(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7)
fgetss — Gets line from file pointer and strip HTML tags
This function has been DEPRECATED as of PHP 7.3.0. Relying on this function is highly discouraged.
$handle
[, int $length
[, string $allowable_tags
]] ) : stringIdentical to fgets(), except that fgetss() attempts to strip any NUL bytes, HTML and PHP tags from the text it reads. The function retains the parsing state from call to call, and as such is not equivalent to calling strip_tags() on the return value of fgets().
handle
The file pointer must be valid, and must point to a file successfully opened by fopen() or fsockopen() (and not yet closed by fclose()).
length
Length of the data to be retrieved.
allowable_tags
You can use the optional third parameter to specify tags which should
not be stripped.
See strip_tags() for details regarding
allowable_tags
.
Returns a string of up to length
- 1 bytes read from
the file pointed to by handle
, with all HTML and PHP
code stripped.
If an error occurs, returns FALSE
.
Example #1 Reading a PHP file line-by-line
<?php
$str = <<<EOD
<html><body>
<p>Welcome! Today is the <?php echo(date('jS')); ?> of <?= date('F'); ?>.</p>
</body></html>
Text outside of the HTML block.
EOD;
file_put_contents('sample.php', $str);
$handle = @fopen("sample.php", "r");
if ($handle) {
while (!feof($handle)) {
$buffer = fgetss($handle, 4096);
echo $buffer;
}
fclose($handle);
}
?>
The above example will output something similar to:
Welcome! Today is the of . Text outside of the HTML block.
Note: If PHP is not properly recognizing the line endings when reading files either on or created by a Macintosh computer, enabling the auto_detect_line_endings run-time configuration option may help resolve the problem.