Get Last Part of URL PHP
Split it apart and get the last element:
$end = end(explode('/', $url));
# or:
$end = array_slice(explode('/', $url), -1)[0];
Edit: To support apache-style-canonical URLs, rtrim
is handy:
$end = end(explode('/', rtrim($url, '/')));
# or:
$end = array_slice(explode('/', rtrim($url, '/')), -1)[0];
A different example which might me considered more readable is (Demo):
$path = parse_url($url, PHP_URL_PATH);
$pathFragments = explode('/', $path);
$end = end($pathFragments);
This example also takes into account to only work on the path of the URL.
Yet another edit (years after), canonicalization and easy UTF-8 alternative use included (via PCRE regular expression in PHP):
<?php
use function call_user_func as f;
use UnexpectedValueException as e;
$url = 'http://example.com/artist/song/music-videos/song-title/9393903';
$result = preg_match('(([^/]*)/*$)', $url, $m)
? $m[1]
: f(function() use ($url) {throw new e("pattern on '$url'");})
;
var_dump($result); # string(7) "9393903"
Which is pretty rough but shows how to wrap this this within a preg_match
call for finer-grained control via PCRE regular expression pattern. To add some sense to this bare-metal example, it should be wrapped inside a function of its' own (which would also make the aliasing superfluous). Just presented this way for brevity.
The absolute simplest way to accomplish this, is with basename()
echo basename('http://domain.example/artist/song/music-videos/song-title/9393903');
Which will print
9393903
Of course, if there is a query string at the end it will be included in the returned value, in which case the accepted answer is a better solution.