I want to call require_once("test.php") but not display result and save it into variable like this:
$test = require_once('test.php');
//some operations like $test = preg_replace(…);
echo $test;
Solution:
test.php
<?php
$var = '/img/hello.jpg';
$res = <<<test
<style type="text/css">
body{background:url($var)#fff !important;}
</style>
test;
return $res;
?>
main.php
<?php
$test = require_once('test.php');
echo $test;
?>
Is it possible?
Yes, but you need to do an explicit return in the required file:
//test.php
<? $result = "Hello, world!";
return $result;
?>
//index.php
$test = require_once('test.php'); // Will contain "Hello, world!"
This is rarely useful - check Konrad's output buffer based answer, or adam's file_get_contents one - they are probably better suited to what you want.
“The result” presumably is a string output?
In that case you can use ob_start to buffer said output:
ob_start();
require_once('test.php');
$test = ob_get_contents();
EDIT From the edited question it looks rather like you want to have a function inside the included file. In any case, this would probably be the (much!) cleaner solution:
<?php // test.php:
function some_function() {
// Do something.
return 'some result';
}
?>
<?php // Main file:
require_once('test.php');
$result = test_function(); // Calls the function defined in test.php.
…
?>
file_get_contents will get the content of the file. If it's on the same server and referenced by path (rather than url), this will get the content of test.php. If it's remote or referenced by url, it will get the output of the script.
Related
sorry for my last question where i try put some live code with ob_start buffer content is not helping me to solve my problem because buffer content just collects output text, it doesn't execute any code. thanks #akrys for your advices
what i want is to put code into while looping like this
$sql = $conn->query("SELECT * FROM `users`");
$var = $row['full_name'];
include('test.php');
after i call test.php contain while code like:
while($row = $sql->fetch_array()) {
echo $var;
}
everything is work if i replace $var with $row['full_name'];
but i get the name of row field from some script on index.php so i should access that file first then i call portable file contain query to fetch_array on test.php
how to make it work when i put it back with $var contain variable field name
thank you very much for your attention guys
you should to include before your code
page
test.php
<?php
$someVariable = 'hello'; // the variable only can access in here
?>
<?php
include('test.php');
ob_start();
echo "some text with call variable $someVariable";
echo "other stuff";
$tdcol1_val = ob_get_contents(); ob_clean();
echo $tdcol1_val; //
?>
of course you can use define too
page test.php
<?php
define( "SOMEVARIABLE", hello );
?>
<?php
include('test.php');
ob_start();
echo "some text with call variable ".SOMEVARIABLE;
echo "other stuff";
$tdcol1_val = ob_get_contents(); ob_clean();
echo $tdcol1_val; //
?>
you can use:
define("CONSTANT", "Hello world.");
echo CONSTANT; // outputs "Hello world."
for more help, use the link below:
enter link description here
Suppose I write a line
include Yii::app()->basepath.'/views/email/email_friend.php';
now how can i take the response of this line into a variable?
like
$abc = include Yii::app()->basepath.'/views/email/email_friend.php';
Have a look at the PHP docs for include http://php.net/manual/en/function.include.php
Example #5 is I think what you're looking for
return.php
<?php
$var = 'PHP';
return $var;
?>
noreturn.php
<?php
$var = 'PHP';
?>
testreturns.php
<?php
$foo = include 'return.php';
echo $foo; // prints 'PHP'
$bar = include 'noreturn.php';
echo $bar; // prints 1
?>
All you have to do is the included file had a return with the desired value. It's been quite popular for some time.
so the include.php should like the following:
<?php
return ' World!';
and the including one:
<?php
$a = include('include.php');
echo 'Hello'.$a; // Hello World!
When you include it's like you're copy/pasting the code into your PHP. If it's just inline PHP and there was a variable $abc in the include file 'email_friend.php' then you could access the variable normally after the include.
I know this is an old post. I hope my answer will be useful to someone. I combined the Accepted answer with the answer "PHP/7 you can use a self-invoking anonymous function..."
define( 'WPPATH', dirname(dirname(__FILE__)) . '/public/partials/bla-bla.php' );
$publicDisplayContent = (function () {
// [PHP/7 you can use a self-invoking anonymous function](https://stackoverflow.com/a/41568962/601770)
// https://stackoverflow.com/a/5948404/601770
ob_start();
require_once(WPPATH);
return ob_get_clean();
})(); // PHP/7 you can use a self-invoking anonymous function
error_log( 'activate() >> $publicDisplayContent: ' . print_r( $publicDisplayContent, true ) );
DOT DOT DOT
'post_content' => $publicDisplayContent,
I want to include a file, but instead of printing output I want to get it as string.
For example, I want include a file:
<?php echo "Hello"; ?> world!
But instead of printing Hello world! while including the file I want to get it as a string.
I want to filter some elements from the file, but not from whole php file, but just from the html output.
Is it possible to do something like this?
You can use php buffers like this:
<?php
ob_start();
include('other.php');
$script = ob_get_contents(); // it will hold the output of other.php
ob_end_clean();
EDIT: You can abstract this into a function:
function inlcude2string($file) {
ob_start();
include($file);
$output = ob_get_contents(); // it will hold the output of other.php
ob_end_clean();
return $output;
}
$str = inlcude2string('other.php');
How can I put the result of an include into a PHP variable?
I tried file_get_contents but it gave me the actual PHP code, whereas I want whats echoed.
Either capture anything that's printed in the include file through output buffering
ob_start();
include 'yourFile.php';
$out = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
or alternatively, set a return value in the script, e.g.
// included script
return 'foo';
// somewhere else
$foo = include 'yourFile.php';
See Example 5 of http://de2.php.net/manual/en/function.include.php
or simply return a value from an included file as explained here.
return.php:
<?php
$var = 'PHP';
return $var;
?>
$foo = include 'return.php';
echo $foo; // prints 'PHP'
I tried:
$test = include 'test.php';
But that just included the file normally
You'll want to look at the output buffering functions.
//get anything that's in the output buffer, and empty the buffer
$oldContent = ob_get_clean();
//start buffering again
ob_start();
//include file, capturing output into the output buffer
include "test.php";
//get current output buffer (output from test.php)
$myContent = ob_get_clean();
//start output buffering again.
ob_start();
//put the old contents of the output buffer back
echo $oldContent;
EDIT:
As Jeremy points out, output buffers stack. So you could theoretically just do something like:
<?PHP
function return_output($file){
ob_start();
include $file;
return ob_get_clean();
}
$content = return_output('some/file.php');
This should be equivalent to my more verbose original solution.
But I haven't bothered to test this one.
Try something like:
ob_start();
include('test.php');
$content = ob_get_clean();
Try file_get_contents().
This function is similar to file(), except that file_get_contents() returns the file in a string.
Solution #1: Make use of include (works like a function): [My best solution]
File index.php:
<?php
$bar = 'BAR';
$php_file = include 'included.php';
print $php_file;
?>
File included.php:
<?php
$foo = 'FOO';
return $foo.' '.$bar;
?>
<p>test HTML</p>
This will output FOO BAR, but
Note: Works like a function, so RETURN passes contents back to variable (<p>test HTML</p> will be lost in the above)
Solution #2: op_buffer():
File index.php:
<?php
$bar = 'BAR';
ob_start();
include 'included.php';
$test_file = ob_get_clean(); //note on ob_get_contents below
print $test_file;
?>
File included.php:
<?php
$foo = 'FOO';
print $foo.' '.$bar;
?>
<p>test HTML</p>
If you use ob_get_contents() it will output FOO BAR<p>test HTML</p> TWICE, make sure you use ob_get_clean()
Solution #3: file_get_contents():
File index.php:
<?php
$bar = 'BAR';
$test_file = eval(file_get_contents('included.php'));
print $test_file;
?>
File included.php:
$foo = 'FOO';
print $foo.' '.$bar;
This will output FOO BAR, but Note: Include.php should not have <?php opening and closing tags as you are running it through eval()
The other answers, for reasons unknown to me, don't quite reach the correct solution.
I suggest using the buffer, but you have to get the contents and then clean the buffer before the end of the page, otherwise it is outputted. Should you wish to use the output from the included file, you should use op_get_contents(), which will return a string of the contents of the buffer.
You also don't need to loop over the includes as each will just add to the buffer (unless you clean it first).
You therefore could use the following;
ob_start();
include_once('test.php');
include_once('test2.php');
$contents = ob_get_contents();
ob_end_clean();
Hope this helps.
You can use the function file_get_contents.