PHP
downloads | documentation | faq | getting help | mailing lists | reporting bugs | php.net sites | links | conferences | my php.net

search for in the

fseek> <fread
Last updated: Fri, 20 Jun 2008

view this page in

fscanf

(PHP 4 >= 4.0.1, PHP 5)

fscanf — Analyse un fichier en fonction d'un format

Description

mixed fscanf ( resource $handle , string $format [, mixed &$... ] )

La fonction fscanf() est similaire à la fonction sscanf(), sauf qu'elle prend un fichier en entrée, représentée par la ressource handle et interprète l'entrée en fonction du format format spécifié, qui est décrit dans la documentation de la fonction sprintf().

Tous les caractères blancs de la chaîne de formatage correspondent à autant d'espaces dans le flux d'entrée. Cela signifie qu'une tabulation \t dans la chaîne de format peut remplacer un espace simple dans le flux d'entrée.

Liste de paramètres

handle

Un pointeur de système de fichiers de type resource qui est habituellement créé en utilisant la fonction fopen().

format

Le format spécifié, tel que décrit dans la documentation de la fonction sprintf().

...

Les valeurs optionnelles à assigner.

Valeurs de retour

Si seulement 2 paramètres sont passés à la fonction, la valeur analysée sera retourné sous la forme d'un tableau. Si des paramètres optionnels sont passés, la fonction retournera le nombre de valeurs assignées. Les paramètres optionnels doivent être passés par référence.

Historique

Version Description
4.3.0 Avant PHP 4.3.0, le nombre maximum de caractères lus dans le fichier était de 512, ou bien jusqu'à la première nouvelle ligne "\n" : en fait, le premier des deux. Depuis PHP 4.3.0, des lignes de n'importe quelle taille peuvent être lues.

Exemples

Exemple #1 Exemple avec fscanf()

<?php
$handle 
fopen("users.txt""r");
while (
$userinfo fscanf($handle"%s\t%s\t%s\n")) {
    list (
$name$profession$countrycode) = $userinfo;
    
//... traitement des données
}
fclose($handle);
?>

Exemple #2 Contenu du fichier users.txt

javier  argonaut        pe
hiroshi sculptor        jp
robert  slacker us
luigi   florist it



fseek> <fread
Last updated: Fri, 20 Jun 2008
 
add a note add a note User Contributed Notes
fscanf
arentzen at religion dot dk
30-Sep-2007 11:56
If you want fscanf()to scan one variable in a large number of lines,  e.g an Ipadress in a line with more variables, then use fscanf with explode()
<?
$filename
= "somefile.txt";
$fp = fopen($filename, "r") or die ("Error opening file! \n");
$u = explode(" ",$line); // $u is the variable eg. an IPadress
while ($line = fscanf($fp,"%s",$u)) {
if(
preg_match("/^$u/",$_SERVER['REMOTE_ADDR'])) {$badipadresss++;} // do something and continue scan
}
?>
Besides, fscanf()is much faster than fgets()
Bertrand dot Lecun at prism dot uvsq dot Fr
30-May-2007 09:48
It would be great to precise in the fscanf documentation
that one call to the function, reads a complete line.
and not just the number of values defined in the format.

If a text file contains 2 lines each containing 4 integer values,
reading the file with 8 fscanf($fd,"%d",$v) doesnt run !
You have to make 2
fscanf($fd,"%d %d %d %d",$v1,$v2,$v3,$v4);

Then 1 fscanf per line.
loco.xxx at gmail dot com
24-Jul-2006 09:46
to include all type of visible chars you should try:

fscanf($file_handler,"%[ -~]");
worldwideroach at hotmail dot com
14-Jul-2005 06:33
Yet another function to read a file and return a record/string by a delimiter.  It is very much like fgets() with the delimiter being an additional parameter.  Works great across multiple lines.

function fgetd(&$rFile, $sDelim, $iBuffer=1024) {
    $sRecord = '';
    while(!feof($rFile)) {
        $iPos = strpos($sRecord, $sDelim);
        if ($iPos === false) {
            $sRecord .= fread($rFile, $iBuffer);
        } else {
            fseek($rFile, 0-strlen($sRecord)+$iPos+strlen($sDelim), SEEK_CUR);
            return substr($sRecord, 0, $iPos);
        }
    }
    return false;
}
rudigreen at gmail dot com
02-Jul-2005 12:43
I have a function for reading delimited files, it works for multiple lines too (i think...)

<?
//$fh - is the file pointer
//$delim - is the seperator
//$callback - self explanatory
//$len - optional
function file_read_delim($fh,$delim,$callback,$len=1024)
{
   
$rec = '';
    while(!
feof($fh))
    {
       
$buf = fread($fh,$len);
        if(
strpos($buf,$delim) === false)
        {
           
$rec .= $buf;
        }
        else
        {
           
$strs = explode($delim,$buf);
            foreach (
$strs as $ele)
            {
               
$rec .= $ele;
               
call_user_func($callback,$rec);
               
$rec = '';
            }
        }
    }
}

//Here is an example how to use the function

$fh = fopen($filename,'r');
    if(!
$fh)
    {
                 die
'Could not open file for reading';
    }
       
//call the function
   
file_read_delim($fh,'-','cb');
   
fclose($fh);

function
cb($rec)
{
echo
"$rec \n";
}
?>
me at hesterc dot fsnet dot co dot uk
25-May-2004 04:03
I have a simpler method I use to parse delimited text. Using the data posted by gozer at fanhunter dot com, here is my script. Maybe it is faster?

<?php

$fp
= fopen ("sections.dat","r");

if (!
$fp) {echo "<p>Unable to open remote file.</p>"; exit;}

while (!
feof($fp)):
 
$line = fgets($fp, 2048);
 
$out = array($line);
 list (
$id, $name, $description, $language, $directory, $id_uplevel, $order, $hassubsection) = split ("\|", $out[0]);
 echo
"$id-$name-$description-$language-$directory-
$id_uplevel-$order-$hassubsection<br />\n"
;
 
$fp++;
endwhile;

fclose($fp);
?>

Notes:

Avoid the php extension on a data file - it will cause PHP to parse the file, but there is no PHP in it.

The "2048" value on line 2 of the loop is set for long lines. 1024 works fine, but I had to increase it with a large database I use a similar script to read.

You don't need to open and close the speech marks (as in gozer at fanhunter dot com's example) in the echo line, just use the variables inbetween the dashes.

(Remove the line break halfway through the echo line - it is just there for this forum.)
matt at mattsinclair dot com
21-Jan-2004 09:36
A better way to use fscanf() would be this:

<?php
$handle
= fopen("users.txt", "r");
while (!
feof($handle)) {
  
$userinfo = fscanf($handle, "%s\t%s\t%s\n");
   if (
$userinfo) {
     list (
$name, $profession, $countrycode) = $userinfo;
    
//... do something with the values
  
}
  
$userinfo=NULL;
}
fclose($handle);
?>

as you can see, instead of waiting for fscanf() to fail to return a value... it waits for the the pointer to get to the end of the file... this way, if for some reason one of your lines does not match your expression, it will not kill the loop.  it will simply go on to the next line.
robert at NOSPAM dot NOSPAM
25-Oct-2002 01:08
actually, instead of trying to think of every character that might be in your file, excluding the delimiter would be much easier.

for example, if your delimiter was a comma use:

%[^,]

instead of:

%[a-zA-Z0-9.| ... ]

Just make sure to use %[^,\n] on your last entry so you don't include the newline.
ruiner911 at yahoo dot com
15-Aug-2002 10:01
Clear the variables before you scan them in.  As a programmer this should have been very apparent.  Goof.
eugene at pro-access dot com
16-Mar-2002 09:39
If you want to read text files in csv format or the like(no matter what character the fields are separated with), you should use fgetcsv() instead. When a text for a field is blank, fscanf() may skip it and fill it with the next text, whereas fgetcsv() correctly regards it as a blank field.
gozer at fanhunter dot com
07-Mar-2002 03:53
Hi,
A few days ago we got multiple mySQL crashes due to a hardware failure and other processes running.
While we thought it could be the mySQL daemon overloaded, we started looking for alternate ways to get our little databases working so we started using fscanf to parse files.

We ran into multiple problems due to the whitespace and other characters that were in our database. Finally, we made it to work using sets as james@zephyr-works.com remarked.

Our final function is:

  function get_sections($include_dir){
    $filename = $include_dir . "sections.dat.php";
    $datafile = fopen ($filename ,"r");
    while ($sectioninfo = fscanf ($datafile, "%[0-9]|%[a-zA-Z0-9@&;:,. /!?-]|%[a-zA-Z0-9@&;:,. /!?-]|%[a-zA-Z]|%[a-zA-Z0-9@/?&;.+=-]|%[0-9]|%[0-9]|%[0-9]\n")) {
        list($id, $name, $description, $language, $directory, $id_uplevel, $order, $hassubsection) = $sectioninfo;

        // Show output
        echo $id . "-" . $name. "-" . $description . "-" . $language . "-" . $directory . "-" . $id_uplevel . "-" . $order . "-" . $hassubsection . "<br>\n";
    }
    fclose($datafile);
  }

The contents of sections.dat.php (for example):

1|home|P&aacute;gina principal de Fanhunter.|castellano|==|0|0|0
2|fanhunter|Secci&oacute;n principal dedicada al universo Fanhunter.|castellano|fanhunter/|1|0|0
3|outfan|Secci&oacute;n principal dedicada al universo Outfan.|castellano|outfan/|1|0|0
4|fanpiro|Secci&oacute;n principal dedicada al universo Fanpiro.|castellano|fanpiro/|1|0|0
5|tienda|La tienda de Fanhunter.|castellano|tienda/|1|0|0
6|the zone|Secci&oacute;n principal Miscel&aacute;nea.|castellano|thezone/|1|0|0
7|flfcn|Secci&oacute;n principal dedicada a Fan Letal/Fan con Nata.|castellano|fanletal/|1|0|0
8|foro|Nuestro foro de discusi&oacute;n.|castellano|foro/|1|0|0
9|chat|Secci&oacute;n para chatear.|castellano|chat/|1|0|0
10|links|Secci&oacute;n recopilatoria de enlaces de inter&eacute;s a otras p&aacute;ginas.|castellano|links/|1|0|0

Note: The '==' in directory means no directory needed to be specified.
Pay attention to linebreaks, as this forum puts some of them into the code I pasted.

Good luck guys.
james at zephyr-works dot com
08-Jul-2001 09:29
fscanf works a little retardedly I've found. Instead of using just a plain %s you probably will need to use sets instead. Because it works so screwy compared to C/C++, fscanf does not have the ability to scan ahead in a string and pattern match correctly, so a seemingly perfect function call like:

fscanf($fh, "%s::%s");

With a file like:

user::password

Will not work. When fscanf looks for a string, it will look and stop at nothing except for a whitespace so :: and everything except whitespace is considered part of that string, however you can make it a little smarter by:

fscanf($fh, "%[a-zA-Z0-9,. ]::%[a-zA-Z0-9,. ]" $var1, $var2);

Which tells it that it can only accept a through z A through Z 0 through 9 a comma a period and a whitespace as input to the string, everything else cause it to stop taking in as input and continue parsing the line. This is very useful if you want to get a sentence into the string and you're not sure of exactly how many words to add, etc.
yasuo_ohgaki at hotmail dot com
13-Mar-2001 08:59
For C/C++ programmers.

fscanf() does not work like C/C++, because PHP's fscanf() move file pointer the next line implicitly.

fseek> <fread
Last updated: Fri, 20 Jun 2008
 
 
show source | credits | sitemap | contact | advertising | mirror sites