(PHP 5, PECL tidy >= 0.5.2)
tidy::parseFile -- tidy_parse_file — Parse markup in file or URI
Object oriented style
$filename
[, mixed $config
[, string $encoding
[, bool $use_include_path
= false ]]] )Procedural style
$filename
[, mixed $config
[, string $encoding
[, bool $use_include_path
= false ]]] )Parses the given file.
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://tidy.sourceforge.net/docs/quickref.html.
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.
use_include_path
Search for the file in the include_path.
Returns TRUE
on success or FALSE
on failure.
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 occured:\n";
echo $tidy->errorBuffer;
}
?>
Note: The optional parameters
config
andencoding
were added in Tidy 2.0.