165

I have a form that allows the user to either upload a text file or copy/paste the contents of the file into a textarea. I can easily differentiate between the two and put whichever one they entered into a string variable, but where do I go from there?

I need to iterate over each line of the string (preferably not worrying about newlines on different machines), make sure that it has exactly one token (no spaces, tabs, commas, etc.), sanitize the data, then generate an SQL query based off of all of the lines.

I'm a fairly good programmer, so I know the general idea about how to do it, but it's been so long since I worked with PHP that I feel I am searching for the wrong things and thus coming up with useless information. The key problem I'm having is that I want to read the contents of the string line-by-line. If it were a file, it would be easy.

I'm mostly looking for useful PHP functions, not an algorithm for how to do it. Any suggestions?

1
  • You may want to normalize the newlines first. The method s($myString)->normalizeLineEndings() is available with github.com/delight-im/PHP-Str (library under MIT License) which has lots of other useful string helpers. You may want to take a look at the source code.
    – caw
    Jul 25, 2016 at 4:03

8 Answers 8

227

preg_split the variable containing the text, and iterate over the returned array:

foreach(preg_split("/((\r?\n)|(\r\n?))/", $subject) as $line){
    // do stuff with $line
} 
10
  • Will this handle ^M in addition to \n\r ? Sep 22, 2009 at 21:37
  • I'm not sure if the ascii carriage return gets converted to \r once it's placed inside a variable. If not you can always use a split()/exlope() with the ascii value instead -- ch(13)
    – Kyril
    Sep 22, 2009 at 21:52
  • 12
    A better regexp is /((\r?\n)|(\r\n?))/. Nov 12, 2011 at 5:02
  • 3
    To match Unix LF (\n), MacOS<9 CR (\r), Windows CR+LF (\r\n) and rare LF+CR (\n\r) it should be: /((\r?\n)|(\n?\r))/ Mar 7, 2012 at 16:09
  • 2
    This is likely to bomb catastrophically for multi-byte data. Jul 12, 2013 at 10:42
194

I would like to propose a significantly faster (and memory efficient) alternative: strtok rather than preg_split.

$separator = "\r\n";
$line = strtok($subject, $separator);

while ($line !== false) {
    # do something with $line
    $line = strtok( $separator );
}

Testing the performance, I iterated 100 times over a test file with 17 thousand lines: preg_split took 27.7 seconds, whereas strtok took 1.4 seconds.

Note that though the $separator is defined as "\r\n", strtok will separate on either character - and as of PHP4.1.0, skip empty lines/tokens.

See the strtok manual entry: http://php.net/strtok

9
  • 29
    +1 for performance considerations when dealing with large line sets.
    – CodeAngry
    Jul 19, 2013 at 21:32
  • 5
    Although this function api is a total mess (call with different parameters) this is the best solution. Neither prey_split nor explode should be used for yielding structured string fragments. It's like aiming to a fly with a bazooka.
    – Maciej Sz
    Mar 25, 2014 at 14:53
  • 3
    If you check the memory usage while the app is running, then you'll see the magic. It actually pulls the file you're reading into memory in the event you loop through each of the lines, and it keeps your token location. You'll want to flush that to be truly memory efficient. php.net/strtok#103051 Aug 30, 2017 at 6:43
  • 2
    quick note, using strtok() on something else inside that while loop will break things. I was also using it to grab everything in a string up to the first space (stackoverflow.com/a/2477411/1767412) and took me a minute to realize why things weren't going as planned Jun 13, 2018 at 19:55
  • 2
    should be the accepted answer, probably the fastest solution from all options.
    – John
    Nov 25, 2018 at 2:33
107

If you need to handle newlines in diferent systems you can simply use the PHP predefined constant PHP_EOL (http://php.net/manual/en/reserved.constants.php) and simply use explode to avoid the overhead of the regular expression engine.

$lines = explode(PHP_EOL, $subject);
4
  • 36
    Beware: It will work on different systems but it won't work well with strings from different systems. The PHP Manual states that PHP_EOL (string) is The correct 'End Of Line' symbol for this platform.
    – wadim
    Dec 11, 2013 at 14:57
  • 1
    @wadim is right! If you are processing a Windows text file on a Unix server, it will fail.
    – javsmo
    Jan 9, 2014 at 17:47
  • 1
    Beware that depending on the length of your lines, this can eat very large amounts of memory for big strings.
    – Synchro
    Mar 3, 2015 at 14:30
  • 1
    Note that if the last line contains a line terminator, then this will also return another empty string after that.
    – user1804599
    May 19, 2018 at 10:57
25

It's overly-complicated and ugly but in my opinion this is the way to go:

$fp = fopen("php://memory", 'r+');
fputs($fp, $data);
rewind($fp);
while($line = fgets($fp)){
  // deal with $line
}
fclose($fp);
2
  • 2
    +1 and you can also use php://temp for storing larger data to temporary disk file.
    – CodeAngry
    Jul 19, 2013 at 21:34
  • 6
    It should be noted that that this allows you to detect empty lines, unlike the strtok() solution. The documentation is at php.net/manual/en/… Jul 28, 2015 at 14:58
9

Potential memory issues with strtok:

Since one of the suggested solutions uses strtok, unfortunately it doesn't point out a potential memory issue (though it claims to be memory efficient). When using strtok according to the manual, the:

Note that only the first call to strtok uses the string argument. Every subsequent call to strtok only needs the token to use, as it keeps track of where it is in the current string.

It does this by loading the file into memory. If you're using large files, you need to flush them if you're done looping through the file.

<?php
function process($str) {
    $line = strtok($str, PHP_EOL);

    /*do something with the first line here...*/

    while ($line !== FALSE) {
        // get the next line
        $line = strtok(PHP_EOL);

        /*do something with the rest of the lines here...*/

    }
    //the bit that frees up memory
    strtok('', '');
}

If you're only concerned with physical files (eg. datamining):

According to the manual, for the file upload part you can use the file command:

 //Create the array
 $lines = file( $some_file );

 foreach ( $lines as $line ) {
   //do something here.
 }
6
foreach(preg_split('~[\r\n]+~', $text) as $line){
    if(empty($line) or ctype_space($line)) continue; // skip only spaces
    // if(!strlen($line = trim($line))) continue; // or trim by force and skip empty
    // $line is trimmed and nice here so use it
}

^ this is how you break lines properly, cross-platform compatible with Regexp :)

5

Kyril's answer is best considering you need to be able to handle newlines on different machines.

"I'm mostly looking for useful PHP functions, not an algorithm for how to do it. Any suggestions?"

I use these a lot:

  • explode() can be used to split a string into an array, given a single delimiter.
  • implode() is explode's counterpart, to go from array back to string.
4

Similar as @pguardiario, but using a more "modern" (OOP) interface:

$fileObject = new \SplFileObject('php://memory', 'r+');
$fileObject->fwrite($content);
$fileObject->rewind();

while ($fileObject->valid()) {
    $line = $fileObject->current();
    $fileObject->next();
}

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.