strange...
echo 'blah blah blah ' . $this->arrayname['value'] . ' blah';
should work just as fine.
I think you are confused with strings.
Sincerely,
Maxim Maletsky
Founder, Chief Developer
PHPBeginner.com (Where PHP Begins)
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.phpbeginner.com
-----Original Message-----
From: DELAP, SCOTT F (SBCSI) [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, April 09, 2001 11:28 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [PHP] Real Problem: Accessing Array In A Class
I've been trying to figure this out for a day or so now. Someone needs to
do a concise tutorial with arrays, references, etc. with PHP. I've got a
class that has a member variable that is an array. When I try to access it
in a function like this:
print "blah blah blah $this->arrayname['value'] blah";
$this->arrayname evaluates to an array object and ['value'] comes out as a
string. If I assign it to a variable first like so:
$arraytemp = $this->arrayname;
print "blah blah blah $arraytemp['value'] blah";
it works fine. However, I know there should be a way to reference it
directly. Any suggestions on what I have do to as far as brackets, etc. to
force php to evaluate it they way I want?
Scott Delap
SBC Services, Inc.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
314-235-6216
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