Description
string 
stripslashes ( string str )
     Returns a string with backslashes stripped off.
     (\' becomes ' and so on.)
     Double backslashes (\\) are made into a single
     backslash (\). 
    
Note: 
      If magic_quotes_sybase is
      on, no backslashes are stripped off but two apostrophes are replaced by
      one instead.
     
     An example use of stripslashes() is when the PHP
     directive magic_quotes_gpc
     is on (it's on by default), and you aren't inserting
     this data into a place (such as a database) that requires escaping.
     For example, if you're simply outputting data straight from an HTML
     form.
    
     
| Example 1. A stripslashes() example | 
<?php$str = "Is your name O\'reilly?";
 
 // Outputs: Is your name O'reilly?
 echo stripslashes($str);
 ?>
 | 
 | 
    Note: 
      stripslashes() is not recursive. If you want to apply
      this function to a mutli-dimensional array, you need to use a recursive function.
     
     
| Example 2. Using stripslashes() on an array | 
<?phpfunction stripslashes_deep($value)
 {
 $value = is_array($value) ?
 array_map('stripslashes_deep', $value) :
 stripslashes($value);
 
 return $value;
 }
 
 // Example
 $array = array("f\\'oo", "b\\'ar", array("fo\\'o", "b\\'ar"));
 $array = stripslashes_deep($array);
 
 // Output
 print_r($array);
 ?>
 | 
 The above example will output: | Array
(
    [0] => f'oo
    [1] => b'ar
    [2] => Array
        (
            [0] => fo'o
            [1] => b'ar
        )
) | 
 | 
    
     For more information about "magic quotes", see get_magic_quotes_gpc().
    
     See also addslashes() and
     get_magic_quotes_gpc().