thanks, I didn't notice your change the first time around
On Dec 20, 10:14 am, euromark wrote:
> thats not what i was saying
> you sure can
> and I already gave you the answer in the previous post :)
>
> On 20 Dez., 17:33, roundrightfarm wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > Thanks,
> > To make sure I'm unde
thats not what i was saying
you sure can
and I already gave you the answer in the previous post :)
On 20 Dez., 17:33, roundrightfarm wrote:
> Thanks,
> To make sure I'm undersatnding correctly, you can not change the
> values in an array that is being scanned by foreach, you need to send
> chang
Thanks,
To make sure I'm undersatnding correctly, you can not change the
values in an array that is being scanned by foreach, you need to send
changes based on the scan to a new variable?
This worked
$weeks_prices = array();
foreach($discount_prices as $key => $discount_price){
basic php
you cannot override $discount_price locally and expect it to change
anything outside of the loop and the scope of this change
if(!isset($discount_price)) $discount_prices[$key] =
$item_prices[$key];
On 20 Dez., 16:37, roundrightfarm wrote:
> The two arrays made with find() look like I
The two arrays made with find() look like I would expect them to, but
the foreach loop leaves $discount_prices (of which many have null
values) unaffected. What am I missing here?
//get regular prices
$item_prices = $this->Item->find('list', array('fields' =>
array('Item.price'))
Makes sense, I'll give it a try.
Thanks!
Brendon Kozlowski pisze:
> I *think* you're looking for array_diff_uassoc --
> http://php.net/array_diff_uassoc
>
> On Apr 29, 2:15 pm, Faza wrote:
>
>> Hi guys,
>>
>> I'm curious if there is a built-in method to get an array which is a
>> result of c
I *think* you're looking for array_diff_uassoc --
http://php.net/array_diff_uassoc
On Apr 29, 2:15 pm, Faza wrote:
> Hi guys,
>
> I'm curious if there is a built-in method to get an array which is a
> result of comparing two other arrays with the same structure?
>
> Like
>
> $a = array('k1' =>
Hi guys,
I'm curious if there is a built-in method to get an array which is a
result of comparing two other arrays with the same structure?
Like
$a = array('k1' => 'v1', 'k2' => 'v2', 'k3' => '')
$b = array('k1' => '', 'k2' => 'v2', 'k3' => 'yo momma')
comparison of the two would give
$c = a