see example 2.
-Original Message-
From: Timothy Hitchens (HiTCHO) [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, 1 January 2003 11:00 PM
To: Sean Malloy; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [PHP] makeing an array
Your example of:
for ($i = 0; $i count($comment); $i++)
Is very bad
-Original Message-
From: Sean Malloy [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: 02 January 2003 13:35
To: Timothy Hitchens (HiTCHO); [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [PHP] makeing an array
see example 2.
But that produces the elements in reverse order -- no use if you want them
On Wednesday 01 January 2003 01:41 pm, Timothy Hitchens (HiTCHO) wrote:
Use the count like following inside to ensure that you don't
call on a non existent index.
for ($i = 0, $x = count($comment); $i $x; $i++)
{
echo $comment[$i].'br /';
}
Why do you want to echo out $comment_1 ???
-Original Message-
From: Gerald Timothy Quimpo [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: 02 January 2003 14:12
alternatively, if you don't want to change to array syntax,
you can use
variable variables. e.g.,
$variable_name=comment_.nIndex; // now comment_1, for example.
//
, 1 January 2003 4:41 PM
To: Philip J. Newman; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [PHP] makeing an array
Use the count like following inside to ensure that you don't
call on a non existent index.
for ($i = 0, $x = count($comment); $i $x; $i++)
{
echo $comment[$i].'br /';
}
Why do you
- Original Message -
From: Sean Malloy [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, January 01, 2003 9:40 PM
Subject: RE: [PHP] makeing an array
why the $x variable aswell?!
for ($i = 0; $i count($comment); $i++)
{
echo $comment[$i].'br /';
}
or even faster:
$i = count
Example of an Array:
$my_first_array = array(1 = 'first', 2 = 'second', 3 = 'third');
You can now access these like so:
echo $my_first_array[1]; etc etc
of if you had this: $my_first_array = array('first_name' = 'Philip',
'last_name' = 'Newman');
You could do this:
echo
[EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, January 01, 2003 6:12 PM
Subject: Re: [PHP] makeing an array
Example of an Array:
$my_first_array = array(1 = 'first', 2 = 'second', 3 = 'third');
You can now access these like so:
echo $my_first_array[1]; etc etc
of if you had
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- Original Message -
From: Philip J. Newman [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Timothy Hitchens (HiTCHO) [EMAIL PROTECTED];
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, January 01, 2003 3:29 PM
Subject: Re: [PHP] makeing an array
So in saything that I
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