tidy::parseFile

tidy_parse_file

(PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8, PECL tidy >= 0.5.2)

tidy::parseFile -- tidy_parse_fileParse markup in file or URI

Description

Object-oriented style

public tidy::parseFile(
    string $filename,
    array|string|null $config = null,
    ?string $encoding = null,
    bool $useIncludePath = false
): bool

Procedural style

tidy_parse_file(
    string $filename,
    array|string|null $config = null,
    ?string $encoding = null,
    bool $useIncludePath = false
): tidy|false

Parses the given file.

Parameters

filename

If the filename parameter is given, this function will also read that file and initialize the object with the file, acting like tidy_parse_file().

config

The config config can be passed either as an array or as a string. If a string is passed, it is interpreted as the name of the configuration file, otherwise, it is interpreted as the options themselves.

For an explanation about each option, see » http://api.html-tidy.org/#quick-reference.

encoding

The encoding parameter sets the encoding for input/output documents. The possible values for encoding are: ascii, latin0, latin1, raw, utf8, iso2022, mac, win1252, ibm858, utf16, utf16le, utf16be, big5, and shiftjis.

useIncludePath

Search for the file in the include_path.

Return Values

tidy::parseFile() returns true on success. tidy_parse_file() returns a new tidy instance on success. Both, the method and the function return false on failure.

Changelog

Version Description
8.0.0 config and encoding are nullable now.

Examples

Example #1 tidy::parseFile() example

<?php
$tidy
= new tidy();
$tidy->parseFile('file.html');

$tidy->cleanRepair();

if(!empty(
$tidy->errorBuffer)) {
echo
"The following errors or warnings occurred:\n";
echo
$tidy->errorBuffer;
}
?>

See Also

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