP Manual Comment

    As to your issue with codepoints – you might want to look at html_entity_decode, which I think converts codepoints (e.g. &#223) to the character they represent. You’ll need to give it a charset so it knows what 223 means (since what ‘223’ means depends on the charset).

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