©
This document uses PHP Chinese website manual Release
(PHP 5 >= 5.3.0)
str_getcsv — 解析 CSV 字符串为一个数组
$input
[, string $delimiter
= ","
[, string $enclosure
= '"'
[, string $escape
= "\\"
]]] )以 CSV 字段格式解析字符串输入,并返回包含读取字段的数组。
input
待解析的字符串。
delimiter
设定字段界定符(仅单个字符)。
enclosure
设定字段包裹字符(仅单个字符)。
escape
设置转义字符(仅单个字符)。默认为反斜线(\)。
返回一个包含读取到的字段的索引数组。
[#1] nobody [2015-08-07 09:44:36]
You can parse a full standard csv string (i.e. a form posted textarea with csv lines) in one easy step:
<?php
$fullcsv = array_map('str_getcsv', str_getcsv($str_csv,"\n"));
?>
[#2] starrychloe at oliveyou dot net [2015-07-23 18:12:46]
Based on James' line, this will create an array of associative arrays with the first row column headers as the keys.
<?php
$csv = array_map('str_getcsv', file($file));
array_walk($csv, function(&$a) use ($csv) {
$a = array_combine($csv[0], $a);
});
array_shift($csv); # remove column header
?>
This will yield something like
[2] => Array
(
[Campaign ID] => 295095038
[Ad group ID] => 22460178158
[Keyword ID] => 3993587178
[#3] peter dot mlich at volny dot cz [2015-07-02 10:21:41]
> 49 durik at 3ilab dot net / 4 years ago
$rows = str_getcsv($csv_data, "\n");
- bug, data in csv can have "\n"
'aaa','bb
b','ccc'
[#4] str_getcsv at php dot net [2015-06-23 12:49:06]
An alternative for 'str_getcsv'
if (!function_exists('str_getcsv')) {
function str_getcsv($str, $length = 8096, $delimiter = ',', $enclosure = '"', $escape = '\\') {
$handle = fopen('data://text/plain;base64,' . base64_encode($str), 'r');
$data = array();
$i = 0;
while (($line = fgetcsv($handle, $length, $delimiter, $enclosure)) !== false) {
foreach ($line as $value) {
$data[$i] = $value;
$i ++;
}
}
fclose($handle);
return $data;
}
}
[#5] pasmanik at gmail dot com [2015-05-28 08:08:05]
I prepared some better function for parsing CSV string.
function csv_to_array($string='', $row_delimiter=PHP_EOL, $delimiter = "," , $enclosure = '"' , $escape = "\\" )
{
$rows = array_filter(explode($row_delimiter, $string));
$header = NULL;
$data = array();
foreach($rows as $row)
{
$row = str_getcsv ($row, $delimiter, $enclosure , $escape);
if(!$header)
$header = $row;
else
$data[] = array_combine($header, $row);
}
return $data;
}
[#6] csver at phper dot com [2015-05-06 10:02:53]
Quick and proper way:
$temp = fopen('php://temp', 'r+');
fputs($csvString, $temp);
rewind($temp);
$csvArray = array();
while( $csvRow = fgetcsv($temp) )
$csvArray[] = $csvRow;
fclose($temp);
[#7] sven at e7o dot de [2015-02-24 14:53:18]
PHP is failing when parsing UTF-8 with Byte Order Mark. Strip it with this one from string before passing it to csv parser:
<?php
$bom = pack('CCC', 0xEF, 0xBB, 0xBF);
if (strncmp($yourString, $bom, 3) === 0) {
$body = substr($yourString, 3);
}
?>
[#8] okonomiyaki3000 at gmail dot com [2015-02-12 10:58:30]
`durik at 3ilab dot net` brings up a good point but the solution provided may fail in certain (very rare) edge cases. I believe a more perfect solution is as follows:
<?php
// Use an I/O stream instead of an actual file.
$handle = fopen('php://temp/myCSV', 'w+b');
// Write all the data to it
fwrite($handle, $CSVString);
// Rewind for reading
rewind($handle);
// use fgetcsv which tends to work better than str_getcsv in some cases
$rows = array();
while ($row = fgetcsv($handle)) $rows[] = $row;
?>
A variation on this technique can also be used to implement an 'str_putcsv' which PHP lacks.
[#9] dejiakala at gmail dot com [2014-09-21 06:06:13]
I wanted the best of the 2 solutions by james at moss dot io and Jay Williams (csv_to_array()) - create associative array from a CSV file with a header row.
<?php
$array = array_map('str_getcsv', file('data.csv'));
$header = array_shift($array);
array_walk($array, '_combine_array', $header);
function _combine_array(&$row, $key, $header) {
$row = array_combine($header, $row);
}
?>
Then I thought why not try some benchmarking? I grabbed a sample CSV file with 50,000 rows (10 columns each) and Vulcan Logic Disassembler (VLD) which hooks into the Zend Engine and dumps all the opcodes (execution units) of a script - see http://pecl.php.net/package/vld and example here: http://fabien.potencier.org/article/8/print-vs-echo-which-one-is-faster
Result:
array_walk() and array_map() - 39 opcodes
csv_to_array() - 69 opcodes
[#10] enmanuelcorvo at gmail dot com [2014-09-02 20:49:44]
I always use this:
function convert_to_csv($input_array, $output_file_name, $delimiter)
{
$temp_memory = fopen('php://memory', 'w');
foreach ($input_array as $line) {
fputcsv($temp_memory, $line, $delimiter);
}
fseek($temp_memory, 0);
header('Content-Type: application/csv');
header('Content-Disposition: attachement; filename="' . $output_file_name . '";');
fpassthru($temp_memory);
}
$array_to_csv = Array(Array(12566, 'Enmanuel', 'Corvo'), Array(56544, 'John', 'Doe'), Array(78550, 'Mark', 'Smith'));
convert_to_csv($array_to_csv, 'report.csv', ',');
you can read the full post here:
<a href="http://webtricksandtreats.com/export-to-csv-php/">PHP to CSV Download </a>
[#11] james at moss dot io [2014-04-03 10:24:22]
Handy one liner to parse a CSV file into an array
<?php
$csv = array_map('str_getcsv', file('data.csv'));
?>
[#12] peter at icb dot at [2014-03-21 17:11:44]
Optimized JayWilliams function a little bit:
<?php
function csv_to_array($filename, $delimiter=',', $enclosure='"', $escape = '\\')
{
if(!file_exists($filename) || !is_readable($filename)) return false;
$header = null;
$data = array();
$lines = file($filename);
foreach($lines as $line) {
$values = str_getcsv($line, $delimiter, $enclosure, $escape);
if(!$header) $header = $values;
else $data[] = array_combine($header, $values);
}
return $data;
}
?>
[#13] lewis [2014-02-11 13:51:47]
str_getcsv can be really fussy about trailing spaces - it will not necessarily recognise a final element in a quote delimited set of strings with a space following the final string for example. Using trim() before str_getcsv() quickly fixes this.
[#14] Ryan Rubley [2013-09-13 20:00:26]
@normadize - that is a nice start, but it fails on situations where a field is empty but quoted (returning a string with one double quote instead of an empty string) and cases like """""foo""""" that should result in ""foo"" but instead return "foo". I also get a row with 1 empty field at the end because of the final CRLF in the CSV. Plus, I don't really like the !!Q!! magic or urlencoding to get around things. Also, \R doesn't work in pcre on any of my php installations.
Here is my take on this, without anonymous functions (so it works on PHP < 5.3), and without your options (because I believe the only correct way to parse according to the RFC would be $skip_empty_lines = false and $trim_fields = false).
//parse a CSV file into a two-dimensional array
//this seems as simple as splitting a string by lines and commas, but this only works if tricks are performed
//to ensure that you do NOT split on lines and commas that are inside of double quotes.
function parse_csv($str)
{
//match all the non-quoted text and one series of quoted text (or the end of the string)
//each group of matches will be parsed with the callback, with $matches[1] containing all the non-quoted text,
//and $matches[3] containing everything inside the quotes
$str = preg_replace_callback('/([^"]*)("((""|[^"])*)"|$)/s', 'parse_csv_quotes', $str);
//remove the very last newline to prevent a 0-field array for the last line
$str = preg_replace('/\n$/', '', $str);
//split on LF and parse each line with a callback
return array_map('parse_csv_line', explode("\n", $str));
}
//replace all the csv-special characters inside double quotes with markers using an escape sequence
function parse_csv_quotes($matches)
{
//anything inside the quotes that might be used to split the string into lines and fields later,
//needs to be quoted. The only character we can guarantee as safe to use, because it will never appear in the unquoted text, is a CR
//So we're going to use CR as a marker to make escape sequences for CR, LF, Quotes, and Commas.
$str = str_replace("\r", "\rR", $matches[3]);
$str = str_replace("\n", "\rN", $str);
$str = str_replace('""', "\rQ", $str);
$str = str_replace(',', "\rC", $str);
//The unquoted text is where commas and newlines are allowed, and where the splits will happen
//We're going to remove all CRs from the unquoted text, by normalizing all line endings to just LF
//This ensures us that the only place CR is used, is as the escape sequences for quoted text
return preg_replace('/\r\n?/', "\n", $matches[1]) . $str;
}
//split on comma and parse each field with a callback
function parse_csv_line($line)
{
return array_map('parse_csv_field', explode(',', $line));
}
//restore any csv-special characters that are part of the data
function parse_csv_field($field) {
$field = str_replace("\rC", ',', $field);
$field = str_replace("\rQ", '"', $field);
$field = str_replace("\rN", "\n", $field);
$field = str_replace("\rR", "\r", $field);
return $field;
}
[#15] allan dot mtx dot IAMHUMAN at GOREADABOOK dot gmail dot com [2013-07-29 18:27:04]
<?php
function user_str_getcsv($str, $delimiter=',', $enclosure='"', $escape='\\') {
$return = array();
$fields = 0;
$inside = false;
$quoted = false;
$char = '';
//Let's go through the string
for ($i=0; $i<mb_strlen($str); $i++) {
$char = mb_substr($str, $i, 1, 'UTF-8');
if (!$inside) { //Check if we are not inside a field
if ($char == $delimiter) { //Check if the current char is the delimiter
//Tells the function that we are not inside a field anymore
$inside = false;
$quoted = false;
//Jumps to the next field
$fields++;
} elseif($char == $escape) { //Check if the current char is the escape
//Error, because it isn't inside a field and there is a escape here
return false;
} elseif($char != ' ') { //Check if the current char isn't a blank space
//Tells the function that a field starts
$inside = true;
//Check if the current char is the enclosure, indicating that this field is quoted
if ($char == $enclosure) {
$quoted= true;
} else {
$return[$fields] .= $char;
}
}
} else { //Here we are inside a field
//Check if the current char is the escape
if ($char == $escape) {
//Check if the string has one more char beyond the current one
if (mb_strlen($str)>$i+1) {
//Tells the function we will treat the next char
$i++;
$char = mb_substr($str, $i, 1, 'UTF-8');
//Check if our new char is the enclosure
if ($char == $enclosure) {
//Check if the field is a quoted one
if ($quoted) {
$return[$fields] .= $enclosure;
} else {
//Error, because we have an escape and then we have an enclosure and we are not inside a quoted field
return false;
}
} elseif ($char == $escape) {
$return[$fields] .= $char;
} else {
eval("\$return[\$fields] .= \"\\".$char."\";");
}
} else {
//Error, because there is an escape and nothing more then
return false;
}
} elseif ($char == $enclosure) { //Check if the current char is the enclosure
//Check if we are in a quoted field
if ($quoted) {
//Tells the function that we are not inside a field anymore
$inside = false;
$quoted = false;
} else {
//Error, because there is an enclosure inside a non quoted field
return false;
}
} elseif ($char == $delimiter) { //Check if it is the delimiter
//Check if we are inside a quoted field
if ($quoted) {
$return[$fields] .= $char;
} else {
//Tells the function that we are not inside a field anymore
$inside = false;
$quoted = false;
//Jumps to the next field
$fields++;
}
} else {
$return[$fields] .= $char;
}
}
}
return $return;
}
print_r(user_str_getcsv("test,1,\"B,C,D\",\"with a escape\\\\\", \"with an enter\\n\", \"with an enclusure enclosure\\\"\""));
exit(0);
?>
The response will be:
Array
(
[0] => test
[1] => 1
[2] => B,C,D
[3] => with a escape\
[4] => with an enter
[5] => with an enclusure enclosure"
)
[#16] normadize -a- gmail -d- com [2013-03-13 23:19:04]
Like some other users here noted, str_getcsv() cannot be used if you want to comply with either the RFC or with most spreadsheet tools like Excel or Google Docs.
These tools do not escape commas or new lines, but instead place double-quotes (") around the field. If there are any double-quotes in the field, these are escaped with another double-quote (" becomes ""). All this may look odd, but it is what the RFC and most tools do ...
For instance, try exporting as .csv a Google Docs spreadsheet (File > Download as > .csv) which has new lines and commas as part of the field values and see how the .csv content looks, then try to parse it using str_getcsv() ... it will spectacularly regardless of the arguments you pass to it.
Here is a function that can handle everything correctly, and more:
- doesn't use any for or while loops,
- it allows for any separator (any string of any length),
- option to skip empty lines,
- option to trim fields,
- can handle UTF8 data too (although .csv files are likely non-unicode).
Here is the more human readable version of the function:
<?php
// returns a two-dimensional array or rows and fields
function parse_csv ($csv_string, $delimiter = ",", $skip_empty_lines = true, $trim_fields = true)
{
$enc = preg_replace('/(?<!")""/', '!!Q!!', $csv_string);
$enc = preg_replace_callback(
'/"(.*?)"/s',
function ($field) {
return urlencode(utf8_encode($field[1]));
},
$enc
);
$lines = preg_split($skip_empty_lines ? ($trim_fields ? '/( *\R)+/s' : '/\R+/s') : '/\R/s', $enc);
return array_map(
function ($line) use ($delimiter, $trim_fields) {
$fields = $trim_fields ? array_map('trim', explode($delimiter, $line)) : explode($delimiter, $line);
return array_map(
function ($field) {
return str_replace('!!Q!!', '"', utf8_decode(urldecode($field)));
},
$fields
);
},
$lines
);
}
?>
Since this is not using any loops, you can actually write it as a one-line statement (one-liner).
Here's the function using just one line of code for the function body, formatted nicely though:
<?php
// returns the same two-dimensional array as above, but with a one-liner code
function parse_csv ($csv_string, $delimiter = ",", $skip_empty_lines = true, $trim_fields = true)
{
return array_map(
function ($line) use ($delimiter, $trim_fields) {
return array_map(
function ($field) {
return str_replace('!!Q!!', '"', utf8_decode(urldecode($field)));
},
$trim_fields ? array_map('trim', explode($delimiter, $line)) : explode($delimiter, $line)
);
},
preg_split(
$skip_empty_lines ? ($trim_fields ? '/( *\R)+/s' : '/\R+/s') : '/\R/s',
preg_replace_callback(
'/"(.*?)"/s',
function ($field) {
return urlencode(utf8_encode($field[1]));
},
$enc = preg_replace('/(?<!")""/', '!!Q!!', $csv_string)
)
)
);
}
?>
Replace !!Q!! with another placeholder if you wish.
Have fun.
[#17] V.Krishn [2013-03-06 01:31:00]
<?php
Note: The function trims all values unlike str_getcsv (v5.3).
function str_getcsv4($input, $delimiter = ',', $enclosure = '"') {
if( ! preg_match("/[$enclosure]/", $input) ) {
return (array)preg_replace(array("/^\\s*/", "/\\s*$/"), '', explode($delimiter, $input));
}
$token = "##"; $token2 = "::";
//alternate tokens "\034\034", "\035\035", "%%";
$t1 = preg_replace(array("/\\\[$enclosure]/", "/$enclosure{2}/",
"/[$enclosure]\\s*[$delimiter]\\s*[$enclosure]\\s*/", "/\\s*[$enclosure]\\s*/"),
array($token2, $token2, $token, $token), trim(trim(trim($input), $enclosure)));
$a = explode($token, $t1);
foreach($a as $k=>$v) {
if ( preg_match("/^{$delimiter}/", $v) || preg_match("/{$delimiter}$/", $v) ) {
$a[$k] = trim($v, $delimiter); $a[$k] = preg_replace("/$delimiter/", "$token", $a[$k]); }
}
$a = explode($token, implode($token, $a));
return (array)preg_replace(array("/^\\s/", "/\\s$/", "/$token2/"), array('', '', $enclosure), $a);
}
if ( ! function_exists('str_getcsv')) {
function str_getcsv($input, $delimiter = ',', $enclosure = '"') {
return str_getcsv4($input, $delimiter, $enclosure);
}
}
?>
[#18] V.Krishn [2013-03-06 01:20:46]
Note: The function trims all values unlike str_getcsv (v5.3).
function str_getcsv4($input, $delimiter = ',', $enclosure = '"') {
if( ! preg_match("/[$enclosure]/", $input) ) {
return (array)preg_replace(array("/^\\s*/", "/\\s*$/"), '', explode($delimiter, $input));
}
$token = "##"; $token2 = "::";
//alternate tokens "\034\034", "\035\035", "%%";
$t1 = preg_replace(array("/\\\[$enclosure]/", "/$enclosure{2}/",
"/[$enclosure]\\s*[$delimiter]\\s*[$enclosure]\\s*/", "/\\s*[$enclosure]\\s*/"),
array($token2, $token2, $token, $token), trim(trim(trim($input), $enclosure)));
$a = explode($token, $t1);
foreach($a as $k=>$v) {
if ( preg_match("/^{$delimiter}/", $v) || preg_match("/{$delimiter}$/", $v) ) {
$a[$k] = trim($v, $delimiter); $a[$k] = preg_replace("/$delimiter/", "$token", $a[$k]); }
}
$a = explode($token, implode($token, $a));
return (array)preg_replace(array("/^\\s/", "/\\s$/", "/$token2/"), array('', '', $enclosure), $a);
}
if ( ! function_exists('str_getcsv')) {
function str_getcsv($input, $delimiter = ',', $enclosure = '"') {
return str_getcsv4($input, $delimiter, $enclosure);
}
}
[#19] khelibert at gmail dot com [2012-09-04 16:42:46]
I've written this to handle :
- fields with or without enclosure;
- escape and enclosure characters using the same character (ie <<">> in Excel)
<?php
function csvToArray($fileContent,$escape = '\\', $enclosure = '"', $delimiter = ';')
{
$lines = array();
$fields = array();
if($escape == $enclosure)
{
$escape = '\\';
$fileContent = str_replace(array('\\',$enclosure.$enclosure,"\r\n","\r"),
array('\\\\',$escape.$enclosure,"\\n","\\n"),$fileContent);
}
else
$fileContent = str_replace(array("\r\n","\r"),array("\\n","\\n"),$fileContent);
$nb = strlen($fileContent);
$field = '';
$inEnclosure = false;
$previous = '';
for($i = 0;$i<$nb; $i++)
{
$c = $fileContent[$i];
if($c === $enclosure)
{
if($previous !== $escape)
$inEnclosure ^= true;
else
$field .= $enclosure;
}
else if($c === $escape)
{
$next = $fileContent[$i+1];
if($next != $enclosure && $next != $escape)
$field .= $escape;
}
else if($c === $delimiter)
{
if($inEnclosure)
$field .= $delimiter;
else
{
//end of the field
$fields[] = $field;
$field = '';
}
}
else if($c === "\n")
{
$fields[] = $field;
$field = '';
$lines[] = $fields;
$fields = array();
}
else
$field .= $c;
$previous = $c;
}
//we add the last element
if(true || $field !== '')
{
$fields[] = $field;
$lines[] = $fields;
}
return $lines;
}
?>
[#20] xoneca at gmail dot com [2011-11-27 04:26:03]
Note that this function can also be used to parse other types of constructions. For example, I have used to parse .htaccess AddDescription lines:
AddDescription "My description to the file." filename.jpg
Those lines can be parsed like this:
<?php
$line = 'AddDescription "My description to the file." filename.jpg';
$parsed = str_getcsv(
$line, # Input line
' ', # Delimiter
'"', # Enclosure
'\\' # Escape char
);
var_dump( $parsed );
?>
The output:
array(3) {
[0]=>
string(14) "AddDescription"
[1]=>
string(27) "My description to the file."
[2]=>
string(12) "filename.jpg"
}
[#21] durik at 3ilab dot net [2011-01-16 11:39:57]
As the str_getcsv(), unlike to fgetcsv(), does not parse the rows in CSV string, I have found following easy workaround:
<?php
$Data = str_getcsv($CsvString, "\n"); //parse the rows
foreach($Data as &$Row) $Row = str_getcsv($Row, ";"); //parse the items in rows
?>
Why not use explode() instead of str_getcsv() to parse rows? Because explode() would not treat possible enclosured parts of string or escaped characters correctly.
[#22] Anonymous [2010-10-25 00:25:22]
If your version of PHP doesn't have `str_getcsv` and you don't need custom $escape or $eol values, try this:
<?php if (!function_exists('str_getcsv')) {
function str_getcsv($input, $delimiter=',', $enclosure='"', $escape=null, $eol=null) {
$temp=fopen("php://memory", "rw");
fwrite($temp, $input);
fseek($temp, 0);
$r = array();
while (($data = fgetcsv($temp, 4096, $delimiter, $enclosure)) !== false) {
$r[] = $data;
}
fclose($temp);
return $r;
}
} ?>
[EDIT BY danbrown AT php DOT net: Contains a bugfix provided by (depely AT IAMNOTABOT prestaconcept.net) on 04-MAR-2011 with the following note: "The previous anonymous function only read the first line".]
[#23] Jay Williams [2010-08-10 13:50:05]
Here is a quick and easy way to convert a CSV file to an associated array:
<?php
function csv_to_array($filename='', $delimiter=',')
{
if(!file_exists($filename) || !is_readable($filename))
return FALSE;
$header = NULL;
$data = array();
if (($handle = fopen($filename, 'r')) !== FALSE)
{
while (($row = fgetcsv($handle, 1000, $delimiter)) !== FALSE)
{
if(!$header)
$header = $row;
else
$data[] = array_combine($header, $row);
}
fclose($handle);
}
return $data;
}
?>
[#24] hpartidas at deuz dot net [2010-05-25 09:50:49]
I found myself wanting to parse a CSV and didn't have access to str_getcsv, so I wrote substitute for PHP < 5.3, hope it helps someone out there stuck in the same situation.
<?php
if (!function_exists('str_getcsv')) {
function str_getcsv($input, $delimiter = ',', $enclosure = '"', $escape = '\\', $eol = '\n') {
if (is_string($input) && !empty($input)) {
$output = array();
$tmp = preg_split("/".$eol."/",$input);
if (is_array($tmp) && !empty($tmp)) {
while (list($line_num, $line) = each($tmp)) {
if (preg_match("/".$escape.$enclosure."/",$line)) {
while ($strlen = strlen($line)) {
$pos_delimiter = strpos($line,$delimiter);
$pos_enclosure_start = strpos($line,$enclosure);
if (
is_int($pos_delimiter) && is_int($pos_enclosure_start)
&& ($pos_enclosure_start < $pos_delimiter)
) {
$enclosed_str = substr($line,1);
$pos_enclosure_end = strpos($enclosed_str,$enclosure);
$enclosed_str = substr($enclosed_str,0,$pos_enclosure_end);
$output[$line_num][] = $enclosed_str;
$offset = $pos_enclosure_end+3;
} else {
if (empty($pos_delimiter) && empty($pos_enclosure_start)) {
$output[$line_num][] = substr($line,0);
$offset = strlen($line);
} else {
$output[$line_num][] = substr($line,0,$pos_delimiter);
$offset = (
!empty($pos_enclosure_start)
&& ($pos_enclosure_start < $pos_delimiter)
)
?$pos_enclosure_start
:$pos_delimiter+1;
}
}
$line = substr($line,$offset);
}
} else {
$line = preg_split("/".$delimiter."/",$line);
if (is_array($line) && !empty($line[0])) {
$output[$line_num] = $line;
}
}
}
return $output;
} else {
return false;
}
} else {
return false;
}
}
}
?>
[#25] Raymond [2009-12-14 17:49:06]
Here's a little function to convert a multi-line CSV string to an array:
<?php
function csv_to_array($csv, $delimiter = ',', $enclosure = '"', $escape = '\\', $terminator = "\n") {
$r = array();
$rows = explode($terminator,trim($csv));
$names = array_shift($rows);
$names = str_getcsv($names,$delimiter,$enclosure,$escape);
$nc = count($names);
foreach ($rows as $row) {
if (trim($row)) {
$values = str_getcsv($row,$delimiter,$enclosure,$escape);
if (!$values) $values = array_fill(0,$nc,null);
$r[] = array_combine($names,$values);
}
}
return $r;
}
?>
[#26] dave_walter at yahoo dot com [2009-06-04 09:51:20]
Just to clarify, my str_putcsv() function was only ever designed to complement the functionality of the str_getcsv() built-in function, which can only handle converting one line of input into a single level array. For example, this code:
<?php
var_dump( str_getcsv( "a,b,c\nd,e,f", "," ));
?>
generates this output:
array(5) {
[0]=>
string(1) "a"
[1]=>
string(1) "b"
[2]=>
string(3) "c
d"
[3]=>
string(1) "e"
[4]=>
string(1) "f"
}
Even fgetcsv() and fputcsv() only work with a single line. All the examples show them being used within a loop of some sort.
I was also avoiding the artificial restriction on the length of the CSV string introduced by Ulf's modification.
[#27] Ulf [2009-05-28 06:24:09]
As Dave's function also had the problem with only one line being returned here's a slightly changed version:
<?php
function str_putcsv($input, $delimiter = ',', $enclosure = '"') {
// Open a memory "file" for read/write...
$fp = fopen('php://temp', 'r+');
// ... write the $input array to the "file" using fputcsv()...
fputcsv($fp, $input, $delimiter, $enclosure);
// ... rewind the "file" so we can read what we just wrote...
rewind($fp);
// ... read the entire line into a variable...
$data = fread($fp, 1048576); // [changed]
// ... close the "file"...
fclose($fp);
// ... and return the $data to the caller, with the trailing newline from fgets() removed.
return rtrim( $data, "\n" );
}
?>
It assumes that one line won't exceed 1Mb of data. That should be more than enough.
[#28] Anonymous [2009-03-16 22:02:16]
For some reason o'connor's code only reads one line of a csv for me... I had to replace the line
$data = fgetcsv($fp, 1000, $delimiter, $enclosure); // $escape only got added in 5.3.0
with this:
$data;
while (!feof($fp))
{
$data[] = fgetcsv($fp, 0, $delimiter, $enclosure); // $escape only got added in 5.3.0
}
...to get all of the data out of my string (some post data pasted into a textbox and processed only with stripslashes).
[#29] dave_walter at NOSPAM dot yahoo dot com [2009-02-06 15:32:20]
Drawing inspiration from daniel dot oconnor at gmail dot com, here's an alternative str_putcsv() that leverages existing PHP core functionality (5.1.0+) to avoid re-inventing the wheel.
<?php
if(!function_exists('str_putcsv')) {
function str_putcsv($input, $delimiter = ',', $enclosure = '"') {
// Open a memory "file" for read/write...
$fp = fopen('php://temp', 'r+');
// ... write the $input array to the "file" using fputcsv()...
fputcsv($fp, $input, $delimiter, $enclosure);
// ... rewind the "file" so we can read what we just wrote...
rewind($fp);
// ... read the entire line into a variable...
$data = fgets($fp);
// ... close the "file"...
fclose($fp);
// ... and return the $data to the caller, with the trailing newline from fgets() removed.
return rtrim( $data, "\n" );
}
}
?>
[#30] Jeremy [2009-01-20 17:20:46]
After using several methods in the past to create CSV strings without using files (disk IO sucks), I finally decided it's time to write a function to handle it all. This function could use some cleanup, and the variable type test might be overkill for what is needed, I haven't thought about it too much.
Also, I took the liberty of replacing fields with certain data types with strings which I find much easier to work with. Some of you may not agree with those. Also, please note that the type "double" or float has been coded specifically for two digit precision because if I am using a float, it's most likely for currency.
I am sure some of you out there would appreciate this function.
<?php
function str_putcsv($array, $delimiter = ',', $enclosure = '"', $terminator = "\n") {
# First convert associative array to numeric indexed array
foreach ($array as $key => $value) $workArray[] = $value;
$returnString = ''; # Initialize return string
$arraySize = count($workArray); # Get size of array
for ($i=0; $i<$arraySize; $i++) {
# Nested array, process nest item
if (is_array($workArray[$i])) {
$returnString .= str_putcsv($workArray[$i], $delimiter, $enclosure, $terminator);
} else {
switch (gettype($workArray[$i])) {
# Manually set some strings
case "NULL": $_spFormat = ''; break;
case "boolean": $_spFormat = ($workArray[$i] == true) ? 'true': 'false'; break;
# Make sure sprintf has a good datatype to work with
case "integer": $_spFormat = '%i'; break;
case "double": $_spFormat = '%0.2f'; break;
case "string": $_spFormat = '%s'; break;
# Unknown or invalid items for a csv - note: the datatype of array is already handled above, assuming the data is nested
case "object":
case "resource":
default: $_spFormat = ''; break;
}
$returnString .= sprintf('%2$s'.$_spFormat.'%2$s', $workArray[$i], $enclosure);
$returnString .= ($i < ($arraySize-1)) ? $delimiter : $terminator;
}
}
# Done the workload, return the output information
return $returnString;
}
?>
[#31] daniel dot oconnor at gmail dot com [2009-01-19 16:48:15]
Don't have this? Ask fgetcsv() to do it for you.
5.1.0+
<?php
if (!function_exists('str_getcsv')) {
function str_getcsv($input, $delimiter = ",", $enclosure = '"', $escape = "\\") {
$fiveMBs = 5 * 1024 * 1024;
$fp = fopen("php://temp/maxmemory:$fiveMBs", 'r+');
fputs($fp, $input);
rewind($fp);
$data = fgetcsv($fp, 1000, $delimiter, $enclosure); // $escape only got added in 5.3.0
fclose($fp);
return $data;
}
}
?>
[#32] william dot j dot weir at gmail dot com [2008-09-18 03:19:26]
If your happy enough having just a multi-dimensional array, this should work fine. I had wanted to use the one provided by keananda but it was choking on pr($lines).
<?php
function f_parse_csv($file, $longest, $delimiter) {
$mdarray = array();
$file = fopen($file, "r");
while ($line = fgetcsv($file, $longest, $delimiter)) {
array_push($mdarray, $line);
}
fclose($file);
return $mdarray;
}
?>
$longest is a number that represents the longest line in the csv file as required by fgetcsv(). The page for fgetcsv() said that the longest line could be set to 0 or left out, but I couldn't get it to work without. I just made it extra large when I had to use it.
[#33] keananda at gmail dot com [2008-09-15 04:29:18]
For those who need this function but not yet installed in their environment, you can use my function bellow.
You can parse your csv file into an associative array (by default) for each lines, or into an object.
<?php
function parse_csv($file, $options = null) {
$delimiter = empty($options['delimiter']) ? "," : $options['delimiter'];
$to_object = empty($options['to_object']) ? false : true;
$str = file_get_contents($file);
$lines = explode("\n", $str);
pr($lines);
$field_names = explode($delimiter, array_shift($lines));
foreach ($lines as $line) {
// Skip the empty line
if (empty($line)) continue;
$fields = explode($delimiter, $line);
$_res = $to_object ? new stdClass : array();
foreach ($field_names as $key => $f) {
if ($to_object) {
$_res->{$f} = $fields[$key];
} else {
$_res[$f] = $fields[$key];
}
}
$res[] = $_res;
}
return $res;
}
?>
NOTE:
Line number 1 of the csv file will be considered as header (field names).
TODO:
- Enclosure handling
- Escape character handling
- Other features/enhancements as you need
EXAMPLE USE:
Content of /path/to/file.csv:
CODE,COUNTRY
AD,Andorra
AE,United Arab Emirates
AF,Afghanistan
AG,Antigua and Barbuda
<?php
$arr_csv = parse_csv("/path/to/file.csv");
print_r($arr_csv);
?>
// Output:
Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[CODE] => AD
[COUNTRY] => Andorra
)
[1] => Array
(
[CODE] => AE
[COUNTRY] => United Arab Emirates
)
[2] => Array
(
[CODE] => AF
[COUNTRY] => Afghanistan
)
[3] => Array
(
[CODE] => AG
[COUNTRY] => Antigua and Barbuda
)
)
<?php
$obj_csv = parse_csv("/path/to/file.csv", array("to_object" => true));
print_r($obj_csv);
?>
// Output:
Array
(
[0] => stdClass Object
(
[CODE] => AD
[COUNTRY] => Andorra
)
[1] => stdClass Object
(
[CODE] => AE
[COUNTRY] => United Arab Emirates
)
[2] => stdClass Object
(
[CODE] => AF
[COUNTRY] => Afghanistan
)
[3] => stdClass Object
(
[CODE] => AG
[COUNTRY] => Antigua and Barbuda
)
[4] => stdClass Object
(
[CODE] =>
[COUNTRY] =>
)
)
// If you use character | (pipe) as delimiter in your csv file, use:
<?php
$arr_csv = parse_csv("/path/to/file.csv", array("delimiter"=>"|"));
?>
==NSD==
[#34] csv at rfc dot org [2008-05-05 13:15:14]
RFC 4180 which deals with CSVs states the escape character is supposed to be a double quotation mark: (page 2)
7. If double-quotes are used to enclose fields, then a double-quote
appearing inside a field must be escaped by preceding it with
another double quote. For example:
"aaa","b""bb","ccc"
[#35] peev[dot]alexander at gmail dot com [2008-04-20 14:22:35]
CSV parsing and storage is not that hard to implement - see my example functions ( I believe they do a pretty good job - I use them in a production environment ):
<?php
if( !function_exists("parse_csv") ){
function parse_csv($string){
if( !function_exists("parse_csv_aux") ){
function parse_csv_aux( $string ){
$product = "";
$in_quote = FALSE;
$skipped_quote = FALSE;
for( $i = 0 ; $i < strlen($string) ; $i++ ){
if( $string{$i} == "\"" ){
if($in_quote){
if($skipped_quote){
$product .= "\"";
$skipped_quote = FALSE;
}
else if( !$skipped_quote ){
$skipped_quote = TRUE;
}
}
else{
if($skipped_quote) $skipped_quote = FALSE;
$in_quote = TRUE;
}
}
else if( $string{$i} == ";" ){
if($in_quote){
$product .= ";";
}
else{
$product .= " ; ";
}
}
else{
if($in_quote){
$in_quote = FALSE;
$product .= $string{$i};
}
else{
$product .= $string{$i};
}
}
}
return $product;
}
}
$data = array();
if( is_string($string) && ( stripos($string, "\n") !== FALSE ) ){
$data = explode("\n", parse_csv_aux($string) );
foreach($data as $key => $row){
$columns = array();
//$row = strtr( $row, array( "\";\"" => "\";\"", ";" => " ; " ) );
if( stripos($row, " ; ") !== FALSE ){
$columns = explode( " ; ", $row );
if( !is_array($columns) )$columns = array( strval($columns) );
$data[$key] = $columns;
}
}
return $data;
}
else if( is_string($string) && ( stripos( ($string = parse_csv_aux($string)), " ; ") !== FALSE ) ){
$columns = explode( " ; ", $string );
if( !is_array($columns) )$columns = array( strval($columns) );
return array($columns);
}
else return strval($string);
}
}
if( !function_exists("store_csv") ){
function store_csv($data){
if( !function_exists("store_csv_aux") ){
function store_csv_aux( $string ){
$string = strtr( $string, array( "\n" => "" ) );
$product = "";
$in_quote = FALSE;
for( $i = 0 ; $i < strlen($string) ; $i++ ){
if( $string{$i} == "\"" ){
if($in_quote){
$product .= "\"\"";
}
else{
$product .= "\"\"\"";
$in_quote = TRUE;
}
}
else if( $string{$i} == ";" ){
if($in_quote){
$product .= ";";
}
else{
$product .= "\";";
$in_quote = TRUE;
}
}
else{
if($in_quote){
$product .= "\"";
$in_quote = FALSE;
$product .= $string{$i};
}
else{
$product .= $string{$i};
}
}
}
if($in_quote)$product .= "\"";
return $product;
}
}
if(!is_array($data))return strval($data);
$passed_rows = FALSE;
$product = "";
foreach($data as $row){
if( $passed_rows )$product .= "\n";
if( is_array($row) ){
$columns = "";
$passed_cols = FALSE;
foreach($row as $column){
if( $passed_cols )$columns .= ";";
$columns .= store_csv_aux( $column );
$passed_cols =TRUE;
}
$product .= strval($columns);
}
else{
$product .= strtr( strval($row), array("\n" => "") );
}
$passed_rows = TRUE;
}
return $product;
}
}
?>