I'm new to php and trying to create a simple script.. but I don't know if what i'm trying to do is possible with ob_start() please let me know, thanks.
here is my code:
<?php
ob_start();
if($mystuff !== 0) { foreach($mystuff['sirf7alk'] as $mystuff) {
?>
<?php include('header.php'); ?>
App name: <?php echo $mystuff->app; ?>
<?php include('footer.php');?>
<?php
} }
file_put_contents('page.php', ob_get_contents());
?>
that's what my code outputs:
my header content
App name: My app name
my footer content
here is what i want to achieve:
<?php include('header.php'); ?>
App name: My app name
<?php include('footer.php');?>
You need to output the PHP code, as opposed to running it. Treating it as a string will do that:
ob_start();
if ($mystuff !== 0) {
foreach($mystuff['sirf7alk'] as $mystuff) {
echo "<?php include 'header.php' ?>".PHP_EOL;
echo "App name: {$mystuff->app}".PHP_EOL;
echo "<?php include 'footer.php' ?>".PHP_EOL;
}
}
$output = ob_get_contents();
file_put_contents('page.php', $output);
Now that the actual question is answered... It may be fun to control output buffering in this way, but it is probably not the best idea in the world, which is to say that there are better ways of achieving the same result. E.g. simply using an auxiliary variable, which holds the otherwise output buffered content, is a much saner approach:
$output = '';
if ($mystuff !== 0) {
foreach($mystuff['sirf7alk'] as $mystuff) {
$output .= "<?php include 'header.php' ?>".PHP_EOL;
$output .= "App name: {$mystuff->app}".PHP_EOL;
$output .= "<?php include 'footer.php' ?>".PHP_EOL;
}
}
file_put_contents('page.php', $output);
<?php
ob_start();
if($mystuff !== 0) { foreach($mystuff['sirf7alk'] as $mystuff) {
echo "<?php include('header.php'); ?>\n";
?>
App name: <?php echo $mystuff->app; ?>
<?php
echo "<?php include('footer.php');?>\n";
} }
file_put_contents('page.php', ob_get_contents());
?>
Should do it. You must echo the whole include lines as strings to avoid php from parsing it
Related
Why does this if statement have each of its conditionals wrapped in PHP tags?
<?php if(!is_null($sel_subject)) { //subject selected? ?>
<h2><?php echo $sel_subject["menu_name"]; ?></h2>
<?php } elseif (!is_null($sel_page)) { //page selected? ?>
<h2><?php echo $sel_page["menu_name"]; ?></h2>
<?php } else { // nothing selected ?>
<h2>Select a subject or a page to edit</h2>
<?php } ?>
Because there is html used. Jumping between PHP and HTML is called escaping.
But I recommend you not to use PHP and HTML like this. May have a look to some template-systems e.g. Smarty or Frameworks with build-in template-systems like e.g. Symfony using twig.
Sometimes its ok if you have a file with much HTML and need to pass a PHP variable.
Sample
<?php $title="sample"; ?>
<html>
<title><?php echo $title; ?></title>
<body>
</body>
</html>
This is not much html but a sample how it could look like.
That sample you provided us should more look like....
<?php
if(!is_null($sel_subject))
{ //subject selected?
$content = $sel_subject["menu_name"];
}
else if (!is_null($sel_page))
{ //page selected?
$content = $sel_page["menu_name"];
}
else
{ // nothing selected
$content = "Select a subject or a page to edit";
}
echo "<h2>{$content}</h2>";
?>
You could echo each line of course. I prefer to store this in a variable so I can easy prevent the output by editing one line in the end and not each line where I have added a echo.
According to some comments i did a approvement to the source :)
Because the <h2> tags are not PHP and will display an error if the PHP Tags are removed.
This code will display one line of text wrapped in <h2> tags.
This is called escaping.
Because you cannot just type html between your php tags.
However, I would rather use the following syntax because it is easier to read. But that depends on the programmers opinion.
<?php
if(!is_null($sel_subject))
{ //subject selected?
echo "<h2>" . $sel_subject["menu_name"] . "</h2>";
}
elseif (!is_null($sel_page))
{ //page selected?
ehco "<h2>" . $sel_page["menu_name"] . "</h2>";
}
else
{ // nothing selected
echo "<h2>Select a subject or a page to edit</h2>";
}
Because inside the if-statement there is an HTML code, which you can put it by closing PHP tags and open it again like this:
<?php if(/*condition*/){ ?> <html></html> <?php } ?>
or:
<?php if(/*condition*/){ echo '<html></html>' ; }
That is because in this snippet we see html and php code. The code <?php changes from html-mode to php-mode and the code ?> changes back to html-mode.
There are several possibilites to rewrite this code to make it more readable. I'd suggest the following:
<?php
//subject selected?
if (!is_null($sel_subject)) {
echo "<h2>" . $sel_subject["menu_name"] . "</h2>";
//page selected?
} elseif (!is_null($sel_page)) {
echo "<h2>" . $sel_page["menu_name"] . "</h2>";
// nothing selected
} else {
echo "<h2>Select a subject or a page to edit</h2>";
}
?>
using the echo-command to output html, you don't need to change from php-mode to html-mode and you can reduce the php-tag down to only one.
I have the code below on a page basically what I'm trying to do is fill $content variable using the function pagecontent. Anything inside pagecontent function should be added to the $content variable and then my theme system will take that $content and put it in theme. From the answers below it seems you guys think I want the html and php inside the actual function I don't.
This function below is for pagecontent and is what I'm currently trying to use to populate $content.
function pagecontent()
{
return $pagecontent;
}
<?php
//starts the pagecontent and anything inside should be inside the variable is what I want
$content = pagecontent() {
?>
I want anything is this area whether it be PHP or HTML added to $content using pagecontent() function above.
<?php
}///this ends pagecontent
echo functional($content, 'Home');
?>
I think you're looking for output buffering.
<?
// Start output buffering
ob_start();
?> Do all your text here
<? echo 'Or even PHP output ?>
And some more, including <b>HTML</b>
<?
// Get the buffered content into your variable
$content = ob_get_contents();
// Clear the buffer.
ob_get_clean();
// Feed $content to whatever template engine.
echo functional($content, 'Home');
As you are obviously a beginner here's a much simplified, working version to get you started.
function pageContent()
{
$html = '<h1>Added from pageContent function</h1>';
$html .= '<p>Funky eh?</p>';
return $html;
}
$content = pageContent();
echo $content;
The rest of the code you post is superfluous to your problem. Get the bare minimum working first then move on from there.
Way 1:
function page_content(){
ob_start(); ?>
<h1>Hello World!</h1>
<?php
$buffer = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
return $buffer;
}
$content .= page_content();
Way 2:
function page_content( & $content ){
ob_start(); ?>
<h1>Hello World!</h1>
<?php
$buffer = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
$content .= $buffer;
}
$content = '';
page_content( $content );
Way 3:
function echo_page_content( $name = 'John Doe' ){
return <<<END
<h1>Hello $name!</h1>
END;
}
echo_page_content( );
I have a file B590.php which is having a lot of html code and some php code (eg logged in username, details of user).
I tried using $html = file_get_content("B590.php");
But then $html will have the content of B90.php as plain text(with php code).
Is there any method where I can get the content of the file after it has been evaluated?
There seems to be many related questions like this one and this one but none seems to have any definite answer.
You can use include() to execute the PHP file and output buffering to capture its output:
ob_start();
include('B590.php');
$content = ob_get_clean();
function get_include_contents($filename){
if(is_file($filename)){
ob_start();
include $filename;
$contents = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
return $contents;
}
return false;
}
$html = get_include_contents("/playbooks/html_pdf/B580.php");
This answer was originally posted on Stackoverflow
If you use include or require the file contents will behave as though the current executing file contained the code of that B590.php file, too. If what you want is the "result" (ie output) of that file, you could do this:
ob_start();
include('B590.php');
$html = ob_get_clean();
Example:
B590.php
<div><?php echo 'Foobar'; ?></div>
current.php
$stuff = 'do stuff here';
echo $stuff;
include('B590.php');
will output:
do stuff here
<div>Foobar</div>
Whereas, if current.php looks like this:
$stuff = 'do stuff here';
echo $stuff;
ob_start();
include('B590.php');
$html = ob_get_clean();
echo 'Some more';
echo $html;
The output will be:
do stuff here
Some more
<div>Foobar</div>
To store evaluated result into some variable, try this:
ob_start();
include("B590.php");
$html = ob_get_clean();
$filename = 'B590.php';
$content = '';
if (php_check_syntax($filename)) {
ob_start();
include($filename);
$content = ob_get_clean();
ob_end_clean();
}
echo $content;
page.php:
<?php
include("header.php");
$title = "TITLE";
?>
header.php:
<title><?php echo $title; ?></title>
I want my title to be set after including the header file. Is it possible to do this?
expanding on Dainis Abols answer, and your question on output handling,
consider the following:
your header.php has the title tag set to <title>%TITLE%</title>;
the "%" are important since hardly anyone types %TITLE% so u can use that for str_replace() later.
then, you can use output buffer like so
<?php
ob_start();
include("header.php");
$buffer=ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
$buffer=str_replace("%TITLE%","NEW TITLE",$buffer);
echo $buffer;
?>
and that should do it.
EDIT
I believe Guy's idea works better since it gives you a default if you need it, IE:
The title is now <title>Backup Title</title>
Code is now:
<?php
ob_start();
include("header.php");
$buffer=ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
$title = "page title";
$buffer = preg_replace('/(<title>)(.*?)(<\/title>)/i', '$1' . $title . '$3', $buffer);
echo $buffer;
?>
1. Simply add $title variable before require function
<?php
$title = "Your title goes here";
require("header.php");
?>
2. Add following code into header.php
<title><?php echo $title; ?></title>
What you can do is, you store the output in a variable like:
header.php
<?php
$output = '<html><title>%TITLE%</title><body>';
?>
PS: You need to remove all echos/prints etc so that all possible output is stored in the $output variable.
This can be easely done, by defining $output = ''; at the start of the file and then find/replace echo to $output .=.
And then replace the %TITLE% to what you need:
<?php
include("header.php");
$title = "TITLE";
$output = str_replace('%TITLE%', $title, $output);
echo $output;
?>
Another way is using javascript in your code, instead of:
<title><?php echo $title; ?></title>
Put this in there:
<script type="text/javascript">
document.title = "<?=$title;?>"
</script>
Or jQuery, if you prefer:
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function() {
$(this).attr("title", "<?=$title;?>");
});
</script>
Expanding a little on we.mamat's answer,
you could use a preg_replace instead of the simple replace and remove the need for a %title% altogether. Something like this:
<?php
ob_start();
include("header.php");
$buffer=ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
$title = "page title";
$buffer = preg_replace('/(<title>)(.*?)(<\/title>)/i', '$1' . $title . '$3', $buffer);
echo $buffer;
?>
you can set using JavaScript
<script language="javascript">
document.title = "The new title goes here.";
</script>
Add this code on top your page
<?php
$title="This is the new page title";
?>
Add this code on your Template header file (include)
<title><?php echo $title; ?></title>
It's very easy.
Put this code in header.php
<?
$sitename = 'Your Site Name'
$pagetitle;
if(isset($pagetitle)){
echo "<title>$pagetitle." | ". $sitename</title>";
}
else {
echo "<title>$sitename</title>";
}
?>
Then in the page put there :
<?
$pagetitle = 'Sign up'
include "header.php";
?>
So if you are on Index.php , The title is Your Site Name.
And for example if you are on sign up page , The title is Sign up | Your Site Name
Every Simple just using a function , I created it .
<?
function change_meta_tags($title,$description,$keywords){
// This function made by Jamil Hammash
$output = ob_get_contents();
if ( ob_get_length() > 0) { ob_end_clean(); }
$patterns = array("/<title>(.*?)<\/title>/","<meta name='description' content='(.*)'>","<meta name='keywords' content='(.*)'>");
$replacements = array("<title>$title</title>","meta name='description' content='$description'","meta name='keywords' content='$keywords'");
$output = preg_replace($patterns, $replacements,$output);
echo $output;
}
?>
First of all you must create function.php file and put this function inside ,then make require under the MetaTags in Header.php .
To use this function change_meta_tags("NEW TITLE","NEW DESCRIPTION",NEW KEYWORDS); .
Don't use this function in Header.php !! just with another pages .
Use a jQuery function like this:
$("title").html('your title');
This question already has answers here:
HTML into PHP Variable (HTML outside PHP code)
(7 answers)
Closed 4 years ago.
Hi i'd like to store a dinamically generated(with php) html code into a variable and be able to send it as a reply to an ajax request.
Let's say i randomly generate a table like:
<?php
$c=count($services);
?>
<table>
<?php
for($i=0; $i<$c; $i++){
echo "<tr>";
echo "<td>".$services_global[$i][service] ."</td>";
echo "<td>".$services_global[$i][amount]."</td>";
echo "<td>€ ".$services_global[$i][unit_price].",00</td>";
echo "<td>€ ".$services_global[$i][service_price].",00</td>";
echo "<td>".$services_global[$i][service_vat].",00%</td>";
echo "</tr>";
}
?>
</table>
I need to store all the generated html code(and the rest) and echo it as a json encoded variable like:
$error='none';
$result = array('teh_html' => $html, 'error' => $error);
$result_json = json_encode($result);
echo $result_json;
I could maybe generate an html file and then read it with:
ob_start();
//all my php generation code and stuff
file_put_contents('./tmp/invoice.html', ob_get_contents());
$html = file_get_contents('./tmp/invoice.html');
But it sounds just wrong and since i don't really need to generate the code but only send it to my main page as a reply to an ajax request it would be a waste of resources.
Any suggestions?
You don't have to store it in a file, you can just use the proper output buffering function
// turn output buffering on
ob_start();
// normal output
echo "<h1>hello world!</h1>";
// store buffer to variable and turn output buffering offer
$html = ob_get_clean();
// recall the buffered content
echo $html; //=> <h1>hello world!</h1>
More about ob_get_clean()
if the data is so much expensive to regenerate then I would suggest you to use memcached.
Otherwise I would go regenerate it every-time or cache it on the frontend.
for($i=0;$i<=5;$i++)
{
ob_start();
$store_var = $store_var.getdata($i); // put here your recursive function name
ob_get_clean();
}
function getdata($i)
{
?>
<h1>
<?php
echo $i;
?>
</h1>
<?php
ob_get_contents();
}