I have this:
[1]=>
object(SimpleXMLElement)#6 (1) {
["@attributes"]=>
array(14) {
["name"]=>
string(5) "MySQL"
["acknowledged"]=>
string(1) "1"
["comments"]=>
string(1) "1"
["current_check_attempt"]=>
string(1) "1"
["downtime"]=>
string(1) "0"
["last_check"]=>
string(19) "2010-05-01 17:57:00"
["markdown_filter"]=>
string(1) "0"
["max_check_attempts"]=>
string(1) "3"
["output"]=>
string(42) "CRITICAL - Socket timeout after 10 seconds"
["perfdata_available"]=>
string(1) "1"
["service_object_id"]=>
string(3) "580"
["state"]=>
string(8) "criti开发者_JAVA技巧cal"
["state_duration"]=>
string(6) "759439"
["unhandled"]=>
string(1) "0"
}
}
(I used var_dump($child) to generate that)
How do I get the 'name' attribute out of there as a string?
Here is my code:
$xml = simplexml_load_string($results);
foreach($xml->data->list as $child) {
var_dump($child);
echo $child->getName() . ": " . $child->name . "<br />";
}
With SimpleXML, you can get :
- sub-elements, using object notation :
$element->subElement
- and attributes, using array notation :
$element['attribute']
So, here, I'd say you'd have to use :
echo $child['name'];
As a reference, and for a couple of examples, see the Basic usage section of simplexml's manual.
Example #6 should be the interesting one, about attributes.
While you can do:
echo $child['name'];
to see the value, you should note that $child['name']
is an object, not a string. Echoing it casts it to a string, so it works in that situation. But if you're storing it somewhere, it's better to cast it to a string yourself:
$name = (string) $child['name'];
Kind of messy, but I used this successfully
foreach($xml->data->children() as $child) {
//var_dump($child);
foreach ($child->attributes() as $a => $b) {
echo $a . '=' . $b . '<br />';
}
}
Not sure why, but the OpsView API returns a two-dimensional array instead of just having one value per XML node :(
echo $child['name'];
works and is much more elegant, thank you.
I had a similar problem, I needed to get the string out of my SimpleXMLElement, I couldn't find the name to call it. Found the solution, by using (string) to get the string text:
foreach ($lines as $line) {
array_push($result, new line(**(string)**$line));
}
array
0 =>
object(line)[190]
private '_line' =>
object(SimpleXMLElement)[128]
public '@attributes' =>
array
...
string ' ' (length=1)
1 =>
object(line)[191]
private '_line' =>
object(SimpleXMLElement)[131]
public '@attributes' =>
array
...
string ' ' (length=1)
2 =>
object(line)[192]
private '_line' =>
object(SimpleXMLElement)[132]
public '@attributes' =>
array
...
string ' ~54**** I N V O I C E ****' (length=27)
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