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- MAGPIERSS RECIPES: Cooking with Corbies
- "Four and twenty blackbirds baked in a pie."
- 1. LIMIT THE NUMBER OF HEADLINES(AKA ITEMS) RETURNED.
- PROBLEM:
- You want to display the 10 (or 3) most recent headlines, but the RSS feed
- contains 15.
- SOLUTION:
- $num_items = 10;
- $rss = fetch_rss($url);
- $items = array_slice($rss->items, 0, $num_items);
- DISCUSSION:
- Rather then trying to limit the number of items Magpie parses, a much simpler,
- and more flexible approach is to take a "slice" of the array of items. And
- array_slice() is smart enough to do the right thing if the feed has less items
- then $num_items.
- See: http://www.php.net/array_slice
- 2. DISPLAY A CUSTOM ERROR MESSAGE IF SOMETHING GOES WRONG
- PROBLEM:
- You don't want Magpie's error messages showing up if something goes wrong.
- SOLUTION:
- # Magpie throws USER_WARNINGS only
- # so you can cloak these, by only showing ERRORs
- error_reporting(E_ERROR);
- # check the return value of fetch_rss()
- $rss = fetch_rss($url);
- if ( $rss ) {
- ...display rss feed...
- }
- else {
- echo "An error occured! " .
- "Consider donating more $$$ for restoration of services." .
- "<br>Error Message: " . magpie_error();
- }
- DISCUSSION:
- MagpieRSS triggers a warning in a number of circumstances. The 2 most common
- circumstances are: if the specified RSS file isn't properly formed (usually
- because it includes illegal HTML), or if Magpie can't download the remote RSS
- file, and there is no cached version.
- If you don't want your users to see these warnings change your error_reporting
- settings to only display ERRORs. Another option is to turn off display_error,
- so that WARNINGs, and NOTICEs still go to the error_log but not to the webpages.
- You can do this with:
- ini_set('display_errors', 0);
- See: http://www.php.net/error_reporting,
- http://www.php.net/ini_set,
- http://www.php.net/manual/en/ref.errorfunc.php
- 3. GENERATE A NEW RSS FEED
- PROBLEM:
- Create an RSS feed for other people to use.
- SOLUTION:
- Use Useful Inc's RSSWriter (http://usefulinc.com/rss/rsswriter/)
- DISCUSSION:
- An example of turning a Magpie parsed RSS object back into an RSS file is forth
- coming. In the meantime RSSWriter has great documentation.
- 4. DISPLAY HEADLINES MORE RECENT THEN X DATE
- PROBLEM:
- You only want to display headlines that were published on, or after a certain
- date.
- SOLUTION:
- require 'rss_utils.inc';
- # get all headlines published today
- $today = getdate();
- # today, 12AM
- $date = mktime(0,0,0,$today['mon'], $today['mday'], $today['year']);
- $rss = fetch_rss($url);
- foreach ( $rss->items as $item ) {
- $published = parse_w3cdtf($item['dc']['date']);
- if ( $published >= $date ) {
- echo "Title: " . $item['title'];
- echo "Published: " . date("h:i:s A", $published);
- echo "<p>";
- }
- }
- DISCUSSION:
- This recipe only works for RSS 1.0 feeds that include the <dc:date> field.
- (which is very good RSS style)
- parse_w3cdtf is defined in rss_utils.inc, and parses RSS style dates into Unix
- epoch seconds.
- See: http://www.php.net/manual/en/ref.datetime.php
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