str_getcsv
(PHP 5 >= 5.3.0, PHP 7, PHP 8)
str_getcsv — Parse a CSV string into an array
Description
string
$string,string
$separator = ",",string
$enclosure = "\"",string
$escape = "\\"): array
Parses a string input for fields in CSV format and returns an array containing the fields read.
Note: The locale settings are taken into account by this function. For example, data encoded in certain one-byte encodings may be parsed incorrectly if
LC_CTYPEisen_US.UTF-8.
Parameters
stringThe string to parse.
separatorThe
separatorparameter sets the field separator. It must be a single byte character.enclosureThe
enclosureparameter sets the field enclosure character. It must be a single byte character.escapeThe
escapeparameter sets the escape character. It must be a single byte character or the empty string. The empty string ("") disables the proprietary escape mechanism.WarningIn the input stream, the
enclosurecharacter can always be escaped by doubling it inside a quoted string, resulting in a singleenclosurecharacter in the parsed result. Theescapecharacter works differently: If a sequence ofescapeandenclosurecharacters appear in the input, both characters will be present in the parsed result. So for the default parameters, a CVS line like"a""b","c\"d"will have the fields parsed asa"bandc\"d, respectively.WarningAs of PHP 8.4.0, depending on the default value of
escapeis deprecated. It needs to be provided explicitly either positionally or by the use of named arguments.
When escape is set to anything other than an empty string ("") it can result in CSV that is not compliant with » RFC 4180 or unable to survive a roundtrip through the PHP CSV functions. The default for escape is "\\" so it is recommended to set it to the empty string explicitly. The default value will change in a future version of PHP, no earlier than PHP 9.0.
Return Values
Returns an indexed array containing the fields read.
Errors/Exceptions
Throws a ValueError if separator or enclosure is not one byte long.
Throws a ValueError if escape is not one byte long or the empty string.
Changelog
| Version | Description |
|---|---|
| 8.4.0 | Relying on the default value of escape is now deprecated. |
| 8.4.0 | Now throws a ValueError if separator, enclosure, or escape is invalid. This mimics the behavior of fgetcsv() and fputcsv(). |
| 8.3.0 | An empty string is returned instead of a string with a single null byte for the last field if it contains only an unterminated enclosure. |
| 7.4.0 | The escape parameter now interprets an empty string as signal to disable the proprietary escape mechanism. Formerly, an empty string was treated like the default parameter value. |
Examples
Example #1 str_getcsv() example
<?php
$string = 'PHP,Java,Python,Kotlin,Swift';
$data = str_getcsv($string, escape: '\\');
var_dump($data);
?>The above example will output:
array(5) {
[0]=>
string(3) "PHP"
[1]=>
string(4) "Java"
[2]=>
string(6) "Python"
[3]=>
string(6) "Kotlin"
[4]=>
string(5) "Swift"
}Example #2 str_getcsv() example with an empty string
On an empty string this function returns the value [null] instead of an empty array.
<?php
$string = '';
$data = str_getcsv($string, escape: '\\');
var_dump($data);
?>The above example will output:
array(1) {
[0]=>
NULL
}See Also
- fputcsv() - Format line as CSV and write to file pointer
- fgetcsv() - Gets line from file pointer and parse for CSV fields
- SplFileObject::fgetcsv() - Gets line from file and parse as CSV fields
- SplFileObject::fputcsv() - Write a field array as a CSV line
- SplFileObject::setCsvControl() - Set the delimiter, enclosure and escape character for CSV
- SplFileObject::getCsvControl() - Get the delimiter, enclosure and escape character for CSV