XMLReader
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XMLReader::read

(PHP 5 >= 5.1.2)

XMLReader::readMove to next node in document

说明

bool XMLReader::read ( void )

Moves cursor to the next node in the document.

返回值

成功时返回 TRUE, 或者在失败时返回 FALSE.

参见


XMLReader
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PHP手册
PHP手册 - N: Move to next node in document

用户评论:

Nate (27-Jun-2011 06:49)

It is interesting to note that this function will stop on closing tags as well.  I have an XML document similar to the following:

<root>
  <columns>
    <column>columnX</column>
    <column>columnY</column>
  </columns>
  <table>
    <row>
      <columnX>38</columnX>
      <columnY>50</columnY>
    </row>
    <row>
      <columnX>82</columnY>
      <columnY>28</columnY>
    </row>
    ...
  </table>
</root>

I need to parse the <columns> object to know what attributes to check for from each <row> node.  Therefore I was doing the following:

<?php
while ($xml->read()) {
  if (
$xml->name === 'column') {
  
//parse column node to into $columns array
 
}
  elseif (
$xml->name === 'row') {
   
//parse row node, using constructed $columns array
 
}
}
?>

This kind of worked in that I ended up with an array of all the data I wanted, but the array I constructed was twice as large as I expected and every other entry was empty.  Took me a while to debug, but finally figured out that checking <?php $xml->name === 'row' ?> matches both <row> and </row>, so the check should really be something more like:

<?php

if ($xml->name === 'row' && $xml->nodeType == XMLReader::ELEMENT) {
 
// parse row node
}

?>

I would have liked to use the next() function instead, but as I needed to parse 2 different subtrees, I couldn't figure out how to find all the columns, reset the pointer, and then find all the rows.

andy at siliconrockstar dot com (16-May-2011 09:01)

A very simple way to avoid typing $reader->read() multiple times when you want to skip some nodes:

<?php
class smartXMLReader extends XMLReader {
    public function
readTimes($count) {
       
$i = 0;
        while(
$i < $count){
           
$this->read();
           
$i++;
        }
    }
}
?>

Using this smartXMLReader,

<?php
$reader
->readTimes(3);
?>

is equivalent to

<?php
$reader
->read();
$reader->read();
$reader->read();
?>

Makes getting around in your XML document a bit easier :)

caddozzone at gmail dot com (01-Feb-2011 09:58)

This class XMLReader2 is dangerous: charge all XML in memory, it can cause an out of memory error. It's the same that SimpleXML does.
Please take care.

Yannik (10-Nov-2009 11:38)

If you have trouble parsing xml documents with text tags bigger than 10MB, this might help you:

<?php
$xmlreader
= new XMLReader();
$xmlreader->open($uri, null, 1<<19);
?>

Since in libxml there is a constant
XML_PARSE_HUGE = 1<<19
which enables parsing xml documents with huge texts.

Please note that this option is not accessible using the setParserProperty method and that there is currently no constant to do the work, which will hopefully change soon:

http://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=49660

jirka at kosek dot cz (08-Feb-2006 09:01)

libxml2 contains much more useful method readString() that will read and return whole text content of element. You can call it after receiving start tag (XMLReader::ELEMENT). You can use this PHP code to emulate this method until PHP will directly call underlying libxml2 implementation.

<?php
class XMLReader2 extends XMLReader
{
  function
readString()
  {
       
$depth = 1;
       
$text = "";

        while (
$this->read() && $depth != 0)
        {
            if (
in_array($this->nodeType, array(XMLReader::TEXT, XMLReader::CDATA, XMLReader::WHITESPACE, XMLReader::SIGNIFICANT_WHITESPACE)))
               
$text .= $this->value;
            if (
$this->nodeType == XMLReader::ELEMENT) $depth++;
            if (
$this->nodeType == XMLReader::END_ELEMENT) $depth--;
        }
        return
$text;
    }
}
?>

Just use XMLReader2 instead of XMLReader.