I am new to php (learning since 1 week ). I am learning arrays. while doing it, I found a api which gives out results in the form of a multidimensional array.. and I am unable to echo the values of the array ..
Sample response
Array
(
[query] => Array
(
[count] => 1
[created] => 2010-07-16T08:35:38Z
[lang] => en-US
[results] => Array
(
[item] => Array
(
[rel] => rel:Person
[resource] => http://twitter.com/twitter
[meta] => Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[property] => foaf:name
[content] => Twitter
)
开发者_如何学运维 )
)
)
)
)
I can echo some values..like
echo $array["query"]['count']."<br />";
echo $array["query"]["results"]["item"]["resource"];
but, when I want to use the [meta] => Array
I am not able to use :(
echo $array["query"]["results"]["item"]["resource"]["meta']["0"["content"];
please guide me
You should use your debugging skills to tackle this kind of problem.
- First,
print_r()
your $array, which you did. - Then
print_r($array['query'])
- Then
print_r($array['query']['results'])
- and so on, and so on
When you get to print_r($array["query"]["results"]["item"]["resource"])
, you see that the result is not an array, it's a scalar, thus you need a different index.
Good luck!
Maybe is because you don't close the ["0"] array properly
echo $array["query"]["results"]["item"]["resource"]["meta"][0]["content"]
From your paste:
[query] => Array (
[results] => Array (
[item] => Array (
[resource] => "http://twitter.com/twitter"
[meta] => Array (
[0] => Array (
[content] => "Twitter"
(...)
The $array["query"]["results"]["item"]["resource"]
is not an array, it's a string; you probably want the meta
array that's inside $array["query"]["results"]["item"]
(same level as resource
). This should work:
echo $array["query"]["results"]["item"]["meta"]["0"]["content"];
Also, you made two typos:
["meta']
- you're opening meta with double quote"
and trying to close with single quote'
- they have to be the same - e.g.['meta']
["0"
- you didn't close the bracket - e.g.['0']
You forgot ] at ["0"]
Also leave out the " around the 0, since you are calling thins elemnt by index, not by name:
$array["query"]["results"]["item"]["resource"]["meta"][0]["content"]
And for meta you used two different kinds of ". One time " and one time '. The closing " needs to be of the same type as the opening one.
echo $array["query"][count]."<br />";
echo $array["query"]["results"]["item"]["resource"];
count
should be "count"
, otherwise PHP thinks count is a constant.
echo $array["query"]["results"]["item"]["resource"]["meta']["0"["content"];
"meta'
should be "meta"
, you must use same type of quote.
["0"
should be ["0"]
or [0]
- you must close the bracket.
Morgen32 is correct. You hadn't closed the opening [
Also, you can do the same as the "API" you're using is doing by typing
echo "<pre>".print_r($array, true)."</pre>";
below the place in your code that you create the array.
Sorry about the length of this post - it is more like a mini-tutorial, but hopefully this should give you some good concepts to play around with which will help you to solve this problem. There is a couple of approaches I would recommend.
Advice #1, when you are using print_r, try using it like so:
print_r ($array[query], 1);
This will allow you to add a 'return' by setting the return flag to true. The advantage of this is that you can embed it like so:
<pre> <?php echo (print_r($array[query], 1)); ?> </pre>
This would print a 'pre-formatted' array into your HTML, which would preserve all of the spaces and line breaks. See http://php.net/manual/en/function.print-r.php for more information. I won't go into the full details of how to do this, but there are quite a few tutorials here that will get you started: http://www.java2s.com/Code/Php/Data-Structure/LoopingThroughaMultidimensionalArray.htm (also http://php.net/manual/en/control-structures.foreach.php)
Here is a simple example using the object code from above:
Advice #2. Often I find when I am working with APIs and 'arrays' produced from database results, the type is actually wrong. For example, you will often get something that looks like an array, but is actually a stdObject. Even if this is not the case, I would advise you to try this function (from http://php.net/manual/en/function.var-dump.php):
<?php
$a = array(1, 2, array("a", "b", "c"));
var_dump($a);
?>
Objects and arrays do similar things, but you can avoid notices and possible heartaches by using this approach since var_dump also displays the object type and length. You can try:
<?php
$book = new stdClass;
$book->title = "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban";
$book->author = "J. K. Rowling";
$book->publisher = "Arthur A. Levine Books";
$book->amazon_link = "http://www.amazon.com/dp/0439136369/";
?>
<pre>
<?php
ob_start();
var_dump($book);
$a = ob_get_clean();
$b = print_r($book,1);
echo($a."\n\n".$b);
?>
</pre>
This also introduces output buffering, which may affect performance, but I have saved may hours of frustration debugging like this (also, you will want to use something like Zend-debug or Xdebug). There is a bit on PHP output buffering with var_dump here: How can I capture the result of var_dump to a string?
don't enclose your numeric index (0) in quotes:
echo $array["query"]["results"]["item"]["resource"]["meta"][0]["content"];
edit: iirc there's a difference between numeric and string indices. nevertheless, the real problem seem to be that you hadn't closed one bracket, and have mixed single/double quotes around meta.
this should have reported and syntax error …
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