Or use XMLReader::ELEMENT and XMLReader::END_ELEMENT rather than the numbers 1 and 15.
(PHP 5 >= 5.1.0, PHP 7, PHP 8)
XMLReader::getAttribute — Get the value of a named attribute
$name
): ?string
Returns the value of a named attribute or null
if the
attribute does not exist or not positioned on an element node.
name
The name of the attribute.
The value of the attribute, or null
if no attribute with the given
name
is found or not positioned on an element node.
版本 | 说明 |
---|---|
8.0.0 |
This function can no longer return false .
|
Or use XMLReader::ELEMENT and XMLReader::END_ELEMENT rather than the numbers 1 and 15.
might be obvious, but not to everyone ;-) ... when reading attributes from a node that has sub-nodes (and creating an output from this node), the output will be issued twice, once on the <ELEMENT> tag and once on the end tag </ELEMENT>. To avoid this, you can test on which part of the node you are using the property nodeType.
It'll be 1 for the element, 15 for the end element.
To get all attributes and their names, use something like this:
<?php
function getAttributes($reader)
{
$attributes = [];
for ($i = 0; $i < $reader->attributeCount; $i++) {
$reader->moveToAttributeNo($i);
$attributes[$reader->name] = $reader->value;
}
return $attributes;
}
?>