CSVParser
class CSVParser implements Iterator
Class to handle parsing of CSV files, where the column headers are in the first row.
The idea is that you pass it another object to handle the actual processing of the data in the CSV file.
Usage:
$parser = new CSVParser('myfile.csv');
$parser->mapColumns(array(
'first name' => 'FirstName',
'lastname' => 'Surname',
'last name' => 'Surname',
));
foreach($parser as $row) {
// $row is a map of column name => column value
$obj = new MyDataObject();
$obj->update($row);
$obj->write();
}
Traits
Methods
An implementation of the factory method, allows you to create an instance of a class
Creates a class instance by the "singleton" design pattern.
Open a CSV file for parsing.
Re-map columns in the CSV file.
If your CSV file doesn't have a header row, then you can call this function to provide one.
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Details
in Injectable at line 26
static Injectable
create(array $args)
An implementation of the factory method, allows you to create an instance of a class
This method will defer class substitution to the Injector API, which can be customised via the Config API to declare substitution classes.
This can be called in one of two ways - either calling via the class directly, or calling on Object and passing the class name as the first parameter. The following are equivalent: $list = DataList::create('SiteTree'); $list = SiteTree::get();
in Injectable at line 43
static Injectable
singleton(string $class = null)
Creates a class instance by the "singleton" design pattern.
It will always return the same instance for this class, which can be used for performance reasons and as a simple way to access instance methods which don't rely on instance data (e.g. the custom SilverStripe static handling).
at line 116
__construct(string $filename, string $delimiter = ",", string $enclosure = '"')
Open a CSV file for parsing.
You can use the object returned in a foreach loop to extract the data.
at line 139
mapColumns(array $columnMap)
Re-map columns in the CSV file.
This can be useful for identifying synonyms in the file. For example:
$csv->mapColumns(array(
'firstname' => 'FirstName',
'last name' => 'Surname',
));
at line 161
provideHeaderRow(array $headerRow)
If your CSV file doesn't have a header row, then you can call this function to provide one.
If you call this function, then the first row of the CSV will be included in the data returned.