Also while the enclosure character cannot be NULL you can set it to ASCII NUL character chr(0) with the same practical effect.
(PHP 5 >= 5.1.0, PHP 7, PHP 8)
SplFileObject::fgetcsv — Gets line from file and parse as CSV fields
$delimiter
= ","
, string $enclosure
= "\""
, string $escape
= "\\"
) : arrayGets a line from the file which is in CSV format and returns an array containing the fields read.
Note:
The locale settings are taken into account by this function. If
LC_CTYPE
is e.g.en_US.UTF-8
, files in one-byte encodings may be read wrongly by this function.
delimiter
The field delimiter (one character only). Defaults as a comma or the value set using SplFileObject::setCsvControl().
enclosure
The field enclosure character (one character only). Defaults as a double quotation mark or the value set using SplFileObject::setCsvControl().
escape
The escape character (at most one character). Defaults as a backslash (\
) or the value set using SplFileObject::setCsvControl().
An empty string (""
) disables the proprietary escape mechanism.
Note: Usually an
enclosure
character is escpaped inside a field by doubling it; however, theescape
character can be used as an alternative. So for the default parameter values""
and\"
have the same meaning. Other than allowing to escape theenclosure
character theescape
character has no special meaning; it isn't even meant to escape itself.
Returns an indexed array containing the fields read, or false
on error.
Note:
A blank line in a CSV file will be returned as an array comprising a single
null
field unless usingSplFileObject::SKIP_EMPTY | SplFileObject::DROP_NEW_LINE
, in which case empty lines are skipped.
版本 | 说明 |
---|---|
7.4.0 |
The escape parameter now also accepts an empty
string to disable the proprietary escape mechanism.
|
Example #1 SplFileObject::fgetcsv() example
<?php
$file = new SplFileObject("data.csv");
while (!$file->eof()) {
var_dump($file->fgetcsv());
}
?>
Example #2 SplFileObject::READ_CSV
example
<?php
$file = new SplFileObject("animals.csv");
$file->setFlags(SplFileObject::READ_CSV);
foreach ($file as $row) {
list($animal, $class, $legs) = $row;
printf("A %s is a %s with %d legs\n", $animal, $class, $legs);
}
?>
Contents of animals.csv
crocodile,reptile,4 dolphin,mammal,0 duck,bird,2 koala,mammal,4 salmon,fish,0
以上例程的输出类似于:
A crocodile is a reptile with 4 legs A dolphin is a mammal with 0 legs A duck is a bird with 2 legs A koala is a mammal with 4 legs A salmon is a fish with 0 legs
Also while the enclosure character cannot be NULL you can set it to ASCII NUL character chr(0) with the same practical effect.
Be aware.
There is bug 46569 persists that breaks usage of SplFileObject::fgetcsv() after SplFileObject::seek()-ing to a non-zero position and then returns the contents of wrong line - off by one
<?php
$file = new SplFileObject('foo/bar.csv');
$file->seek(1);
print_r($file->fgetcsv()); // reads 3rd line against 2nd
If your CSV doesn't have enclosures, you can face an issue with default " identified as enclosure in data. Empty $enclosure is not allowed, but you can use same $enclosure as $delimiter (\n by default) to emulate empty enclosure.
Note that due to bugs 55807 and 61032, introduced in 5.3.8, if the csv in example #2 has a newline character at the end of each line, the foreach will execute 6 times.
The last time through the loop $row will be bool(false). This is true even if using SplFileObject::SKIP_EMPTY and SplFileObject::DROP_NEW_LINE.
Until the bug is fixed, the workaround is to also add SplFileObject::READ_AHEAD to your setFlags() call.
after setting the delimiter '\t' fgetcsv() truncates the value when it is empty string
workaround:
<?php
$file = new SplFileObject($path);
$file->setFlags(SplFileObject::DROP_NEW_LINE);
while ($file->valid()) {
$line = $file->fgets();
$line = explode("\t", $line);
print_r($line);
}
?>