Как найти строку файла php

Using php, I’m trying to create a script which will search within a text file and grab that entire line and echo it.

I have a text file (.txt) titled “numorder.txt” and within that text file, there are several lines of data, with new lines coming in every 5 minutes (using cron job). The data looks similar to:

2 aullah1
7 name
12 username

How would I go about creating a php script which will search for the data “aullah1” and then grab the entire line and echo it? (Once echoed, it should display “2 aullah1” (without quotations).

If I didn’t explain anything clearly and/or you’d like me to explain in more detail, please comment.

Toby Allen's user avatar

Toby Allen

11k11 gold badges73 silver badges124 bronze badges

asked Sep 10, 2010 at 15:55

aullah's user avatar

4

And a PHP example, multiple matching lines will be displayed:

<?php
$file = 'somefile.txt';
$searchfor = 'name';

// the following line prevents the browser from parsing this as HTML.
header('Content-Type: text/plain');

// get the file contents, assuming the file to be readable (and exist)
$contents = file_get_contents($file);

// escape special characters in the query
$pattern = preg_quote($searchfor, '/');

// finalise the regular expression, matching the whole line
$pattern = "/^.*$pattern.*$/m";

// search, and store all matching occurences in $matches
if (preg_match_all($pattern, $contents, $matches))
{
   echo "Found matches:n";
   echo implode("n", $matches[0]);
}
else
{
   echo "No matches found";
}

Avatar's user avatar

Avatar

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answered Sep 10, 2010 at 16:05

Lekensteyn's user avatar

LekensteynLekensteyn

64k22 gold badges157 silver badges192 bronze badges

5

Do it like this. This approach lets you search a file of any size (big size won’t crash the script) and will return ALL lines that match the string you want.

<?php
$searchthis = "mystring";
$matches = array();

$handle = @fopen("path/to/inputfile.txt", "r");
if ($handle)
{
    while (!feof($handle))
    {
        $buffer = fgets($handle);
        if(strpos($buffer, $searchthis) !== FALSE)
            $matches[] = $buffer;
    }
    fclose($handle);
}

//show results:
print_r($matches);
?>

Note the way strpos is used with !== operator.

answered Sep 10, 2010 at 16:11

shamittomar's user avatar

shamittomarshamittomar

46k12 gold badges74 silver badges78 bronze badges

6

Using file() and strpos():

<?php
// What to look for
$search = 'foo';
// Read from file
$lines = file('file.txt');
foreach($lines as $line)
{
  // Check if the line contains the string we're looking for, and print if it does
  if(strpos($line, $search) !== false)
    echo $line;
}

When tested on this file:

foozah
barzah
abczah

It outputs:

foozah


Update:
To show text if the text is not found, use something like this:

<?php
$search = 'foo';
$lines = file('file.txt');
// Store true when the text is found
$found = false;
foreach($lines as $line)
{
  if(strpos($line, $search) !== false)
  {
    $found = true;
    echo $line;
  }
}
// If the text was not found, show a message
if(!$found)
{
  echo 'No match found';
}

Here I’m using the $found variable to find out if a match was found.

answered Sep 10, 2010 at 16:15

Frxstrem's user avatar

FrxstremFrxstrem

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3

$searchfor = $_GET['keyword'];
$file = 'users.txt';

$contents = file_get_contents($file);
$pattern = preg_quote($searchfor, '/');
$pattern = "/^.*$pattern.*$/m";

if (preg_match_all($pattern, $contents, $matches)) {
    echo "Found matches:<br />";
    echo implode("<br />", $matches[0]);
} else {
    echo "No matches found";
    fclose ($file); 
}

zessx's user avatar

zessx

67.7k28 gold badges135 silver badges158 bronze badges

answered Nov 16, 2015 at 4:23

3

one way…

$needle = "blah";
$content = file_get_contents('file.txt');
preg_match('~^(.*'.$needle.'.*)$~',$content,$line);
echo $line[1];

though it would probably be better to read it line by line with fopen() and fread() and use strpos()

answered Sep 10, 2010 at 16:07

CrayonViolent's user avatar

CrayonViolentCrayonViolent

32k5 gold badges56 silver badges79 bronze badges

2

Slightly modified approach of the Upvoted answer to support multiple directories and variable keywords through a GET variable (if you wish to do it that way)

if (isset($_GET["keyword"])){

   foreach(glob('*.php') as $file) { 

      $searchfor = $_GET["keyword"];
      
      // the following line prevents the browser from parsing this as HTML.
      header('Content-Type: text/plain');
      
      // get the file contents, assuming the file to be readable (and exist)
      $contents = file_get_contents($file);
      // escape special characters in the query
      $pattern = preg_quote($searchfor, '/');
      // finalise the regular expression, matching the whole line
      $pattern = "/^.*$pattern.*$/m";
      // search, and store all matching occurences in $matches
      if(preg_match_all($pattern, $contents, $matches)){
         echo "Found matches:n";
         echo $file. "n";
         echo implode("n", $matches[0]);
         echo "nn";
      }
      else{
      //  echo "No matches found";
      }
   }
}

answered Apr 17, 2022 at 20:00

Pearce's user avatar

PearcePearce

3204 silver badges10 bronze badges

(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

strposFind the position of the first occurrence of a substring in a string

Description

strpos(string $haystack, string $needle, int $offset = 0): int|false

Parameters

haystack

The string to search in.

needle

Prior to PHP 8.0.0, if needle is not a string, it is converted
to an integer and applied as the ordinal value of a character.
This behavior is deprecated as of PHP 7.3.0, and relying on it is highly
discouraged. Depending on the intended behavior, the
needle should either be explicitly cast to string,
or an explicit call to chr() should be performed.

offset

If specified, search will start this number of characters counted from
the beginning of the string. If the offset is negative, the search will start
this number of characters counted from the end of the string.

Return Values

Returns the position of where the needle exists relative to the beginning of
the haystack string (independent of offset).
Also note that string positions start at 0, and not 1.

Returns false if the needle was not found.

Warning

This function may
return Boolean false, but may also return a non-Boolean value which
evaluates to false. Please read the section on Booleans for more
information. Use the ===
operator for testing the return value of this
function.

Changelog

Version Description
8.0.0 Passing an int as needle is no longer supported.
7.3.0 Passing an int as needle has been deprecated.
7.1.0 Support for negative offsets has been added.

Examples

Example #1 Using ===


<?php
$mystring
= 'abc';
$findme = 'a';
$pos = strpos($mystring, $findme);// Note our use of ===. Simply == would not work as expected
// because the position of 'a' was the 0th (first) character.
if ($pos === false) {
echo
"The string '$findme' was not found in the string '$mystring'";
} else {
echo
"The string '$findme' was found in the string '$mystring'";
echo
" and exists at position $pos";
}
?>

Example #2 Using !==


<?php
$mystring
= 'abc';
$findme = 'a';
$pos = strpos($mystring, $findme);// The !== operator can also be used. Using != would not work as expected
// because the position of 'a' is 0. The statement (0 != false) evaluates
// to false.
if ($pos !== false) {
echo
"The string '$findme' was found in the string '$mystring'";
echo
" and exists at position $pos";
} else {
echo
"The string '$findme' was not found in the string '$mystring'";
}
?>

Example #3 Using an offset


<?php
// We can search for the character, ignoring anything before the offset
$newstring = 'abcdef abcdef';
$pos = strpos($newstring, 'a', 1); // $pos = 7, not 0
?>

Notes

Note: This function is
binary-safe.

See Also

  • stripos() – Find the position of the first occurrence of a case-insensitive substring in a string
  • str_contains() – Determine if a string contains a given substring
  • str_ends_with() – Checks if a string ends with a given substring
  • str_starts_with() – Checks if a string starts with a given substring
  • strrpos() – Find the position of the last occurrence of a substring in a string
  • strripos() – Find the position of the last occurrence of a case-insensitive substring in a string
  • strstr() – Find the first occurrence of a string
  • strpbrk() – Search a string for any of a set of characters
  • substr() – Return part of a string
  • preg_match() – Perform a regular expression match

Suggested re-write for pink WARNING box

15 years ago


WARNING

As strpos may return either FALSE (substring absent) or 0 (substring at start of string), strict versus loose equivalency operators must be used very carefully.

To know that a substring is absent, you must use: 

=== FALSE

To know that a substring is present (in any position including 0), you can use either of:

!== FALSE  (recommended)
> -1  (note: or greater than any negative number)

To know that a substring is at the start of the string, you must use: 

=== 0

To know that a substring is in any position other than the start, you can use any of:

> 0  (recommended)
!= 0  (note: but not !== 0 which also equates to FALSE)
!= FALSE  (disrecommended as highly confusing)

Also note that you cannot compare a value of "" to the returned value of strpos. With a loose equivalence operator (== or !=) it will return results which don't distinguish between the substring's presence versus position. With a strict equivalence operator (=== or !==) it will always return false.


martijn at martijnfrazer dot nl

11 years ago


This is a function I wrote to find all occurrences of a string, using strpos recursively.

<?php
function strpos_recursive($haystack, $needle, $offset = 0, &$results = array()) {               
   
$offset = strpos($haystack, $needle, $offset);
    if(
$offset === false) {
        return
$results;           
    } else {
       
$results[] = $offset;
        return
strpos_recursive($haystack, $needle, ($offset + 1), $results);
    }
}
?>

This is how you use it:

<?php
$string
= 'This is some string';
$search = 'a';
$found = strpos_recursive($string, $search);

if(

$found) {
    foreach(
$found as $pos) {
        echo
'Found "'.$search.'" in string "'.$string.'" at position <b>'.$pos.'</b><br />';
    }   
} else {
    echo
'"'.$search.'" not found in "'.$string.'"';
}
?>


fabio at naoimporta dot com

7 years ago


It is interesting to be aware of the behavior when the treatment of strings with characters using different encodings.

<?php
# Works like expected. There is no accent
var_dump(strpos("Fabio", 'b'));
#int(2)

# The "á" letter is occupying two positions

var_dump(strpos("Fábio", 'b')) ;
#int(3)

# Now, encoding the string "Fábio" to utf8, we get some "unexpected" outputs. Every letter that is no in regular ASCII table, will use 4 positions(bytes). The starting point remains like before.
# We cant find the characted, because the haystack string is now encoded.

var_dump(strpos(utf8_encode("Fábio"), 'á'));
#bool(false)

# To get the expected result, we need to encode the needle too

var_dump(strpos(utf8_encode("Fábio"), utf8_encode('á')));
#int(1)

# And, like said before, "á" occupies 4 positions(bytes)

var_dump(strpos(utf8_encode("Fábio"), 'b'));
#int(5)


mtroy dot student at gmail dot com

11 years ago


when you want to know how much of substring occurrences, you'll use "substr_count".
But, retrieve their positions, will be harder.
So, you can do it by starting with the last occurrence :

function strpos_r($haystack, $needle)
{
    if(strlen($needle) > strlen($haystack))
        trigger_error(sprintf("%s: length of argument 2 must be <= argument 1", __FUNCTION__), E_USER_WARNING);

    $seeks = array();
    while($seek = strrpos($haystack, $needle))
    {
        array_push($seeks, $seek);
        $haystack = substr($haystack, 0, $seek);
    }
    return $seeks;
}

it will return an array of all occurrences a the substring in the string

Example :

$test = "this is a test for testing a test function... blah blah";
var_dump(strpos_r($test, "test"));

// output

array(3) {
  [0]=>
  int(29)
  [1]=>
  int(19)
  [2]=>
  int(10)
}

Paul-antoine
Malézieux.


rjeggens at ijskoud dot org

11 years ago


I lost an hour before I noticed that strpos only returns FALSE as a boolean, never TRUE.. This means that

strpos() !== false

is a different beast then:

strpos() === true

since the latter will never be true. After I found out, The warning in the documentation made a lot more sense.


m.m.j.kronenburg

6 years ago


<?php/**
* Find the position of the first occurrence of one or more substrings in a
* string.
*
* This function is simulair to function strpos() except that it allows to
* search for multiple needles at once.
*
* @param string $haystack    The string to search in.
* @param mixed $needles      Array containing needles or string containing
*                            needle.
* @param integer $offset     If specified, search will start this number of
*                            characters counted from the beginning of the
*                            string.
* @param boolean $last       If TRUE then the farthest position from the start
*                            of one of the needles is returned.
*                            If FALSE then the smallest position from start of
*                            one of the needles is returned.
**/
function mstrpos($haystack, $needles, $offset = 0, $last = false)
{
  if(!
is_array($needles)) { $needles = array($needles); }
 
$found = false;
  foreach(
$needles as $needle)
  {
   
$position = strpos($haystack, (string)$needle, $offset);
    if(
$position === false) { continue; }
   
$exp = $last ? ($found === false || $position > $found) :
      (
$found === false || $position < $found);
    if(
$exp) { $found = $position; }
  }
  return
$found;
}
/**
* Find the position of the first (partially) occurrence of a substring in a
* string.
*
* This function is simulair to function strpos() except that it wil return a
* position when the substring is partially located at the end of the string.
*
* @param string $haystack    The string to search in.
* @param mixed $needle       The needle to search for.
* @param integer $offset     If specified, search will start this number of
*                            characters counted from the beginning of the
*                            string.
**/
function pstrpos($haystack, $needle, $offset = 0)
{
 
$position = strpos($haystack, $needle, $offset);
  if(
$position !== false) { return $position; }

    for(

$i = strlen($needle); $i > 0; $i--)
  {
    if(
substr($needle, 0, $i) == substr($haystack, -$i))
    { return
strlen($haystack) - $i; }
  }
  return
false;
}
/**
* Find the position of the first (partially) occurrence of one or more
* substrings in a string.
*
* This function is simulair to function strpos() except that it allows to
* search for multiple needles at once and it wil return a position when one of
* the substrings is partially located at the end of the string.
*
* @param string $haystack    The string to search in.
* @param mixed $needles      Array containing needles or string containing
*                            needle.
* @param integer $offset     If specified, search will start this number of
*                            characters counted from the beginning of the
*                            string.
* @param boolean $last       If TRUE then the farthest position from the start
*                            of one of the needles is returned.
*                            If FALSE then the smallest position from start of
*                            one of the needles is returned.
**/
function mpstrpos($haystack, $needles, $offset = 0, $last = false)
{
  if(!
is_array($needles)) { $needles = array($needles); }
 
$found = false;
  foreach(
$needles as $needle)
  {
   
$position = pstrpos($haystack, (string)$needle, $offset);
    if(
$position === false) { continue; }
   
$exp = $last ? ($found === false || $position > $found) :
      (
$found === false || $position < $found);
    if(
$exp) { $found = $position; }
  }
  return
$found;
}
?>

jexy dot ru at gmail dot com

6 years ago


Docs are missing that WARNING is issued if needle is '' (empty string).

In case of empty haystack it just return false:

For example:

<?php
var_dump
(strpos('foo', ''));var_dump(strpos('', 'foo'));var_dump(strpos('', ''));
?>

will output:

Warning: strpos(): Empty needle in /in/lADCh on line 3
bool(false)

bool(false)

Warning: strpos(): Empty needle in /in/lADCh on line 7
bool(false)

Note also that warning text may differ depending on php version, see https://3v4l.org/lADCh


greg at spotx dot net

5 years ago


Warning:
this is not unicode safe

strpos($word,'?') in e?ez-> 1
strpos($word,'?') in è?ent-> 2


usulaco at gmail dot com

12 years ago


Parse strings between two others in to array.

<?php

function g($string,$start,$end){

    
preg_match_all('/' . preg_quote($start, '/') . '(.*?)'. preg_quote($end, '/').'/i', $string, $m);

    
$out = array();

     foreach(

$m[1] as $key => $value){

      
$type = explode('::',$value);

       if(
sizeof($type)>1){

          if(!
is_array($out[$type[0]]))

            
$out[$type[0]] = array();

         
$out[$type[0]][] = $type[1];

       } else {

         
$out[] = $value;

       }

     }

  return
$out;

}

print_r(g('Sample text, [/text to extract/] Rest of sample text [/WEB::http://google.com/] bla bla bla. ','[/','/]'));

?>



results:

Array

(

    [0] => text to extract

    [WEB] => Array

        (

            [0] => http://google.com

        )

)

Can be helpfull to custom parsing :)


akarmenia at gmail dot com

12 years ago


My version of strpos with needles as an array. Also allows for a string, or an array inside an array.

<?php
function strpos_array($haystack, $needles) {
    if (
is_array($needles) ) {
        foreach (
$needles as $str) {
            if (
is_array($str) ) {
               
$pos = strpos_array($haystack, $str);
            } else {
               
$pos = strpos($haystack, $str);
            }
            if (
$pos !== FALSE) {
                return
$pos;
            }
        }
    } else {
        return
strpos($haystack, $needles);
    }
}
// Test
echo strpos_array('This is a test', array('test', 'drive')); // Output is 10?>


eef dot vreeland at gmail dot com

6 years ago


To prevent others from staring at the text, note that the wording of the 'Return Values' section is ambiguous.

Let's say you have a string $myString containing 50 'a's except on position 3 and 43, they contain 'b'.
And for this moment, forget that counting starts from 0.

strpos($myString, 'b', 40) returns 43, great.

And now the text: "Returns the position of where the needle exists relative to the beginning of the haystack string (independent of offset)."

So it doesn't really matter what offset I specify; I'll get the REAL position of the first occurrence in return, which is 3?

... no ...

"independent of offset" means, you will get the REAL positions, thus, not relative to your starting point (offset).

Substract your offset from strpos()'s answer, then you have the position relative to YOUR offset.


ohcc at 163 dot com

8 years ago


Be careful when the $haystack or $needle parameter is an integer.
If you are not sure of its type, you should  convert it into a string.
<?php
    var_dump
(strpos(12345,1));//false
   
var_dump(strpos(12345,'1'));//0
   
var_dump(strpos('12345',1));//false
   
var_dump(strpos('12345','1'));//0
   
$a = 12345;
   
$b = 1;
   
var_dump(strpos(strval($a),strval($b)));//0
   
var_dump(strpos((string)$a,(string)$b));//0   
?>

ilaymyhat-rem0ve at yahoo dot com

15 years ago


This might be useful.

<?php

class String{
//Look for a $needle in $haystack in any position

   
public static function contains(&$haystack, &$needle, &$offset)

    {

       
$result = strpos($haystack, $needle, $offset);

        return
$result !== FALSE;

    }
//intuitive implementation .. if not found returns -1.

   
public static function strpos(&$haystack, &$needle, &$offset)

    {

       
$result = strpos($haystack, $needle, $offset);

        if (
$result === FALSE )

        {

            return -
1;

        }

        return
$result;

    }

   
}

//String

?>


yasindagli at gmail dot com

13 years ago


This function finds postion of nth occurence of a letter starting from offset.

<?php
function nth_position($str, $letter, $n, $offset = 0){
   
$str_arr = str_split($str);
   
$letter_size = array_count_values(str_split(substr($str, $offset)));
    if( !isset(
$letter_size[$letter])){
       
trigger_error('letter "' . $letter . '" does not exist in ' . $str . ' after ' . $offset . '. position', E_USER_WARNING);
        return
false;
    } else if(
$letter_size[$letter] < $n) {
       
trigger_error('letter "' . $letter . '" does not exist ' . $n .' times in ' . $str . ' after ' . $offset . '. position', E_USER_WARNING);
        return
false;
    }
    for(
$i = $offset, $x = 0, $count = (count($str_arr) - $offset); $i < $count, $x != $n; $i++){
        if(
$str_arr[$i] == $letter){
           
$x++;
        }
    }
    return
$i - 1;
}

echo

nth_position('foobarbaz', 'a', 2); //7
echo nth_position('foobarbaz', 'b', 1, 4); //6
?>


bishop

19 years ago


Code like this:
<?php
if (strpos('this is a test', 'is') !== false) {
    echo
"found it";
}
?>

gets repetitive, is not very self-explanatory, and most people handle it incorrectly anyway. Make your life easier:

<?php
function str_contains($haystack, $needle, $ignoreCase = false) {
    if (
$ignoreCase) {
       
$haystack = strtolower($haystack);
       
$needle   = strtolower($needle);
    }
   
$needlePos = strpos($haystack, $needle);
    return (
$needlePos === false ? false : ($needlePos+1));
}
?>

Then, you may do:
<?php
// simplest use
if (str_contains('this is a test', 'is')) {
    echo
"Found it";
}
// when you need the position, as well whether it's present
$needlePos = str_contains('this is a test', 'is');
if (
$needlePos) {
    echo
'Found it at position ' . ($needlePos-1);
}
// you may also ignore case
$needlePos = str_contains('this is a test', 'IS', true);
if (
$needlePos) {
    echo
'Found it at position ' . ($needlePos-1);
}
?>


Jean

4 years ago


When a value can be of "unknow" type, I find this conversion trick usefull and more readable than a formal casting (for php7.3+):

<?php
$time
= time();
$string = 'This is a test: ' . $time;
echo (
strpos($string, $time) !== false ? 'found' : 'not found');
echo (
strpos($string, "$time") !== false ? 'found' : 'not found');
?>


Anonymous

10 years ago


The most straightforward way to prevent this function from returning 0 is:

  strpos('x'.$haystack, $needle, 1)

The 'x' is simply a garbage character which is only there to move everything 1 position.
The number 1 is there to make sure that this 'x' is ignored in the search.
This way, if $haystack starts with $needle, then the function returns 1 (rather than 0).


marvin_elia at web dot de

5 years ago


Find position of nth occurrence of a string:

    function strpos_occurrence(string $string, string $needle, int $occurrence, int $offset = null) {
        if((0 < $occurrence) && ($length = strlen($needle))) {
            do {
            } while ((false !== $offset = strpos($string, $needle, $offset)) && --$occurrence && ($offset += $length));
            return $offset;
        }
        return false;
    }


digitalpbk [at] gmail.com

13 years ago


This function raises a warning if the offset is not between 0 and the length of string:

Warning: strpos(): Offset not contained in string in %s on line %d


Achintya

13 years ago


A function I made to find the first occurrence of a particular needle not enclosed in quotes(single or double). Works for simple nesting (no backslashed nesting allowed).

<?php

function strposq($haystack, $needle, $offset = 0){

   
$len = strlen($haystack);

   
$charlen = strlen($needle);

   
$flag1 = false;

   
$flag2 = false;

    for(
$i = $offset; $i < $len; $i++){

        if(
substr($haystack, $i, 1) == "'"){

           
$flag1 = !$flag1 && !$flag2 ? true : false;

        }

        if(
substr($haystack, $i, 1) == '"'){

           
$flag2 = !$flag1 && !$flag2 ? true : false;

        }

        if(
substr($haystack, $i, $charlen) == $needle && !$flag1 && !$flag2){

            return
$i;       

        }

    }

    return
false;

}

echo

strposq("he'llo'character;"'som"e;crap", ";"); //16

?>


spinicrus at gmail dot com

16 years ago


if you want to get the position of a substring relative to a substring of your string, BUT in REVERSE way:

<?phpfunction strpos_reverse_way($string,$charToFind,$relativeChar) {
   
//
   
$relativePos = strpos($string,$relativeChar);
   
$searchPos = $relativePos;
   
$searchChar = '';
   
//
   
while ($searchChar != $charToFind) {
       
$newPos = $searchPos-1;
       
$searchChar = substr($string,$newPos,strlen($charToFind));
       
$searchPos = $newPos;
    }
   
//
   
if (!empty($searchChar)) {
       
//
       
return $searchPos;
        return
TRUE;
    }
    else {
        return
FALSE;
    }
   
//
}?>


lairdshaw at yahoo dot com dot au

8 years ago


<?php
/*
* A strpos variant that accepts an array of $needles - or just a string,
* so that it can be used as a drop-in replacement for the standard strpos,
* and in which case it simply wraps around strpos and stripos so as not
* to reduce performance.
*
* The "m" in "strposm" indicates that it accepts *m*ultiple needles.
*
* Finds the earliest match of *all* needles. Returns the position of this match
* or false if none found, as does the standard strpos. Optionally also returns
* via $match either the matching needle as a string (by default) or the index
* into $needles of the matching needle (if the STRPOSM_MATCH_AS_INDEX flag is
* set).
*
* Case-insensitive searching can be specified via the STRPOSM_CI flag.
* Note that for case-insensitive searches, if the STRPOSM_MATCH_AS_INDEX is
* not set, then $match will be in the haystack's case, not the needle's case,
* unless the STRPOSM_NC flag is also set.
*
* Flags can be combined using the bitwise or operator,
* e.g. $flags = STRPOSM_CI|STRPOSM_NC
*/
define('STRPOSM_CI'            , 1); // CI => "case insensitive".
define('STRPOSM_NC'            , 2); // NC => "needle case".
define('STRPOSM_MATCH_AS_INDEX', 4);
function
strposm($haystack, $needles, $offset = 0, &$match = null, $flags = 0) {
   
// In the special case where $needles is not an array, simply wrap
    // strpos and stripos for performance reasons.
   
if (!is_array($needles)) {
       
$func = $flags & STRPOSM_CI ? 'stripos' : 'strpos';
       
$pos = $func($haystack, $needles, $offset);
        if (
$pos !== false) {
           
$match = (($flags & STRPOSM_MATCH_AS_INDEX)
                      ?
0
                     
: (($flags & STRPOSM_NC)
                         ?
$needles
                        
: substr($haystack, $pos, strlen($needles))
                        )
                      );
            return
$pos;
        } else    goto
strposm_no_match;
    }
// $needles is an array. Proceed appropriately, initially by...
    // ...escaping regular expression meta characters in the needles.
   
$needles_esc = array_map('preg_quote', $needles);
   
// If either of the "needle case" or "match as index" flags are set,
    // then create a sub-match for each escaped needle by enclosing it in
    // parentheses. We use these later to find the index of the matching
    // needle.
   
if (($flags & STRPOSM_NC) || ($flags & STRPOSM_MATCH_AS_INDEX)) {
       
$needles_esc = array_map(
            function(
$needle) {return '('.$needle.')';},
           
$needles_esc
       
);
    }
   
// Create the regular expression pattern to search for all needles.
   
$pattern = '('.implode('|', $needles_esc).')';
   
// If the "case insensitive" flag is set, then modify the regular
    // expression with "i", meaning that the match is "caseless".
   
if ($flags & STRPOSM_CI) $pattern .= 'i';
   
// Find the first match, including its offset.
   
if (preg_match($pattern, $haystack, $matches, PREG_OFFSET_CAPTURE, $offset)) {
       
// Pull the first entry, the overall match, out of the matches array.
       
$found = array_shift($matches);
       
// If we need the index of the matching needle, then...
       
if (($flags & STRPOSM_NC) || ($flags & STRPOSM_MATCH_AS_INDEX)) {
           
// ...find the index of the sub-match that is identical
            // to the overall match that we just pulled out.
            // Because sub-matches are in the same order as needles,
            // this is also the index into $needles of the matching
            // needle.
           
$index = array_search($found, $matches);
        }
       
// If the "match as index" flag is set, then return in $match
        // the matching needle's index, otherwise...
       
$match = (($flags & STRPOSM_MATCH_AS_INDEX)
          ?
$index
         
// ...if the "needle case" flag is set, then index into
          // $needles using the previously-determined index to return
          // in $match the matching needle in needle case, otherwise...
         
: (($flags & STRPOSM_NC)
             ?
$needles[$index]
            
// ...by default, return in $match the matching needle in
             // haystack case.
            
: $found[0]
          )
        );
       
// Return the captured offset.
       
return $found[1];
    }
strposm_no_match:
   
// Nothing matched. Set appropriate return values.
   
$match = ($flags & STRPOSM_MATCH_AS_INDEX) ? false : null;
    return
false;
}
?>

qrworld.net

8 years ago


I found a function in this post http://softontherocks.blogspot.com/2014/11/buscar-multiples-textos-en-un-texto-con.html
that implements the search in both ways, case sensitive or case insensitive, depending on an input parameter.

The function is:

function getMultiPos($haystack, $needles, $sensitive=true, $offset=0){
    foreach($needles as $needle) {
        $result[$needle] = ($sensitive) ? strpos($haystack, $needle, $offset) : stripos($haystack, $needle, $offset);
    }
    return $result;
}

It was very useful for me.


Lurvik

9 years ago


Don't know if already posted this, but if I did this is an improvement.

This function will check if a string contains  a needle. It _will_ work with arrays and multidimensional arrays (I've tried with a > 16 dimensional array and had no problem).

<?php
function str_contains($haystack, $needles)
{
   
//If needles is an array
   
if(is_array($needles))
    {
       
//go trough all the elements
       
foreach($needles as $needle)
        {
           
//if the needle is also an array (ie needles is a multidimensional array)
           
if(is_array($needle))
            {
               
//call this function again
               
if(str_contains($haystack, $needle))
                {
                   
//Will break out of loop and function.
                   
return true;
                }

                                return

false;
            }
//when the needle is NOT an array:
                //Check if haystack contains the needle, will ignore case and check for whole words only
           
elseif(preg_match("/b$needleb/i", $haystack) !== 0)
            {
                return
true;
            }
        }
    }
   
//if $needles is not an array...
   
else
    {
        if(
preg_match("/b$needlesb/i", $haystack) !== 0)
        {
            return
true;
        }
    }

    return

false;
}
?>


gambajaja at yahoo dot com

12 years ago


<?php
$my_array
= array ('100,101', '200,201', '300,301');
$check_me_in = array ('100','200','300','400');
foreach (
$check_me_in as $value_cmi){
   
$is_in=FALSE; #asume that $check_me_in isn't in $my_array
   
foreach ($my_array as $value_my){
       
$pos = strpos($value_my, $value_cmi);
        if (
$pos===0)
           
$pos++;
        if (
$pos==TRUE){
           
$is_in=TRUE;
           
$value_my2=$value_my;
            }
    }
    if (
$is_in) echo "ID $value_cmi in $check_me_in I found in value '$value_my2' n";
}
?>

The above example will output
ID 100 in $check_me_in I found in value '100,101'
ID 200 in $check_me_in I found in value '200,201'
ID 300 in $check_me_in I found in value '300,301'

ah dot d at hotmail dot com

13 years ago


A strpos modification to return an array of all the positions of a needle in the haystack

<?php

function strallpos($haystack,$needle,$offset = 0){

   
$result = array();

    for(
$i = $offset; $i<strlen($haystack); $i++){

       
$pos = strpos($haystack,$needle,$i);

        if(
$pos !== FALSE){

           
$offset $pos;

            if(
$offset >= $i){

               
$i = $offset;

               
$result[] = $offset;

            }

        }

    }

    return
$result;

}

?>



example:-

<?php

$haystack
= "ASD is trying to get out of the ASDs cube but the other ASDs told him that his behavior will destroy the ASDs world";
$needle = "ASD";
print_r(strallpos($haystack,$needle));
//getting all the positions starting from a specified position
print_r(strallpos($haystack,$needle,34));

?>


teddanzig at yahoo dot com

14 years ago


routine to return -1 if there is no match for strpos

<?php

//instr function to mimic vb instr fucntion

function InStr($haystack, $needle)

{

   
$pos=strpos($haystack, $needle);

    if (
$pos !== false)

    {

        return
$pos;

    }

    else

    {

        return -
1;

    }

}

?>


Tim

14 years ago


If you would like to find all occurences of a needle inside a haystack you could use this function strposall($haystack,$needle);. It will return an array with all the strpos's.

<?php

/**

* strposall

*

* Find all occurrences of a needle in a haystack

*

* @param string $haystack

* @param string $needle

* @return array or false

*/

function strposall($haystack,$needle){
$s=0;

   
$i=0;

   
    while (

is_integer($i)){
$i = strpos($haystack,$needle,$s);

       
        if (

is_integer($i)) {

           
$aStrPos[] = $i;

           
$s = $i+strlen($needle);

        }

    }

    if (isset(
$aStrPos)) {

        return
$aStrPos;

    }

    else {

        return
false;

    }

}

?>


user at nomail dot com

16 years ago


This is a bit more useful when scanning a large string for all occurances between 'tags'.

<?php
function getStrsBetween($s,$s1,$s2=false,$offset=0) {
   
/*====================================================================
    Function to scan a string for items encapsulated within a pair of tags

    getStrsBetween(string, tag1, <tag2>, <offset>

    If no second tag is specified, then match between identical tags

    Returns an array indexed with the encapsulated text, which is in turn
    a sub-array, containing the position of each item.

    Notes:
    strpos($needle,$haystack,$offset)
    substr($string,$start,$length)

    ====================================================================*/

if( $s2 === false ) { $s2 = $s1; }
   
$result = array();
   
$L1 = strlen($s1);
   
$L2 = strlen($s2);

    if(

$L1==0 || $L2==0 ) {
        return
false;
    }

    do {

$pos1 = strpos($s,$s1,$offset);

        if(

$pos1 !== false ) {
           
$pos1 += $L1;$pos2 = strpos($s,$s2,$pos1);

            if(

$pos2 !== false ) {
               
$key_len = $pos2 - $pos1;$this_key = substr($s,$pos1,$key_len);

                if( !

array_key_exists($this_key,$result) ) {
                   
$result[$this_key] = array();
                }
$result[$this_key][] = $pos1;$offset = $pos2 + $L2;
            } else {
               
$pos1 = false;
            }
        }
    } while(
$pos1 !== false );

    return

$result;
}
?>


philip

18 years ago


Many people look for in_string which does not exist in PHP, so, here's the most efficient form of in_string() (that works in both PHP 4/5) that I can think of:

<?php

function in_string($needle, $haystack, $insensitive = false) {

    if (
$insensitive) {

        return
false !== stristr($haystack, $needle);

    } else {

        return
false !== strpos($haystack, $needle);

    }

}

?>

Lhenry

5 years ago


note that strpos( "8 june 1970"  ,  1970 ) returns FALSE..

add quotes to the needle


gjh42 – simonokewode at hotmail dot com

11 years ago


A pair of functions to replace every nth occurrence of a string with another string, starting at any position in the haystack. The first works on a string and the second works on a single-level array of strings, treating it as a single string for replacement purposes (any needles split over two array elements are ignored).

Can be used for formatting dynamically-generated HTML output without touching the original generator: e.g. add a newLine class tag to every third item in a floated list, starting with the fourth item.

<?php
/* String Replace at Intervals   by Glenn Herbert (gjh42)    2010-12-17
*/

//(basic locator by someone else - name unknown)
//strnposr() - Find the position of nth needle in haystack.

function strnposr($haystack, $needle, $occurrence, $pos = 0) {
    return (
$occurrence<2)?strpos($haystack, $needle, $pos):strnposr($haystack,$needle,$occurrence-1,strpos($haystack, $needle, $pos) + 1);
}
//gjh42
//replace every nth occurrence of $needle with $repl, starting from any position
function str_replace_int($needle, $repl, $haystack, $interval, $first=1, $pos=0) {
  if (
$pos >= strlen($haystack) or substr_count($haystack, $needle, $pos) < $first) return $haystack;
 
$firstpos = strnposr($haystack, $needle, $first, $pos);
 
$nl = strlen($needle);
 
$qty = floor(substr_count($haystack, $needle, $firstpos + 1)/$interval);
  do {
//in reverse order
   
$nextpos = strnposr($haystack, $needle, ($qty * $interval) + 1, $firstpos);
   
$qty--;
   
$haystack = substr_replace($haystack, $repl, $nextpos, $nl);
  } while (
$nextpos > $firstpos);
  return
$haystack;
}
 
//$needle = string to find
  //$repl = string to replace needle
  //$haystack = string to do replacing in
  //$interval = number of needles in loop
  //$first=1 = first occurrence of needle to replace (defaults to first)
  //$pos=0 = position in haystack string to start from (defaults to first)

//replace every nth occurrence of $needle with $repl, starting from any position, in a single-level array

function arr_replace_int($needle, $repl, $arr, $interval, $first=1, $pos=0, $glue='|+|') {
  if (!
is_array($arr))  return $arr;
  foreach(
$arr as $key=>$value){
    if (
is_array($arr[$key])) return $arr;
  }
 
$haystack = implode($glue, $arr);
 
$haystack = str_replace_int($needle, $repl, $haystack, $interval, $first, $pos);
 
$tarr = explode($glue, $haystack);
 
$i = 0;
  foreach(
$arr as $key=>$value){
   
$arr[$key] = $tarr[$i];
   
$i++;
  }
  return
$arr;
}
?>
If $arr is not an array, or a multilevel array, it is returned unchanged.


amolocaleb at gmail dot com

4 years ago


Note that strpos() is case sensitive,so when doing a case insensitive search,use stripos() instead..If the latter is not available,subject the string to strlower() first,otherwise you may end up in this situation..
<?php
//say we are matching url routes and calling access control middleware depending on the route$registered_route = '/admin' ;
//now suppose we want to call the authorization middleware before accessing the admin route
if(strpos($path->url(),$registered_route) === 0){
    
$middleware->call('Auth','login');
}
?>
and the auth middleware is as follows
<?php
class Auth{

function

login(){
   if(!
loggedIn()){
       return
redirect("path/to/login.php");
}
return
true;
}
}
//Now suppose:
$user_url = '/admin';
//this will go to the Auth middleware for checks and redirect accordingly

//But:

$user_url = '/Admin';
//this will make the strpos function return false since the 'A' in admin is upper case and user will be taken directly to admin dashboard authentication and authorization notwithstanding
?>
Simple fixes:
<?php
//use stripos() as from php 5
if(stripos($path->url(),$registered_route) === 0){
    
$middleware->call('Auth','login');
}
//for those with php 4
if(stripos(strtolower($path->url()),$registered_route) === 0){
    
$middleware->call('Auth','login');
}
//make sure the $registered_route is also lowercase.Or JUST UPGRADE to PHP 5>

ds at kala-it dot de

3 years ago


Note this code example below in PHP 7.3
<?php
$str
= "17,25";

if(

FALSE !== strpos($str, 25)){
    echo
"25 is inside of str";
} else {
    echo
"25 is NOT inside of str";
}
?>

Will output "25 is NOT inside of str" and will throw out a deprication message, that non string needles will be interpreted as strings in the future.

This just gave me some headache since the value I am checking against comes from the database as an integer.


sunmacet at gmail dot com

2 years ago


To check that a substring is present.

Confusing check if position is not false:

if ( strpos ( $haystack , $needle ) !== FALSE )

Logical check if there is position:

if ( is_int ( strpos ( $haystack , $needle ) ) )


binodluitel at hotmail dot com

9 years ago


This function will return 0 if the string that you are searching matches i.e. needle matches the haystack

{code}
echo strpos('bla', 'bla');
{code}

Output: 0


hu60 dot cn at gmail dot com

3 years ago


A more accurate imitation of the PHP function session_start().

Function my_session_start() does something similar to session_start() that has the default configure, and the session files generated by the two are binary compatible.

The code may help people increase their understanding of the principles of the PHP session.

<?php
error_reporting
(E_ALL);
ini_set('display_errors', true);
ini_set('session.save_path', __DIR__);my_session_start();

echo

'<p>session id: '.my_session_id().'</p>';

echo

'<code><pre>';
var_dump($_SESSION);
echo
'</pre></code>';$now = date('H:i:s');
if (isset(
$_SESSION['last_visit_time'])) {
  echo
'<p>Last Visit Time: '.$_SESSION['last_visit_time'].'</p>';
}
echo
'<p>Current Time: '.$now.'</p>';$_SESSION['last_visit_time'] = $now;

function

my_session_start() {
  global
$phpsessid, $sessfile;

  if (!isset(

$_COOKIE['PHPSESSID']) || empty($_COOKIE['PHPSESSID'])) {
   
$phpsessid = my_base32_encode(my_random_bytes(16));
   
setcookie('PHPSESSID', $phpsessid, ini_get('session.cookie_lifetime'), ini_get('session.cookie_path'), ini_get('session.cookie_domain'), ini_get('session.cookie_secure'), ini_get('session.cookie_httponly'));
  } else {
   
$phpsessid = substr(preg_replace('/[^a-z0-9]/', '', $_COOKIE['PHPSESSID']), 0, 26);
  }
$sessfile = ini_get('session.save_path').'/sess_'.$phpsessid;
  if (
is_file($sessfile)) {
   
$_SESSION = my_unserialize(file_get_contents($sessfile));
  } else {
   
$_SESSION = array();
  }
 
register_shutdown_function('my_session_save');
}

function

my_session_save() {
  global
$sessfile;file_put_contents($sessfile, my_serialize($_SESSION));
}

function

my_session_id() {
  global
$phpsessid;
  return
$phpsessid;
}

function

my_serialize($data) {
 
$text = '';
  foreach (
$data as $k=>$v) {
   
// key cannot contains '|'
   
if (strpos($k, '|') !== false) {
      continue;
    }
   
$text.=$k.'|'.serialize($v)."n";
  }
  return
$text;
}

function

my_unserialize($text) {
 
$data = [];
 
$text = explode("n", $text);
  foreach (
$text as $line) {
   
$pos = strpos($line, '|');
    if (
$pos === false) {
      continue;
    }
   
$data[substr($line, 0, $pos)] = unserialize(substr($line, $pos + 1));
  }
  return
$data;
}

function

my_random_bytes($length) {
  if (
function_exists('random_bytes')) {
      return
random_bytes($length);
  }
 
$randomString = '';
  for (
$i = 0; $i < $length; $i++) {
     
$randomString .= chr(rand(0, 255));
  }
  return
$randomString;
}

function

my_base32_encode($input) {
 
$BASE32_ALPHABET = 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz234567';
 
$output = '';
 
$v = 0;
 
$vbits = 0;
  for (
$i = 0, $j = strlen($input); $i < $j; $i++) {
   
$v <<= 8;
   
$v += ord($input[$i]);
   
$vbits += 8;
    while (
$vbits >= 5) {
     
$vbits -= 5;
     
$output .= $BASE32_ALPHABET[$v >> $vbits];
     
$v &= ((1 << $vbits) - 1);
    }
  }
  if (
$vbits > 0) {
   
$v <<= (5 - $vbits);
   
$output .= $BASE32_ALPHABET[$v];
  }
  return
$output;
}


msegit post pl

4 years ago


This might be useful, I often use for parsing file paths etc.
(Some examples inside https://gist.github.com/msegu/bf7160257037ec3e301e7e9c8b05b00a )
<?php
/**
* Function 'strpos_' finds the position of the first or last occurrence of a substring in a string, ignoring number of characters
*
* Function 'strpos_' is similar to 'str[r]pos()', except:
* 1. fourth (last, optional) param tells, what to return if str[r]pos()===false
* 2. third (optional) param $offset tells as of str[r]pos(), BUT if negative (<0) search starts -$offset characters counted from the end AND skips (ignore!, not as 'strpos' and 'strrpos') -$offset-1 characters from the end AND search backwards
*
* @param string $haystack Where to search
* @param string $needle What to find
* @param int $offset (optional) Number of characters to skip from the beginning (if 0, >0) or from the end (if <0) of $haystack
* @param mixed $resultIfFalse (optional) Result, if not found
*    Example:
*    positive $offset - like strpos:
*        strpos_('abcaba','ab',1)==strpos('abcaba','ab',1)==3, strpos('abcaba','ab',4)===false, strpos_('abcaba','ab',4,'Not found')==='Not found'
*    negative $offset - similar to strrpos:
*        strpos_('abcaba','ab',-1)==strpos('abcaba','ab',-1)==3, strrpos('abcaba','ab',-3)==3 BUT strpos_('abcaba','ab',-3)===0 (omits 2 characters from the end, because -2-1=-3, means search in 'abca'!)
*
* @result int $offset Returns offset (or false), or $resultIfFalse
*/
function strpos_($haystack, $needle, $offset = 0, $resultIfFalse = false) {
   
$haystack=((string)$haystack);    // (string) to avoid errors with int, float...
   
$needle=((string)$needle);
    if (
$offset>=0) {
       
$offset=strpos($haystack, $needle, $offset);
        return ((
$offset===false)? $resultIfFalse : $offset);
    } else {
       
$haystack=strrev($haystack);
       
$needle=strrev($needle);
       
$offset=strpos($haystack,$needle,-$offset-1);
        return ((
$offset===false)? $resultIfFalse : strlen($haystack)-$offset-strlen($needle));
    }
}
?>

How to search text in some files like PDF, doc, docs or txt using PHP?
I want to do similar function as Full Text Search in MySQL,
but this time, I’m directly search through files, not database.

The search will do searching in many files that located in a folder.
Any suggestion, tips or solutions for this problem?

I also noticed that, google also do searching through the files.

asked Oct 1, 2010 at 11:31

Hafizul Amri's user avatar

Hafizul AmriHafizul Amri

2,6337 gold badges28 silver badges30 bronze badges

2

For searching PDF’s you’ll need a program like pdftotext, which converts content from a pdf to text. For Word documents a simular thingy could be available (because of all the styling and encryption in Word files).

An example to search through PDF’s (copied from one of my scripts (it’s a snippet, not the entire code, but it should give you some understanding) where I extract keywords and store matches in a PDF-results-array.):

foreach($keywords as $keyword)
{
    $keyword = strtolower($keyword);
    $file = ABSOLUTE_PATH_SITE."_uploaded/files/Transcripties/".$pdfFiles[$i];

    $content    = addslashes(shell_exec('/usr/bin/pdftotext ''.$file.'' -'));
    $result     = substr_count(strtolower($content), $keyword);

    if($result > 0)
    {
        if(!in_array($pdfFiles[$i], $matchesOnPDF))
        {
            array_push($matchesOnPDF, array(                                                    
                    "matches"   => $result,
                    "type"      => "PDF",
                    "pdfFile"   => $pdfFiles[$i]));
        }
    }
}

answered Oct 1, 2010 at 11:38

Ben Fransen's user avatar

Ben FransenBen Fransen

10.8k18 gold badges74 silver badges129 bronze badges

Depending on the file type, you should convert the file to text and then search through it using i.e. file_get_contents() and str_pos(). To convert files to text, you have – beside others – the following tools available:

  • catdoc for word files
  • xlhtml for excel files
  • ppthtml for powerpoint files
  • unrtf for RTF files
  • pdftotext for pdf files

answered Oct 1, 2010 at 11:45

cweiske's user avatar

cweiskecweiske

29.7k14 gold badges132 silver badges192 bronze badges

1

If you are under a linux server you may use

grep -R "text to be searched for" ./   // location is everything under the actual directory

called from php using exec resulting in

cmd = 'grep -R "text to be searched for" ./';
$result = exec(grep);
print_r(result);

answered Oct 1, 2010 at 11:36

Thariama's user avatar

ThariamaThariama

49.7k12 gold badges137 silver badges166 bronze badges

2021 I came across this and found something so I figure I will link to it…

Note: docx, pdfs and others are not regular text files and require more scripting and/or different libraries to read and/or edit each different type unless you can find an all in one library. This means you would have to script out each different file type you want to search though including a normal text file. If you don’t want to script it completely then you have to install each of the libraries you will need for each of the file types you want to read as well. But you still need to script each to handle them as the library functions.

I found the basic answer here on the stack.

answered Jun 15, 2021 at 18:46

JSG's user avatar

JSGJSG

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Главная » Php приемчики » Поиск слова в файлах (txt, html, php и т.д.), используя PHP

В статье я покажу, как осуществить поиск слова (и даже целой фразы!) в любых файлах с такими расширениями: txt, html, php и т.д.
Буду использовать язык программирования php.

Поиск слова в файлах (txt, html, php и т.д.), используя PHP

Итак, допустим, у нас есть на сервере файл «bloggood.txt».
В этом файле содержится много текста. Нам нужно проверить, есть ли в тексте фраза «Привет, читатель BlogGood.ru!». Как это сделать?!
Создайте в корне сайта файл с расширением «php», например, «strpos.php» и вставьте вот такой код:

<?
$st_strpos = "Привет, читатель BlogGood.ru!"; //слово или фразу, которую нужно найти в файле
$st_search = "bloggood.txt"; //название файла, в котором нужно найти (если нужно, то еще пропишите путь к файлу)
echo "Результат поиска в файле $st_search: <br>";
if (strpos(file_get_contents("$st_search"), "$st_strpos")) echo "Есть такое слово"; else echo "Нет такого слова";
?>

В коде я оставил комментарий для настройки скрипта.
Если слово или фраза в файле существует, то на экране вы увидите текст:

Результат поиска в файле bloggood.txt: 
Есть такое слово

Если нет такого, то прочитаете это:

Результат поиска в файле bloggood.txt: 
Нет такого слова

Хочу сказать еще, что код очень чувствителен к регистру букв и пробелам. Если вы ошибетесь в слове и слово «Привет» напишите с маленькой буквы «привет», то результат будет отрицательным.

Теперь вы знаете, как можно настроить простой поиск слов в файлах.
Удачи!

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Как найти стоки с нужной подстрокой в файле с помощью PHP

Задача нахождения заданной подстроки в текстовом массиве может быть решена многими способами. В этой статье рассмотрим, как в заданном файле найти строки, в которых есть совпадение с подстрокой, которую мы зададим. Для этого нам нужно будет прочитать весь файл строку за строкой и проверить соответствие этих строк на соответствие их заданному значению, передаваемому в виде строковой переменной, которая служит образцом для сравнения.

Для того, чтобы в будущем было удобнее использовать написанный код, оформим его в виде функции, принимающей в качестве входных данных имя файла и подстроки (образца для сравнения). Сразу приведу листинг программы, после этого разберу построчно, что и как работает, а также почему выбрано именно данное решение:

<?php
$filename = '.htaccess'; // имя файла
$keyline  = 'Order'; // строка, совпадение с которой нужно найти
echo '<pre>';
print_r(search_line($filename, $keyline));
echo '</pre>';

function search_line ($file_name, $key_line) {
	$f = fopen ($file_name, "rt");
	$lines = explode ("n", fread ($f, filesize($file_name)));
	foreach ($lines as $line_num => $line) {
		$line_num++;
		if (strripos($line, $key_line) !== false) {
			$resultline[$line_num+1] =  $line;
		}
	}
	return $resultline;
}
?>

Итак, в строке 2 задаём имя файла, с которым будем работать: $filename = '.htaccess';

В строке 3 — строковую переменную, вхождение которой будем проверять строки данного файла: $keyline  = 'Order';

В строках 4..6 содержится вывод работы функции нахождения строк. Так как функция передаёт эту информацию в виде массива (мне так показалось удобнее), то используем уже найденное решение того, как вывести на экран массив php со значениями всех его элементов с помощью функции print_r, которое подробно описано в → этой статье.

Сама функция поиска вхождения подстроки в строки файла находится в строчках 8..18 приведённого выше кода.

Строка 8 — задаём имя функции и передаваемые ей аргументы (имя файла и подстроку для поиска): function search_line ($file_name, $key_line) {

9..10 строки:

  • открываем файл на чтение с параметром rt для удаления всех символов перевода строк, которые могут остаться после текстовых редакторов Windows
    • $f = fopen ($file_name, "rt");
  • с помощью функции explode удаляем во всех прочитанных строках переводы строк n
    • $lines = explode ("n", fread ($f, filesize($file_name)));

Именно это решение описано в одной толстой книжке по php и рекомендуется для использования, как более быстрое, чем использование функции file(). Раз то, то почему бы им не пользоваться? 😉

В строке 11 запускаем построчный обход полученного из файла массива строк $lines, передавая в переменную $line_num номер строки, который будет увеличиваться на 1 при переходе к следующей строке, а в переменную $line собственно саму читаемую строку: foreach ($lines as $line_num => $line) {

В строке 12 увеличиваем значение номера читаемой строки: $line_num++;

Таким образом у нас есть всё: номер строки и сама строка из файла. Осталось проверить вхождение заданной подстроки в эту строку. Именно это и делаем в строке 13 if (strripos($line, $key_line) !== false) { с помощью функции strripos(), то есть без учёта регистра символов в этой строке. Если нужно проверять строки с учётом регистра (заглавные и строчные), нужно вместо неё использовать функцию strpos().

В этом месте я так и не понял, потратив пару часов времени на отладку:
Простое условие if (strripos($line, $key_line)) по какой-то причине не срабатывает, если вхождение подстроки начинается с начала строки и только при явной проверке  !== false, всё работает как нужно. Разбираться, почему именно так, сейчас лень. =)

После того, как найдено вхождение в строку из файла, сохраняем это значение в 14-й строке как элемент двухмерного массива. Первый ключ – это номер строки, второй – собственно сама строка: $resultline[$line_num+1] = $line;

После того, как все строки файла пройдены и проверены, передаём результат выполнения данной функции в 17-й строке: return $resultline;

Вот собственно и всё!

Результатом выполнения данной программы будет вывод массива с номерами строк и самими строками, которые совпадают с заданной подстрокой из указанного файла:

Array
(
    [83] => #Order allow,deny
    [89] => Order allow,deny
)

Программа рабочая и её можно сразу использовать и расширять, наращивая функционал того, что требуется сделать, если в файле найдено совпадение с найденной подстрокой.

Заберите ссылку на статью к себе, чтобы потом легко её найти!
Выберите, то, чем пользуетесь чаще всего:

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