Let's say I have a database.... is there a way I can export what I have from the database to a CSV file (and text file [if possible]) via PHP?
10 Answers
I personally use this function to create CSV content from any array.
function array2csv(array &$array)
{
if (count($array) == 0) {
return null;
}
ob_start();
$df = fopen("php://output", 'w');
fputcsv($df, array_keys(reset($array)));
foreach ($array as $row) {
fputcsv($df, $row);
}
fclose($df);
return ob_get_clean();
}
Then you can make your user download that file using something like:
function download_send_headers($filename) {
// disable caching
$now = gmdate("D, d M Y H:i:s");
header("Expires: Tue, 03 Jul 2001 06:00:00 GMT");
header("Cache-Control: max-age=0, no-cache, must-revalidate, proxy-revalidate");
header("Last-Modified: {$now} GMT");
// force download
header("Content-Type: application/force-download");
header("Content-Type: application/octet-stream");
header("Content-Type: application/download");
// disposition / encoding on response body
header("Content-Disposition: attachment;filename={$filename}");
header("Content-Transfer-Encoding: binary");
}
Usage example:
download_send_headers("data_export_" . date("Y-m-d") . ".csv");
echo array2csv($array);
die();
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2on local server it's working, but in distant one it display a new page with content and no download window (sorry for my english) Dec 28, 2012 at 8:27
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3There may be several reasons for errors, the simplest way to find them is to look at your apache error.log file.– AlainDec 28, 2012 at 18:01
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10You need to put a
die();
call just afterecho array2csv();
, will edit my answer. Be sure to generate your csv before outputting something in your page.– AlainJun 6, 2013 at 17:29 -
2@ring0 I guess putting the past date in header disables the page caching, look at 2nd example php.net/manual/en/function.header.php Oct 22, 2014 at 13:50
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3Gives mime types to your browser so you'll get a download modal instead of the csv rendered in the current window.– AlainOct 7, 2015 at 14:15
You can export the date using this command.
<?php
$list = array (
array('aaa', 'bbb', 'ccc', 'dddd'),
array('123', '456', '789'),
array('"aaa"', '"bbb"')
);
$fp = fopen('file.csv', 'w');
foreach ($list as $fields) {
fputcsv($fp, $fields);
}
fclose($fp);
?>
First you must load the data from the mysql server in to a array
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11Or, you can do the fputcsv() inside a standard fetch assoc loop and plop it down straight out of the returned results.– DampeS8NNov 22, 2010 at 19:38
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12@DampeS8N, +1 for the use of "plop it down straight out" in a sentence. Dec 31, 2013 at 19:31
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2
Just for the record, concatenation is waaaaaay faster (I mean it) than fputcsv
or even implode
; And the file size is smaller:
// The data from Eternal Oblivion is an object, always
$values = (array) fetchDataFromEternalOblivion($userId, $limit = 1000);
// ----- fputcsv (slow)
// The code of @Alain Tiemblo is the best implementation
ob_start();
$csv = fopen("php://output", 'w');
fputcsv($csv, array_keys(reset($values)));
foreach ($values as $row) {
fputcsv($csv, $row);
}
fclose($csv);
return ob_get_clean();
// ----- implode (slow, but file size is smaller)
$csv = implode(",", array_keys(reset($values))) . PHP_EOL;
foreach ($values as $row) {
$csv .= '"' . implode('","', $row) . '"' . PHP_EOL;
}
return $csv;
// ----- concatenation (fast, file size is smaller)
// We can use one implode for the headers =D
$csv = implode(",", array_keys(reset($values))) . PHP_EOL;
$i = 1;
// This is less flexible, but we have more control over the formatting
foreach ($values as $row) {
$csv .= '"' . $row['id'] . '",';
$csv .= '"' . $row['name'] . '",';
$csv .= '"' . date('d-m-Y', strtotime($row['date'])) . '",';
$csv .= '"' . ($row['pet_name'] ?: '-' ) . '",';
$csv .= PHP_EOL;
}
return $csv;
This is the conclusion of the optimization of several reports, from ten to thousands rows. The three examples worked fine under 1000 rows, but fails when the data was bigger.
Works with over 100 lines, if you specify the size of the file in the headers simple call the get() method in your own class
function setHeader($filename, $filesize)
{
// disable caching
$now = gmdate("D, d M Y H:i:s");
header("Expires: Tue, 01 Jan 2001 00:00:01 GMT");
header("Cache-Control: max-age=0, no-cache, must-revalidate, proxy-revalidate");
header("Last-Modified: {$now} GMT");
// force download
header("Content-Type: application/force-download");
header("Content-Type: application/octet-stream");
header("Content-Type: application/download");
header('Content-Type: text/x-csv');
// disposition / encoding on response body
if (isset($filename) && strlen($filename) > 0)
header("Content-Disposition: attachment;filename={$filename}");
if (isset($filesize))
header("Content-Length: ".$filesize);
header("Content-Transfer-Encoding: binary");
header("Connection: close");
}
function getSql()
{
// return you own sql
$sql = "SELECT id, date, params, value FROM sometable ORDER BY date;";
return $sql;
}
function getExportData()
{
$values = array();
$sql = $this->getSql();
if (strlen($sql) > 0)
{
$result = dbquery($sql); // opens the database and executes the sql ... make your own ;-)
$fromDb = mysql_fetch_assoc($result);
if ($fromDb !== false)
{
while ($fromDb)
{
$values[] = $fromDb;
$fromDb = mysql_fetch_assoc($result);
}
}
}
return $values;
}
function get()
{
$values = $this->getExportData(); // values as array
$csv = tmpfile();
$bFirstRowHeader = true;
foreach ($values as $row)
{
if ($bFirstRowHeader)
{
fputcsv($csv, array_keys($row));
$bFirstRowHeader = false;
}
fputcsv($csv, array_values($row));
}
rewind($csv);
$filename = "export_".date("Y-m-d").".csv";
$fstat = fstat($csv);
$this->setHeader($filename, $fstat['size']);
fpassthru($csv);
fclose($csv);
}
pre-made code attached here. you can use it by just copying and pasting in your code:
https://gist.github.com/umairidrees/8952054#file-php-save-db-table-as-csv
Just like @Dampes8N said:
$result = mysql_query($sql,$conecction);
$fp = fopen('file.csv', 'w');
while($row = mysql_fetch_assoc($result)){
fputcsv($fp, $row);
}
fclose($fp);
Hope this helps.
<?php
// Database Connection
include "includes/db/db.php";
$query = mysqli_query($connection,"SELECT * FROM team_attendance JOIN team_login ON
team_attendance.attendance_user_id=team_login.user_id where
attendance_activity_name='Checked-In' order by
team_attendance.attendance_id ASC"); // Get data from Database from
demo table
$delimiter = ",";
$filename = "attendance" . date('Ymd') . ".csv"; // Create file name
//create a file pointer
$f = fopen('php://memory', 'w');
//set column headers
$fields = array('ID', 'Employee Name', 'Check In Time', 'Check Out Time', 'Date');
fputcsv($f, $fields, $delimiter);
//output each row of the data, format line as csv and write to file pointer
while($row = $query->fetch_assoc()){
$date=date('d-m-Y',$row['attendance_date']);
$lineData = array($row['attendance_id'], $row['user_name'], $row['attendance_time'],
$row['check_out_time'],$date);
fputcsv($f, $lineData, $delimiter);
}
//move back to beginning of file
fseek($f, 0);
//set headers to download file rather than displayed
header('Content-Type: text/csv');
header('Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="' . $filename . '";');
//output all remaining data on a file pointer
fpassthru($f);
?>
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1
$data .= "Your Data";
if ($data == ""):
$data = "\nNo Records Found!\n";
$file="call_sign_records.txt";
header("Content-type: application/octet-stream");
header("Content-Disposition: attachment; filename=$file");
header("Pragma: no-cache");
header("Expires: 0");
print "$data";
endif;
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Welcome to SO! Please don't post code-only answers but add a little textual explanation about how and why your approach works and what makes it different from the other answers given. You can find out more at our "How to write a good answer" page.– ahuemmerDec 23, 2022 at 8:57
You can use the native PHP function "fputcsv". With CSV it's easy.
<?php
// Connect to the database
$conn = new PDO('mysql:host=localhost;dbname=mydatabase', $username, $password);
// Query the database to get the data
$result = $conn->query('SELECT * FROM table');
// Open a file for writing
$fp = fopen('table.csv', 'w');
// Loop through the result set
while ($row = $result->fetch(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC)) {
// Write the data to the file
fputcsv($fp, $row);
}
// Close the file
fclose($fp);
With txt format it's more complicated because you didn't say what and how you wanna see it. So you have to do introduce your transformer.
A simple example here. It will write rows as lines in the file.
<?php
// Connect to the database
$conn = new PDO('mysql:host=localhost;dbname=mydatabase', $username, $password);
// Query the database to get the data
$result = $conn->query('SELECT * FROM table');
// Open a file for writing
$fp = fopen('table.txt', 'w');
// Loop through the result set
while ($row = $result->fetch(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC)) {
// Transform it here as you want
// Write the data to the file
fwrite($fp, implode(',', $row) . "\n");
}
// Close the file
fclose($fp);