The built-in DOM parser makes it possible to process XML documents in PHP.
The W3C DOM provides a standard set of objects for HTML and XML documents, and a standard interface for accessing and manipulating them.
The W3C DOM is separated into different parts (Core, XML, and HTML) and different levels (DOM Level 1/2/3):
To read and update - create and manipulate - an XML document, you will need an XML parser.
There are two basic types of XML parsers:
The DOM parser is an tree-based parser.
Look at the following XML document fraction:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?> <from>Jani</from>
The XML DOM sees the XML above as a tree structure:
The DOM XML parser functions are part of the PHP core. There is no installation needed to use these functions.
//XML File : The XML file below will be used in our example: <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?> <note> <to>Tove</to> <from>Jani</from> <heading>Reminder</heading> <body>Do not forget me this weekend!</body> </note>
We want to initialize the XML parser, load the xml, and output it:
//Example : <?php $xmlDoc = new DOMDocument(); $xmlDoc->load("note.xml"); print $xmlDoc->saveXML(); ?> // O/P : Tove Jani Reminder Do not forget me this weekend!
If you select "View source" in the browser window, you will see the following HTML:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?> <note> <to>Tove</to> <from>Jani</from> <heading>Reminder</heading> <body>Do not forget me this weekend!</body> </note>
The example above creates a DOMDocument-Object and loads the XML from "note.xml" into it.
Then the saveXML() function to puts the internal XML document into a string, so that we can print it.
We want to initialize the XML parser, load the XML, and loop through all elements of the <note> element:
Example <?php $xmlDoc = new DOMDocument(); $xmlDoc->load("note.xml"); $x = $xmlDoc->documentElement; foreach ($x->childNodes AS $item) { print $item->nodeName . " = " . $item->nodeValue . "<br />"; } ?> // O/P : #text = to = Tove #text = from = Jani #text = heading = Reminder #text = body = Do not forget me this weekend! #text =
In the example above you see that there are empty text nodes between each element.
When XML generates, it often contains white-spaces between the nodes. The XML DOM parser treats these as ordinary elements, and if you are not aware of them, they sometimes cause problems.
SimpleXML handles the most common XML tasks and leaves the rest for other extensions.
SimpleXML is new in PHP 5. It is an easy way of getting an element's attributes and text, if you know the XML document's layout.
Compared to DOM or the Expat parser, SimpleXML just takes a few lines of code to read text data from an element.
SimpleXML converts the XML document into an object, like this:
SimpleXML is fast and easy to use when performing basic tasks like:
However, when dealing with advanced XML, like namespaces, you are better off using the Expat parser or the XML DOM.
Installation :
As of PHP 5.0, the SimpleXML functions are part of the PHP core. There is no installation needed to use these functions.
Using SimpleXML Below is an XML file: <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?> <note> <to>Tove</to> <from>Jani</from> <heading>Reminder</heading> <body>Do not forget me this weekend!</body> </note>
We want to output the element names and data from the XML file above.
Here's what to do:
//Example : <?php $xml = simplexml_load_file("test.xml"); echo $xml->getName() . "<br />"; foreach($xml->children() as $child) { echo $child->getName() . ": " . $child . "<br />"; } ?> // O/P : note to: Tove from: Jani heading: Reminder body: Do not forget me this weekend!
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