Opens filename
and parses it line by line for <meta> tags in the file. The parsing stops at </head>.
The path to the HTML file, as a string. This can be a local file or an URL.
Example #1 What get_meta_tags() parses
<meta name="author" content="name"> <meta name="keywords" content="php documentation"> <meta name="DESCRIPTION" content="a php manual"> <meta name="geo.position" content="49.33;-86.59"> </head> <!-- parsing stops here -->
Setting use_include_path
to TRUE
will result in PHP trying to open the file along the standard include path as per the include_path directive. This is used for local files, not URLs.
Returns an array with all the parsed meta tags.
The value of the name property becomes the key, the value of the content property becomes the value of the returned array, so you can easily use standard array functions to traverse it or access single values. Special characters in the value of the name property are substituted with '_', the rest is converted to lower case. If two meta tags have the same name, only the last one is returned.
Only meta tags with name attributes will be parsed. Quotes are not required.
<meta name="author" content="name"> <meta name="keywords" content="php documentation"> <meta name="DESCRIPTION" content="a php manual"> <meta name="geo.position" content="49.33;-86.59"> </head> <!-- parsing stops here -->
<?php // Assuming the above tags are at www.example.com $tags = get_meta_tags('http://www.example.com/'); // Notice how the keys are all lowercase now, and // how . was replaced by _ in the key. echo $tags['author']; // name echo $tags['keywords']; // php documentation echo $tags['description']; // a php manual echo $tags['geo_position']; // 49.33;-86.59 ?>
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