Last active
October 3, 2024 17:01
-
-
Save zuzuleinen/6db61b09465e9bc8a7ea to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
CSV Response in Symfony controller action
This file contains hidden or bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
<?php | |
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response; | |
use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\Controller; | |
class CsvController extends Controller | |
{ | |
/** | |
* Get a CSV file from an array | |
* | |
* @return \Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response | |
*/ | |
public function csvAction() | |
{ | |
$list = array( | |
//these are the columns | |
array('Firstname', 'Lastname',), | |
//these are the rows | |
array('Andrei', 'Boar'), | |
array('John', 'Doe') | |
); | |
$fp = fopen('php://output', 'w'); | |
foreach ($list as $fields) { | |
fputcsv($fp, $fields); | |
} | |
$response = new Response(); | |
$response->headers->set('Content-Type', 'text/csv'); | |
//it's gonna output in a testing.csv file | |
$response->headers->set('Content-Disposition', 'attachment; filename="testing.csv"'); | |
return $response; | |
} | |
} |
A bit late, but there is a class called CsvEncoder
. You can do something like this:
use Symfony\Component\Serializer\Encoder\CsvEncoder;
$csvEncoder = new CsvEncoder();
$data = [];
foreach ($people as $person) {
$data[] = [
'First Name' => $person->getFirstName(),
'Last Name' => $person->getLastName(),
];
}
$csv = $csvEncoder->encode($data, 'csv');
The array keys of each element in $data
are the headers. You can change the header order by doing something like this:
$headers = ['Last Name', 'First Name'];
$csv = $csvEncoder->encode($data, 'csv', [
'csv_headers' => $headers,
]);
Sign up for free
to join this conversation on GitHub.
Already have an account?
Sign in to comment
It's also worth to explain why one shouldn't write to
php://output
in this case. That stream is the same one as the one used byecho
orprint
statements. Obviously, you can also access it viaob_*
functions. The thing is - you've got no idea what's in it or who's going to write to it. I've had a case, where using it caused theContent-Type
of a response to randomly change betweentext/csv
andtext/html
. In other words - weird things happened!Switching to anything else, in my case to
php://temp
(thanks Nyholm!), did the trick.