PHP Basic

PHP HOME
PHP Intro
PHP Install
PHP Syntax
PHP Variables
PHP String
PHP Operators
PHP If...Else
PHP Switch
PHP Arrays
PHP While Loops
PHP For Loops
PHP Functions
PHP Forms
PHP $_GET
PHP $_POST

PHP Advanced

PHP Date
PHP Include
PHP File
PHP File Upload
PHP Cookies
PHP Sessions
PHP E-mail
PHP Secure E-mail
PHP Error
PHP Exception
PHP Filter

PHP Database

MySQL Introduction
MySQL Connect
MySQL Create
MySQL Insert
MySQL Select
MySQL Where
MySQL Order By
MySQL Update
MySQL Delete
PHP ODBC

PHP XML

XML Expat Parser
XML DOM
XML SimpleXML

PHP and AJAX

AJAX Intro
AJAX PHP
AJAX Database
AJAX XML
AJAX Live Search
AJAX RSS Reader
AJAX Poll

PHP Reference

PHP Array
PHP Calendar
PHP Date
PHP Directory
PHP Error
PHP Filesystem
PHP Filter
PHP FTP
PHP HTTP
PHP Libxml
PHP Mail
PHP Math
PHP Misc
PHP MySQL
PHP SimpleXML
PHP String
PHP XML
PHP Zip

PHP Quiz

PHP Quiz
PHP Certificate

PHP Arrays

« Previous Next Chapter »

An array stores multiple values in one single variable.


What is an Array?

A variable is a storage area holding a number or text. The problem is, a variable will hold only one value.

An array is a special variable, which can store multiple values in one single variable.

If you have a list of items (a list of car names, for example), storing the cars in single variables could look like this:

$cars1="Saab";
$cars2="Volvo";
$cars3="BMW";

However, what if you want to loop through the cars and find a specific one? And what if you had not 3 cars, but 300?

The best solution here is to use an array!

An array can hold all your variable values under a single name. And you can access the values by referring to the array name.

Each element in the array has its own index so that it can be easily accessed.

In PHP, there are three kind of arrays:


Numeric Arrays

A numeric array stores each array element with a numeric index.

There are two methods to create a numeric array.

1. In the following example the index are automatically assigned (the index starts at 0):

$cars=array("Saab","Volvo","BMW","Toyota");

2. In the following example we assign the index manually:

$cars[0]="Saab";
$cars[1]="Volvo";
$cars[2]="BMW";
$cars[3]="Toyota";

Example

In the following example you access the variable values by referring to the array name and index:

<?php
$cars[0]="Saab";
$cars[1]="Volvo";
$cars[2]="BMW";
$cars[3]="Toyota"; 
echo $cars[0] . " and " . $cars[1] . " are Swedish cars.";
?>

The code above will output:

Saab and Volvo are Swedish cars.


Associative Arrays

An associative array, each ID key is associated with a value.

When storing data about specific named values, a numerical array is not always the best way to do it.

With associative arrays we can use the values as keys and assign values to them.

Example 1

In this example we use an array to assign ages to the different persons:

$ages = array("Peter"=>32, "Quagmire"=>30, "Joe"=>34);

Example 2

This example is the same as example 1, but shows a different way of creating the array:

$ages['Peter'] = "32";
$ages['Quagmire'] = "30";
$ages['Joe'] = "34";

The ID keys can be used in a script:

<?php
$ages['Peter'] = "32";
$ages['Quagmire'] = "30";
$ages['Joe'] = "34";

echo "Peter is " . $ages['Peter'] . " years old.";
?>

The code above will output:

Peter is 32 years old.


Multidimensional Arrays

In a multidimensional array, each element in the main array can also be an array. And each element in the sub-array can be an array, and so on.

Example

In this example we create a multidimensional array, with automatically assigned ID keys:

$families = array
   (
   "Griffin"=>array
   (
   "Peter",
   "Lois",
   "Megan"
   ),
   "Quagmire"=>array
   (
   "Glenn"
   ),
   "Brown"=>array
   (
   "Cleveland",
   "Loretta",
   "Junior"
   )
   );

The array above would look like this if written to the output:

Array
(
[Griffin] => Array
   (
   [0] => Peter
   [1] => Lois
   [2] => Megan
   )
[Quagmire] => Array
   (
   [0] => Glenn
   )
[Brown] => Array
   (
   [0] => Cleveland
   [1] => Loretta
   [2] => Junior
   )
)

Example 2

Lets try displaying a single value from the array above:

echo "Is " . $families['Griffin'][2] . 
" a part of the Griffin family?";

The code above will output:

Is Megan a part of the Griffin family?


Complete PHP Array Reference

For a complete reference of all array functions, go to our complete PHP Array Reference.

The reference contains a brief description, and examples of use, for each function!


« Previous Next Chapter »


宏飞网络是你学习web开发、测试web程序实例、和培养职业技能的首选网站。我们提供例子也许有些简单,但对理解基本概念有帮助。

我们尽量避免在教程、参考及例子中出现错误,但不能保证所有的内容都是正确的。

你使用本网站时,我们默认你已经阅读并接受了我们的隐私政策。

Copyright 2003-2011宏飞网络 版权所有