Table of Contents
Zend_Feed
provides functionality for consuming RSS and Atom feeds. It provides a
natural syntax for accessing elements of feeds, feed attributes, and entry attributes.
Zend_Feed
also has extensive support for modifying feed and entry structure with the
same natural syntax, and turning the result back into XML. In the future, this modification support
could provide support for the Atom Publishing Protocol.
Programmatically, Zend_Feed
consists of a base Zend_Feed
class, abstract
Zend_Feed_Abstract
and Zend_Feed_EntryAbstract
base classes for
representing Feeds and Entries, specific implementations of feeds and entries for RSS and Atom, and
a behind-the-scenes helper for making the natural syntax magic work.
In the example below, we demonstrate a simple use case of retrieving an RSS feed and saving relevant portions of the feed data to a simple PHP array, which could then be used for printing the data, storing to a database, etc.
Note | |
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Many RSS feeds have different channel and item properties available. The RSS specification provides for many optional properties, so be aware of this when writing code to work with RSS data. |
Example 4.1. Putting Zend_Feed to Work on RSS Feed Data
<?php require_once 'Zend/Feed.php'; // Fetch the latest Slashdot headlines try { $slashdotRss = Zend_Feed::import('http://rss.slashdot.org/Slashdot/slashdot'); } catch (Zend_Feed_Exception $e) { // feed import failed echo "Exception caught importing feed: {$e->getMessage()}\n"; exit; } // Initialize the channel data array $channel = array( 'title' => $slashdotRss->title(), 'link' => $slashdotRss->link(), 'description' => $slashdotRss->description(), 'items' => array() ); // Loop over each channel item and store relevant data foreach ($slashdotRss as $item) { $channel['items'][] = array( 'title' => $item->title(), 'link' => $item->link(), 'description' => $item->description() ); } ?>