On Tue, Jun 08, 2010 at 04:44:53PM +0200, Peter Lind wrote:

> On 8 June 2010 16:38, Ashley Sheridan <a...@ashleysheridan.co.uk> wrote:
> > On Tue, 2010-06-08 at 10:35 -0400, Paul M Foster wrote:
> >
> >> On Tue, Jun 08, 2010 at 09:38:58AM -0400, Robert Cummings wrote:
> >>
> >> > Tanel Tammik wrote:
> >> >> Hi,
> >> >>
> >> >> which one is correct or "better"?
> >> >>
> >> >> $array[3] = '';
> >> >> or
> >> >> $array['3'] = '';
> >> >>
> >> >> $i = 7;
> >> >>
> >> >> $array[$i] = '';
> >> >> or
> >> >> $array["$i"] = '';
> >> >
> >> > Sometimes it is good to illustrate the correct answer:
> >> >
> >> > <?php
> >> >
> >> > $array = array
> >> > (
> >> >     '1'     => '1',
> >> >     '2'     => '2',
> >> >     'three' => 'three',
> >> >     '4.0'   => '4.0',
> >> >     5.0     => 5.0,
> >> > );
> >> >
> >> > var_dump( array_keys( $array ) );
> >> >
> >> > ?>
> >> >
> >> > The answer is surprising (well, not really :) and certainly advocates
> >> > against making literal strings of integers or manually converting a
> >> > string integer to a real integer or using floating point keys.
> >>
> >> Curse you, Rob Cummings! ;-}
> >>
> >> I was stunned at the results of this. I assumed that integers cast as
> >> strings would remain strings as indexes. Not so. And then float indexes
> >> cast to ints. Argh!
> >>
> >> My advice to the original poster was slightly incorrect. But I would
> >> still encourage you to avoid enclosing variables in double-quotes
> >> unnecessarily. (And integers in single-quotes for that matter.)
> >>
> >> Paul
> >>
> >> --
> >> Paul M. Foster
> >>
> >
> >
> > The obvious way around this would be to include some sort of character
> > in the index that can't be cast to an integer, so instead of $array[1.0]
> > which would equate to $array[1] maybe add an underscore to make it
> > $array['_1.0']. It's not the prettiest of solutions, but it does mean
> > that indexes are kept as you intended, and you need only strip out the
> > first character, although I imagine a lot of string manipulation on a
> > large array would decrease performance.
> 
> Floats in quotes are not cast to int when used as array keys. Just an FYI :)

Umm, yes, you are correct. I pasted Rob's code into a test file, added
some other print_r()s and such, just to look at the whole issue. I'm
*still* examining the results, trying to wrap my wits around why things
are done this way.

Paul

-- 
Paul M. Foster

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