I would like to know if it is possible to get the x-value position (ie 2nd) in a variable variable array reference.
the code below works for the 1st array but not the 2nd.
// WORKS FINE //
$my1stArray= array( 'red', 'green', 'blue');
$var_1st = 'my1stArray';
// for each lopp of var var works fine
echo " - my1stArray Values - <br>";
foreach ($$var_1st as $k => $v){
echo $k." : ".$v." <br>";
}
// direct access also works
echo "my1stArray 3rd value: ".${$var_1st}[2]."<br>";
// Not so good! //
$my2ndArray = array(
'color' => '#ff0000',
'face' => 'helvetica',
'size' => '+5',
);
$var_2nd = 'my2ndArray';
// for each lopp of var_2nd works fine
echo "<br> - my2ndArray Values - <br>";
foreach ($$var_2nd as $k => $v){
echo $k." : ".$v." <br>";
}
/** try to access 2nd value in array with position **/
echo "my2ndArray 2rd value: ".${$var_2nd[1]}[0]."<br>";
echo "my2ndArray 2rd value: ".${$var_2nd}[1][0]."<br>";
Well, in the comments I said "no, you can't", but there is actually a way. Here is an example (without variable variables):
$my2ndArray = array(
'color' => '#ff0000',
'face' => 'helvetica',
'size' => '+5',
);
$keys = array_keys($my2ndArray);
echo "my2ndArray 2nd value: " . $my2ndArray[$keys[1]] . "<br>";
Doesn't look very nice, but should work. Not that if you ever sort the array, the key indexes will change.
Another way to do that would be using a counter and a loop as I mentioned in the comments. But that would be even uglier...