i have array like
Array
(
[1] => Array
(
[user_info] => Array
(
[id] => 1
[name] => Josh
[email] => u0001#josh.com
[watched_auctions] => 150022 150031
)
[auctions] => Array
(
[150022] => Array
(
[id] => 150022
[title] => Title of auction
[end_date] => 2013-08-28 17:50:00
[price] => 10
)
[150031] => Array
(
[id] => 150031
[title] => Title of auction №
[end_date] => 2013-08-28 16:08:03
[price] => 10
)
)
)
so i need put in <td> info from [auctions] => Array where is id,title,end_date but when i do like $Info['id'] going and put id from [user_info] when i try $Info[auctions]['id'] there is return null how to go and get [auctions] info ?
Try:
foreach( $info['auctions'] as $key=>$each ){
echo ( $each['id'] );
}
Or,
foreach( $info as $key=>$each ){
foreach( $each['auctions'] as $subKey=>$subEach ){
echo ( $subEach['id'] );
}
}
Given the data structure from your question, the correct way would be for example:
$Info[1]['auctions'][150031]['id']
$array =array();
foreach($mainArray as $innerArray){
$array[] = $innerArray['auctions'];
}
foreach($array as $key=>$val){
foreach($val as $k=>$dataVal){
# Here you will get Value of particular key
echo $dataVal[$k]['id'];
}
}
Try this code
Your question is a bit malformed. I don't know if this is due to a lacking understanding of the array structure or just that you had a hard time to explain. But basically an array in PHP never has two keys. I will try to shed some more light on the topic on a basic level and hope it helps you.
Anyway, what you have is an array of arrays. And there is no difference in how you access the contents of you array containing the arrays than accessing values in an array containing integers. The only difference is that what you get if you retrieve a value from your array, is another array. That array can you then in turn access values from just like a normal array to.
You can do all of this in "one" line if you'd like. For example
echo $array[1]["user_info"]["name"]
which would print Josh
But what actually happens is no magic.
You retrieve the element at index 1 from your array. This happens to be an array so you retrieve the element at index *user_info* from that. What you get back is also an array so you retrieve the element at index name.
So this is the same as doing
$arrayElement = $array[1];
$userInfo = $arrayElement["user_info"];
$name = $userInfo["name"];
Although this is "easier" to read and debug, the amount of code it produces sometimes makes people write the more compact version.
Since you get an array back you can also do things like iterating you array with a foreach loop and within that loop iterate each array you get from each index within the first array. This can be a quick way to iterate over multidimensional array and printing or doing some action on each element in the entire structure.
Related
As a newbie, does anyone have any good tutorials to help me understand different levels of an array? What I'm trying to learn is how to echo different levels, e.g. here is the output array:
Array
(
[meta] =>
Array
(
[total_record_count] => 1
[total_pages] => 1
[current_page] => 1
[per_page] => 1
)
[companies] =>
Array
(
[0] =>
Array
(
[id] => 291869
[url] => https://api.mattermark.com/companies/291869
[company_name] => gohenry.co.uk
[domain] => gohenry.co.uk
)
)
[total_companies] => 1
[page] => 1
[per_page] => 1
)
And here is the code to parse the array:
foreach($jsonObj as $item)
{
echo $item['total_companies'];
}
I'm really struggling to find the structure and how to output each items, e.g. tried things like:
echo $item[0]['total_companies'];
echo $item['companies'][0]['id'];
Any help or pointers would be greatly received.
Well, Lets start, You have a multi-dimensional array. For a multi-dimensional array you need to use looping e.g: for, while, foreach. For your purpose it is foreach.
Start with the array dimension, Array can be multi-dimension, Like you have multi-dimension. If you have an array like below, then it is single dimension.
array(
key => value,
key2 => value2,
key3 => value3,
...
)
Now, How can you know what is a multi-dimension array, If you array has another array as child then it is called multi-dimensional array, like below.
$array = array(
"foo" => "bar",
42 => 24,
"multi" => array(
"dimensional" => array(
"array" => "foo"
)
)
);
Its time to work with your array. Suppose you want to access the value of company_name, what should you do?? Let your array name is $arr.
First you need to use a foreach loop like:
foreach($arr as $key => $val)
The keys are (meta, companies, total_companies...), they are in the first dimension. Now check if the key is company_name or not, if it matches than you got it. Or else you need to make another loop if the $val is an array, You can check it using is_array.
By the same processing at the last element your loop executes and find your value.
Learning
Always a good idea to start with the docs:
arrays: http://php.net/manual/en/language.types.array.php
foreach: http://php.net/manual/en/control-structures.foreach.php
As for tutorials, try the interactive tutorial over at codecademy: https://www.codecademy.com/learn/php
Unit 4 has a tutorial on arrays
Unit 11 has a lesson on advanced arrays.
Your code
As for your code, look at the following which I will show you your array structure and how to access each element. Perhaps that will make things clearer for you.
So lets say your array is named $myArray, see how to access each part via the comments. Keep in mind this is not php code, I'm just showing you how to access the array's different elements.
$myArray = Array
(
// $myArray['meta']
[meta] => Array (
// $myArray['meta']['total_record_count']
[total_record_count] => 1
// $myArray['meta']['total_pages']
[total_pages] => 1
// $myArray['meta']['current_page']
[current_page] => 1
// $myArray['meta']['per_page']
[per_page] => 1
)
// $myArray['companies']
[companies] => Array (
// $myArray['companies'][0]
[0] => Array (
// $myArray['companies'][0]['id']
[id] => 291869
// $myArray['companies'][0]['url']
[url] => https://api.mattermark.com/companies/291869
// $myArray['companies'][0]['company_name']
[company_name] => gohenry.co.uk
// $myArray['companies'][0]['domain']
[domain] => gohenry.co.uk
)
)
// $myArray['total_companies']
[total_companies] => 1
// $myArray['page']
[page] => 1
// $myArray['per_page']
[per_page] => 1
)
As for your for each loop
foreach($jsonObj as $item)
{
echo $item['total_companies'];
}
What the foreach loop is doing is looping through each first level of the array $jsonObj, so that would include:
meta
companies
total_companies
page
per_page
Then within the curly braces {} of the foreach loop you can refer to each level by the variable $item.
So depending on what you want to achieve you need to perhaps change your code, what is it you're trying to do as it's not really clear to me.
As for the code within the loop:
echo $item['total_companies'];
It won't work because you're trying to access an array with the index of total_companies within the first level of the $jsonObj array which doesn't exist. For it to work your array would have to look like this:
$jsonObj = array (
'0' => array ( // this is what is reference to as $item
'total_companies' => 'some value'
)
)
What you want to do is this:
foreach($jsonObj as $item)
{
echo $jsonObj['total_companies'];
}
As for your final snippet of code:
echo $item[0]['total_companies'];
Answered this above. Access it like $jsonObj['total_companies'];
echo $item['companies'][0]['id'];
If you want to loop through the companies try this:
foreach($jsonObj['companies'] as $item)
{
// now item will represent each iterable element in $jsonObj['companies]
// so we could do this:
echo $item['id'];
}
I hope that all helps! If you don't understand please make a comment and I'll update my answer.
Please take a look in to here and here
Information about php arrays
Try recursive array printing using this function:
function recursive($array){
foreach($array as $key => $value){
//If $value is an array.
if(is_array($value)){
//We need to loop through it.
recursive($value);
} else{
//It is not an array, so print it out.
echo $value, '<br>';
}
}
}
if you know how deep your array structure you can perform nested foreach loop and before every loop you have to check is_array($array_variable), like :
foreach($parent as $son)
{
if(is_array($son))
{
foreach($son as $grandson)
{
if(is_array($son))
{
foreach($grandson as $grandgrandson)
{
.....
......
.......
}
else
echo $grandson;
}
else
echo $parent;
}
else
echo $son;
}
hope it will help you to understand
i want to restructure my array so that it looks better in a json
here is a print_r of my current variable:
Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[item_id] => 2
)
[1] => Array
(
[item_id] => 1
)
[2] => Array
(
[item_id] => 1
)
)
i want to reconstruct it be like this or similar:
EDIT
Array
(
[item_id] = array([0]=>'2',[1]=>'1', [2]=>'1');
)
sorry for my poor english m(_ _)m
i just want the item_id to have multiple values.
The hurdle
You actually can't in any way produce the output that you desire, since the key needs to be unique.
You can't use a key of item_id more than once, every time you try and set it, it will override what was in there last.
Think about it, how do you then look up the item with key of item_id, you can't, because three things would have that same key.
If the only reason is for cosmetics, I'd leave the output as you currently have it, although it may look a little messy in your JSON, it works.
A different approach
The best you can hope, is to get an output of:
'item_id' => array(
2,
1,
1
)
You can do this with the help of the array_map function:
$array = array('item_id' => array_map('current', $array));
This can be accomplished using this code.
$a['item_id'] = array();
foreach($arr as $key=>$val) {
$a['item_id'][] = $val['item_id'];
}
print_r($a);
$array = array('item_id' => array_map('current', $array));
I'm trying to figure out why it is that I cannot access the follow array with this statement:
var_dump($thevar[0]['product_id']);
Array
(
[d142d425a5487967a914b6579428d64b] => Array
(
[product_id] => 253
[variation_id] =>
[variation] =>
[quantity] => 1
[data] => WC_Product Object
(
[id] => 253
[product_custom_fields] => Array
(
[_edit_last] => Array
(
[0] => 1
)
[_edit_lock] => Array
(
[0] => 1345655854:1
)
[_thumbnail_id] => Array
(
[0] => 102
)
I can, however, access the 'product_id' using the dynamically created array name:
print_r($thevar['d142d425a5487967a914b6579428d64b']['product_id']);
The issue is, I don't know what that dynamic name is going to be on the fly...
There are several options for such scenarios.
Manually iterate over the array
You can use reset, next, key and/or each to iterate over the array (perhaps partially).
For example, to grab the first item regardless of key:
$item = reset($thevar);
Reindex the array
Sometimes it's just convenient to be able to index into the array numerically, and a small performance hit is not a problem. In that case you can reindex using array_values:
$values = array_values($thevar);
$item = $values[0]; // because $values is numerically indexed
Iterate with foreach
This would work for a single value as well as it works for more, but it might give the wrong impression to readers of the code.
foreach($thevar as $item) {
// do something with $item
}
If the array key is dynamic you might find the PHP function array_keys() useful.
It will return an array of the keys used in an array. You can then use this to access a particular element in the array.
See here for more:
http://php.net/manual/en/function.array-keys.php
Because PHP array are associative therefor you have to access them by key.
But you may use reset($thevar) to get first item.
Or array_values():
array_values($thevar)[0]
Or if you feel like overkill you may also use array_keys() and use the [0] element to address element like this:
$thevar[ array_keys($thevar)[0]]
I'm a bit struggling with the associative arrays in associative arrays. Point is that I always have to drill deeper in an array and I just don't get this right.
$array['sections']['items'][] = array (
'ident' => $item->attributes()->ident,
'type' => $questionType,
'title' => $item->attributes()->title,
'objective' => (string) $item->objectives->material->mattext,
'question' => (string) $item->presentation->material->mattext,
'possibilities' => array (
// is this even neccesary to tell an empty array will come here??
//(string) $item->presentation->response_lid->render_choice->flow_label->response_label->attributes()->ident => (string) $item->presentation->response_lid->render_choice->flow_label->response_label->material->mattext
)
);
foreach ($item->presentation->response_lid->render_choice->children() as $flow_label) {
$array['sections']['items']['possibilities'][] = array (
(string) $flow_label->response_label->attributes()->ident => (string) $flow_label->response_label->material->mattext
);
}
So 'possibilities' => array() contains an array and if I put a value in it like the comment illustrates I get what I need. But an array contains multiple values so I am trying to put multiple values on the position $array['sections']['items']['possibilities'][]
But this outputs that the values are stores on a different level.
...
[items] => Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[ident] => SimpleXMLElement Object
(
[0] => QTIEDIT:SCQ:1000015312
)
[type] => SCQ
...
[possibilities] => Array
(
)
)
[possibilities] => Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[1000015317] => 500 bytes
)
[1] => Array
...
What am trying to accomplish is with my foreach code above is the first [possibilities] => Array is containing the information of the second. And of course that the second will disappear.
Your $array['sections']['items'] is an array of items, so you need to specify which item to add the possibilities to:
$array['sections']['items'][$i]['possibilities'][]
Where $i is a counter in your loop.
Right now you are appending the Arrays to [items]. But you want to append them to a child element of [items]:
You do:
$array['sections']['items']['possibilities'][] = ...
But it should be something like:
$array['sections']['items'][0]['possibilities'][] = ...
$array['sections']['items'] is an array of items, and as per the way you populate the possibilities key, each item will have it's own possibilities. So, to access the possibilities of the item that is being looped over, you need to specify which one from $array['sections']['items'] by passing the index as explained in the first answer.
OR
To make things simpler, you can try
Save the item array (RHS of the first =) to a separate variable instead of defining and appending to the main array at the same time.
Set the possibilities of that variable.
Append that variable to the main $array['sections']['items']
I have:
array[{IsChecked: true, SEC: 0, STP: 0},
{IsChecked: ture ,SEC: 0, STP: 1},
{IsChecked: false, SEC: 1 ,STP: 0}]
How to get each SEC where IsCheked value is true?
I have a page that searches a database and generates the following array. I'd like to be able to loop through the array and pick out the value next assigned to the key "contact_id" and do something with it, but I have no idea how to get down to that level of the array.
The array is dynamically generated, so depending on what I search for the index numbers under "values" will change accordingly.
I'm thinking I have to do a foreach starting under values, but I don't know how to start a foreach at a sublevel of an array.
Array (
[is_error] => 0
[version] => 3
[count] => 2
[values] => Array (
[556053] => Array (
[contact_id] => 556053
[contact_type] => Individual
[first_name] => Brian
[last_name] => YYY
[contact_is_deleted] => 0
)
[596945] => Array (
[contact_id] => 596945
[contact_type] => Individual
[first_name] => Brian
[last_name] => XXX
[contact_is_deleted] => 0
)
)
)
I've looked at the following post, but it seems to only address the situation where the array indices are sequential.
Multidimensional array - how to get specific values from sub-array
Any ideas?
Brian
You are correct in your assumption. You could do something like this:
foreach($array['values'] as $key => $values) {
print $values['contact_id'];
}
That should demonstrate starting at a sub level. I would also add in your checks to see if its empty and if its an array... etc.
Another hint regarding syntax - if the array in your original example is called $a, then the values you want are here:
$a['values'][556053]['contact_id']
and here:
$a['values'][596945]['contact_id']
So if there's no additional structure in your array, then this loop is probably what you want:
foreach ($a['values'] as $toplevel_id => $record_data) {
print "for toplevel_id=[$toplevel_id], contact_id=[" . $record_data['contact_id'] . "]\n";
}
foreach($array['values'] as $sub_arr){
echo $sub_arr['contact_id'];
}