echo value from multidimensional array - php

My PHP call is storing a table from mySQL with the following code.
while (mysqli_stmt_fetch($stmtMyCountTotals)) {
$stmtMyCountTotalsrow = array(
'IndividualUnitsCounted' => $IndividualUnitsCounted,
'IndividualUnitsAdjusted' => $IndividualUnitsAdjusted
);
$stmtMyCountTotalsrows[] = $stmtMyCountTotalsrow;
}
$stmtMyCountTotals->close();
I can not seem to pull a individual value from it. For Example If I want to pull a number from column 1 row 2. I know this is a basic question but I can not seem to find an answer.

This is a multidimensional array, so you would access it like so:
$row1col2 = $stmtMyCountTotalsrows[1][2]
$row2col1 = $stmtMyCountTotalsrows[2][1]
But since it is associative you would want:
$var = $stmtMyCountTotalsrows[1]['IndividualUnitsCounted'];
If you want to access it by column, then you would need to retrieve the column names first into an array:
$cols = array_keys($stmtMyCountTotalsrows[0]);
$var = $stmtMyCountTotalsrows[1][$cols[1]]
// ^ where this is the column number

There are no column numbers in your array, the second dimension is an associative array. So it should be:
$stmtMyCountTotalsrows[$row_number]['IndividualUnitsCounted']
$stmtMyCountTotalsrows[$row_number]['IndividualUnitsAdjusted']

You have an array inside another array. Or a multidimensional array. It looks like this:
Array(
0 => Array(
'IndividualUnitsCounted' => 'Something',
'IndividualUnitsAdjusted' => 'Something Else'
),
1 => Array(
'IndividualUnitsCounted' => 'Yet another something',
'IndividualUnitsAdjusted' => 'Final something'
),
...
...
)
If this array is called $stmtMyCountTotalsrows:
$stmtMyCountTotalsrows[0]['IndividualUnitsCounted'] returns "Something"
$stmtMyCountTotalsrows[0]['IndividualUnitsCounted'] returns "Something Else"
$stmtMyCountTotalsrows[1]['IndividualUnitsAdjusted'] returns "Yet another something"
$stmtMyCountTotalsrows[1]['IndividualUnitsAdjusted'] returns "Final something"

If you don't know the name of the columns beforehand, you could use current() for the first:
echo current($stmtMyCountTotalsrows[1]);
Alternatively, use array_slice():
echo current(array_slice(stmtMyCountTotalsrows, 0, 1));

Related

PHP Associative Array count & extract

I've got the following array
$array = [
1 => 'test',
2 => 'test',
3 => 'test',
4 => 'another'
];
What i want to obtain from this is:
The count of value 'test' $values (It's variable);
After that i will need to get all keys for value 'test' do to the next assumption:
if (\count($values) > 1) {
// do something with keys of value 'test'
echo $keysOfThatValue;
}
I will need to do the upper assumption to all of the array elements grouped by array value.
You can use array_keys with a search argument, then just count those:
$count = count($keys = array_keys($array, 'test'));
Or following your code. The if only executes if test is found and keys are returned:
if($keys = array_keys($array, 'test')) {
// do something with $keys of value 'test'
}
array_filter() can be used to get an array of only entries with the value "test".

PHP multiple values in one key of associative Array

I stuck with a problem: I have an array with IDs and want to assign theses IDs to a key of a associative array:
$newlinkcats = array( 'link_id' => $linkcatarray[0], $linkcatarray[1], $linkcatarray[2]);
this works fine, but I don't know how many entries in $linkcatarray. So I would like to loop or similar. But I don't know how.
no push, cause it is no array
no implode, cause it is no string
no =, cause it overrides the value before
Could anyone help?
Thanks
Jim
Why not just implode it ?
$newlinkcats = array(
'link_id' => implode(
',',
$linkcatarray
)
);
Or just do this:
// Suggested by Tularis
$newlinkcats = array(
'link_id' => $linkcatarray
);
If your $linkcatarray array is only comprised of the values you wish to assign to the link_id key, then you can simply point the key at that array:
$newlinkcats = array('link_id' => $linkcatarray);
If that array contains more values that you don't want included, then take a look at array_slice() to only grab the indexes you need:
// Grabs the first 3 values from $linkcatarray
$newlinkcats = array('link_id' => array_slice($linkcatarray, 0, 3));
If your desired indexes aren't contiguous, it may be easier to cherry-pick them and use a new array:
$newlinkcats = array('link_id' => array(
$linkcatarray[7],
$linkcatarray[13],
$linkcatarray[22],
// ...
));

php extract sub array with specific key

if i have the following array:
array(
'var1' => 123,
'var2' => 234,
'var3' => 345
);
I would like to extract specific parts of this to build a new array i.e. var1 and var3.
The result i would be looking for is:
array(
'var1' => 123,
'var3' => 345
);
The example posted is very stripped down, in reality the array has a much larger number of keys and I am looking to extract a larger number of key and also some keys may or may not be present.
Is there a built in php function to do this?
Edit:
The keys to be extracted will be hardcoded as an array in the class i..e $this->keysToExtract
$result = array_intersect_key($yourarray,array_flip(array('var1','var3')));
So, with your edit:
$result = array_intersect_key($yourarray,array_flip($this->keysToExtract));
You don't need a built in function to do this, try this :
$this->keysToExtract = array('var1', 'var3'); // The keys you wish to transfer to the new array
// For each record in your initial array
foreach ($firstArray as $key => $value)
{
// If the key (ex : 'var1') is part of the desired keys
if (in_array($key, $this->keysToExtract)
{
$finalArray[$key] = $value; // Add to the new array
}
}
var_dump($finalArray);
Note that this is most likely the most efficient way to do this.

Understanding the basics of multidimensional arrays

I am new to using multidimensional arrays with php, I have tried to stay away from them because they confused me, but now the time has come that I put them to good use. I have been trying to understand how they work and I am just not getting it.
What I am trying to do is populate results based on a string compare function, once I find some match to an 'item name', I would like the first slot to contain the 'item name', then I would like to increment the priority slot by 1.
So when when I'm all done populating my array, it is going to have a variety of different company names, each with their respective priority...
I am having trouble understanding how to declare and manipulate the following array:
$matches = array(
'name'=>array('somename'),
'priority'=>array($priority_level++)
);
So, in what you have, your variable $matches will point to a keyed array, the 'name' element of that array will be an indexed array with 1 entry 'somename', there will be a 'priority' entry with a value which is an indexed array with one entry = $priority_level.
I think, instead what you probably want is something like:
$matches[] = array(name => 'somename', $priority => $priority_level++);
That way, $matches is an indexed array, where each index holds a keyed array, so you could address them as:
$matches[0]['name'] and $matches[0]['priority'], which is more logical for most people.
Multi-dimensional arrays are easy. All they are is an array, where the elements are other arrays.
So, you could have 2 separate arrays:
$name = array('somename');
$priority = array(1);
Or you can have an array that has these 2 arrays as elements:
$matches = array(
'name' => array('somename'),
'priority' => array(1)
);
So, using $matches['name'] would be the same as using $name, they are both arrays, just stored differently.
echo $name[0]; //'somename';
echo $matches['name'][0]; //'somename';
So, to add another name to the $matches array, you can do this:
$matches['name'][] = 'Another Name';
$matches['priority'][] = 2;
print_r($matches); would output:
Array
(
[name] => Array
(
[0] => somename
[1] => Another Name
)
[priority] => Array
(
[0] => 1
[1] => 2
)
)
In this case, could this be also a solution with a single dimensional array?
$matches = array(
'company_1' => 0,
'company_2' => 0,
);
if (isset($matches['company_1'])) {
++$matches['company_1'];
} else {
$matches['company_1'] = 1;
}
It looks up whether the name is already in the list. If not, it sets an array_key for this value. If it finds an already existing value, it just raises the "priority".
In my opinion, an easier structure to work with would be something more like this one:
$matches = array(
array( 'name' => 'somename', 'priority' => $priority_level_for_this_match ),
array( 'name' => 'someothername', 'priority' => $priority_level_for_that_match )
)
To fill this array, start by making an empty one:
$matches = array();
Then, find all of your matches.
$match = array( 'name' => 'somename', 'priority' => $some_priority );
To add that array to your matches, just slap it on the end:
$matches[] = $match;
Once it's filled, you can easily iterate over it:
foreach($matches as $k => $v) {
// The value in this case is also an array, and can be indexed as such
echo( $v['name'] . ': ' . $v['priority'] . '<br>' );
}
You can also sort the matched arrays according to the priority:
function cmp($a, $b) {
if($a['priority'] == $b['priority'])
return 0;
return ($a['priority'] < $b['priority']) ? -1 : 1;
}
usort($matches, 'cmp');
(Sourced from this answer)
$matches['name'][0] --> 'somename'
$matches['priority'][0] ---> the incremented $priority_level value
Like David said in the comments on the question, it sounds like you're not using the right tool for the job. Try:
$priorities = array();
foreach($companies as $company) {
if (!isset($priorities[$company])) { $priorities[$company] = 0; }
$priorities[$company]++;
}
Then you can access the priorities by checking $priorities['SomeCompanyName'];.

Replace array key integers with string

$string = "php, photoshop, css";
I'm producing an array from the comma separated values above using the str_getcsv() function:
$array = str_getcsv($string);
Result:
Array ( [0] => php [1] => photoshop [2] => css )
How can I replace the key integers with a string tag for all elements like seen below?
Array ( [tag] => php [tag] => photoshop [tag] => css )
Edit: if not possible what alternative can I apply? I need the array keys to be identical for a dynamic query with multiple OR clauses
e.g.
SELECT * FROM ('posts') WHERE 'tag' LIKE '%php% OR 'tag' LIKE '%photoshop% OR 'tag' LIKE '%css%'
I'm producing the query via a function that uses the array key as a column name and value as criteria.
That is not possible. You can have only one item per key. But in your example, the string "tag" would be the key of every item.
The other way arround would work. So having an array like this:
array('php' => 'tag', 'photoshop' => 'tag', 'css' => 'tag');
This might help you, if you want to save the "type" of each entry in an array. But as all the entries of your array seems to be from the same type, just forget about the "tag" and only store the values in a numeric array.
Or you can use a multidimensional array within the numeric array to save the type:
array(
0 => array( 'type' => 'tag', 'value' => 'php' ),
1 => array( 'type' => 'tag', 'value' => 'photoshop' ),
2 => array( 'type' => 'tag', 'value' => 'css' )
);
But still using just an numeric array should be fine if all the entries have the same type. I can even think of a last one:
array(
'tag' => array('php', 'photoshop', 'css')
);
But even if I repeat myself: Just use an ordinary array and name it something like $tag!
BTW: explode(', ', %string) is the more common function to split a string.
To build SQL statement you might do something like this:
// ... inside you build function
if(is_array($value)){
$sql .= "'".$key."' LIKE '%."implode("%' OR '".$key."' LIKE '%", $value)."%'";
} else {
$sql .= "'".$key."' LIKE '%".$value."%'";
}
This might look confusing but it's much cleaner than runnig into two foreach-loops building the query.
That won't work. Your array keys have to be unique, or subsequent additions will simply overwrite the previous key.
As the others said, keys have to be unique. Otherwise, which element should be returned if you access $arr['tag']? If you now say "all of them", then create a nested array:
$array = array();
$array['tag'] = str_getcsv($string);
The value $array['tag'] will be another array (the one you already have) with numerical keys. This makes, because you have a list of tags and lists can be represented as arrays too.
Understanding arrays is very important if you want to work with PHP, so I suggest to read the array manual.
Assuming you know the size of your array beforehand
$tags = array("tag1","tag2","tag3");
$data = array("php","photoshop","css");
$myarray = array();
for ($i=0; $i<count($data); $i++) {
$myarray[$i] = array($data[$i], $tags[$i]);
}
Then
echo $myarray[0][0] . ", " . $myarray[0][1];
Outputs:
php, tag1

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