To count lines, use fgets( ). Because it reads a line at a time, you can count the number of times it's called before reaching the end of a file:
$lines = 0;
if ($fh = fopen('orders.txt','r')) {
while (! feof($fh)) {
if (fgets($fh,1048576)) {
$lines++;
}
}
}
print $lines;
To count paragraphs, increment the counter only when you read a blank line:
$paragraphs = 0;
if ($fh = fopen('great-american-novel.txt','r')) {
while (! feof($fh)) {
$s = fgets($fh,1048576);
if (("\n" == $s) || ("\r\n" == $s)) {
$paragraphs++;
}
}
}
print $paragraphs;
To count records, increment the counter only when the line read contains just the record separator and whitespace:
$records = 0;
$record_separator = '--end--';
if ($fh = fopen('great-american-novel.txt','r')) {
while (! feof($fh)) {
$s = rtrim(fgets($fh,1048576));
if ($s == $record_separator) {
$records++;
}
}
}
print $records;
In the line counter, $lines is incremented only if fgets( ) returns a true value. As fgets( ) moves through the file, it returns each line it retrieves. When it reaches the last line, it returns false, so $lines doesn't get incorrectly incremented. Because EOF has been reached on the file, feof( ) returns true, and the while loop ends.
This paragraph counter works fine on simple text but may produce unexpected results when presented with a long string of blank lines or a file without two consecutive linebreaks. These problems can be remedied with functions based on preg_split( ). If the file is small and can be read into memory, use the pc_split_paragraphs( ) function shown in Example 18-1. This function returns an array containing each paragraph in the file.
function pc_split_paragraphs($file,$rs="\r?\n") {
$text = join('',file($file));
$matches = preg_split("/(.*?$rs)(?:$rs)+/s",$text,-1,
PREG_SPLIT_DELIM_CAPTURE|PREG_SPLIT_NO_EMPTY);
return $matches;
}
The contents of the file are broken on two or more consecutive newlines and returned in the $matches array. The default record-separation regular expression, \r?\n, matches both Windows and Unix linebreaks. If the file is too big to read into memory at once, use the pc_split_paragraphs_largefile( ) function shown in Example 18-2, which reads the file in 4K chunks.
function pc_split_paragraphs_largefile($file,$rs="\r?\n") {
global $php_errormsg;
$unmatched_text = '';
$paragraphs = array();
$fh = fopen($file,'r') or die($php_errormsg);
while(! feof($fh)) {
$s = fread($fh,4096) or die($php_errormsg);
$text_to_split = $unmatched_text . $s;
$matches = preg_split("/(.*?$rs)(?:$rs)+/s",$text_to_split,-1,
PREG_SPLIT_DELIM_CAPTURE|PREG_SPLIT_NO_EMPTY);
// if the last chunk doesn't end with two record separators, save it
* to prepend to the next section that gets read
$last_match = $matches[count($matches)-1];
if (! preg_match("/$rs$rs\$/",$last_match)) {
$unmatched_text = $last_match;
array_pop($matches);
} else {
$unmatched_text = '';
}
$paragraphs = array_merge($paragraphs,$matches);
}
// after reading all sections, if there is a final chunk that doesn't
* end with the record separator, count it as a paragraph
if ($unmatched_text) {
$paragraphs[] = $unmatched_text;
}
return $paragraphs;
}
This function uses the same regular expression as pc_split_paragraphs( ) to split the file into paragraphs. When it finds a paragraph end in a chunk read from the file, it saves the rest of the text in the chunk in $unmatched_text and prepends it to the next chunk read. This includes the unmatched text as the beginning of the next paragraph in the file.
Documentation on fgets( ) at http://www.php.net/fgets, on feof( ) at http://www.php.net/feof, and on preg_split( ) at http://www.php.net/preg-split.
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