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I am fetching some info via PHP from a webpage using simple_php_dom and curl. The problem is that the page is not built correctly so the DOM object contains erroneous info.

How can I get the HTML file as a string in a PHP var so that I can run a regular expression through it?

Curl doesn't work as it is ignoring the bad part.
simple_html_dom.php has the same issue.
wget doesn't work since I don't have permissions for it on the server.

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4 Answers

vote up 11 vote down

file_get_contents — Reads entire file into a string

string file_get_contents ( 
    string $filename [, int $flags= 0 [, resource $context [, int $offset= -1 [, int $maxlen= -1 ]]]] 
)

from the manual:

This function is similar to file(), except that file_get_contents() returns the file in a string, starting at the specified offset up to maxlen bytes. On failure, file_get_contents() will return FALSE.

file_get_contents() is the preferred way to read the contents of a file into a string. It will use memory mapping techniques if supported by your OS to enhance performance.

And it works both with webpages and files. You can grab the HTML, just by using "http://whatever.com/page.html" as $filename.

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Thats what I'd suggest. – Christian Jul 29 at 22:47
2  
Only works if allow_url_fopen is enabled, though. There's really no reason that this should work with curl as well. – Emil H Jul 29 at 22:58
It also ignores part of the file :S The only one so far that really gets the file correctly is wget, which i can't use :S – fmsf Jul 29 at 23:05
You can test it with this: zonlusomundo.pt/txt_geral.php?Gid=1579830&zon… compare the size of wget and the size with that – fmsf Jul 29 at 23:06
Maybe the site has some kind of user-agent policy. How does wget identify itself to the site? If you pull google.com, it (usualy) loads perfectly with both file_get_contents and wget. Maybe you need to set a user-agent string for file_get_contents() – Gerrit Aug 7 at 15:55
vote up 2 vote down

With curl you would want to make sure that you're setting the CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER parameter to ensure that the page is retrieved as a string, e.g.:

    //return the transfer as a string 
    curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER, 1);

See http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.curl-setopt.php

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vote up 0 vote down

How about fsockopen to connect, and then use fgets to pull into your var?

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vote up 0 vote down

I used cURL to get the file into a string (simple_html_dom::load_file just wraps file_get_contents) then using simple_html_dom load (from string) method to parse it. That works for some URL's but it is failing in this case when the URL has a parameter string. It is fetching the URL as if it had not a parameter string. I set an agent with curl to impersonate a browser but no dice.

Sorry this is not an answer really, but maybe using curl will work for some people for whom the fopen setting is a problem.

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