18.8.1 Problem
18.8.2 Solution
Read in each line with fgets( ), separate the line
into words, and process each word:
$fh = fopen('great-american-novel.txt','r') or die($php_errormsg);
while (! feof($fh)) {
if ($s = fgets($fh,1048576)) {
$words = preg_split('/\s+/',$s,-1,PREG_SPLIT_NO_EMPTY);
// process words
}
}
fclose($fh) or die($php_errormsg);
18.8.3 Discussion
Here's how to calculate average word length in a file:
$word_count = $word_length = 0;
if ($fh = fopen('great-american-novel.txt','r')) {
while (! feof($fh)) {
if ($s = fgets($fh,1048576)) {
$words = preg_split('/\s+/',$s,-1,PREG_SPLIT_NO_EMPTY);
foreach ($words as $word) {
$word_count++;
$word_length += strlen($word);
}
}
}
}
print sprintf("The average word length over %d words is %.02f characters.",
$word_count,
$word_length/$word_count);
Processing every word proceeds differently depending on how
"word" is defined. The code in this recipe uses the Perl-compatible regular-expression
engine's \s whitespace metacharacter, which includes space, tab,
newline, carriage return, and formfeed. Section 2.6
breaks apart a line into words by splitting on a space, which is useful in that
recipe because the words have to be rejoined with spaces. The Perl-compatible
engine also has a word-boundary assertion (\b) that matches between a
word character (alphanumeric) and a nonword character (anything else). Using
\b instead of \s to delimit words most noticeably treats
differently words with embedded punctuation. The term 6
o'clock is two words when split by whitespace (6 and
o'clock); it's four words when split by word boundaries (6,
o, ', and clock).