140

I am trying to read every line of a text file into an array and have each line in a new element.
My code so far.

<?php
$file = fopen("members.txt", "r");
while (!feof($file)) {

$line_of_text = fgets($file);
$members = explode('\n', $line_of_text);
fclose($file);

?>
3
  • 1
    Is anything stored in the array with your code as it is? What specific problem are you having? May 28, 2011 at 4:46
  • 2
    Warning: FALSE from fopen will issue warning and result in infinite loop here. php.net/manual/en/function.feof.php Oct 8, 2014 at 10:27
  • Despite the thread's date an '\n\' won't be exploded while it must be a "\n" to have it parsed as an escape sequence.
    – codekandis
    Jun 18, 2019 at 9:22

12 Answers 12

428

If you don't need any special processing, this should do what you're looking for

$lines = file($filename, FILE_IGNORE_NEW_LINES);
2
  • 2
    file() seems to be considerably slower than file_get_contents + explode to array
    – Ron
    Jul 9, 2020 at 13:38
  • 3
    @Ron I agree. Then again, you shouldn't read a file this way at every request. That's just silly, even if the solution is optimal. The content of the file should either be stored on memory cache, or even in a database. Even PHP stores the content of parsed files. I mean, we're far from PHP 4.3 Jul 16, 2020 at 2:32
46

The fastest way that I've found is:

// Open the file
$fp = @fopen($filename, 'r'); 

// Add each line to an array
if ($fp) {
   $array = explode("\n", fread($fp, filesize($filename)));
}

where $filename is going to be the path & name of your file, eg. ../filename.txt.

Depending how you've set up your text file, you'll have might have to play around with the \n bit.

2
  • 6
    I would use "PHP_EOL" instead of "\n", this looks so, $array = explode(PHP_EOL, fread($fp, filesize($filename)));
    – LFS96
    Feb 27, 2016 at 11:43
  • Thanks Drew, after trying many functions, yours is the only one that worked. My search term being <br> instead of your \n. My file was being read as only a single big value array, whole text was just one array item $myarr[0], so shuffling did not work on a single item. Hope it helps someone. Thanks again.
    – washere
    Apr 21, 2017 at 21:54
40

Just use this:

$array = explode("\n", file_get_contents('file.txt'));
0
30
$yourArray = file("pathToFile.txt", FILE_IGNORE_NEW_LINES);

FILE_IGNORE_NEW_LINES avoid to add newline at the end of each array element
You can also use FILE_SKIP_EMPTY_LINES to Skip empty lines

reference here

23
<?php
$file = fopen("members.txt", "r");
$members = array();

while (!feof($file)) {
   $members[] = fgets($file);
}

fclose($file);

var_dump($members);
?>
3
  • 1
    Okay I have it working perfectly thanks. However I need to set a vaiable = to an array element. $var = $ary[1]; does not work. ary[1]= "test". If that helps.
    – Dan
    May 28, 2011 at 5:22
  • 1
    Run a counter yourself and set the index in the array
    – Prasad
    Sep 23, 2012 at 6:45
  • why while(!feof($file)) is wrong
    – Barmar
    Jun 2, 2021 at 18:37
13

It's just easy as that:

$lines = explode("\n", file_get_contents('foo.txt'));

file_get_contents() - gets the whole file as string.

explode("\n") - will split the string with the delimiter "\n" - what is ASCII-LF escape for a newline.

But pay attention - check that the file has UNIX-Line endings.

If "\n" will not work properly you have another coding of newline and you can try "\r\n", "\r" or "\025"

7
$lines = array();
while (($line = fgets($file)) !== false)
    array_push($lines, $line);

Obviously, you'll need to create a file handle first and store it in $file.

3
$file = __DIR__."/file1.txt";
$f = fopen($file, "r");
$array1 = array();

while ( $line = fgets($f, 1000) )
{
    $nl = mb_strtolower($line,'UTF-8');
    $array1[] = $nl;
}

print_r($array);
0
1

You were on the right track, but there were some problems with the code you posted. First of all, there was no closing bracket for the while loop. Secondly, $line_of_text would be overwritten with every loop iteration, which is fixed by changing the = to a .= in the loop. Third, you're exploding the literal characters '\n' and not an actual newline; in PHP, single quotes will denote literal characters, but double quotes will actually interpret escaped characters and variables.

    <?php
        $file = fopen("members.txt", "r");
        $i = 0;
        while (!feof($file)) {
            $line_of_text .= fgets($file);
        }
        $members = explode("\n", $line_of_text);
        fclose($file);
        print_r($members);
    ?>
1
    $file = file("links.txt");
print_r($file);

This will be accept the txt file as array. So write anything to the links.txt file (use one line for one element) after, run this page :) your array will be $file

0

This has been covered here quite well, but if you REALLY need even better performance than anything listed here, you can use this approach that uses strtok.

$Names_Keys = [];
$Name = strtok(file_get_contents($file), "\n");
while ($Name !== false) {
    $Names_Keys[$Name] = 0;
    $Name = strtok("\n");
}

Note, this assumes your file is saved with \n as the newline character (you can update that as need be), and it also stores the words/names/lines as the array keys instead of the values, so that you can use it as a lookup table, allowing the use of isset (much, much faster), instead of in_array.

0

I would use PHP_EOL.

$dataLines = explode(PHP_EOL, $documentVariable);

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.