4.3.1 Problem
4.3.2 Solution
Store the multiple elements in an array:
$fruits = array('red' => array('strawberry','apple'),
'yellow' => array('banana'));
Or, use an object:
while ($obj = mysql_fetch_object($r)) {
$fruits[ ] = $obj;
}
4.3.3 Discussion
In PHP, keys are unique per array, so
you can't associate more than one entry in a key without overwriting the old
value. Instead, store your values in an anonymous array:
$fruits['red'][ ] = 'strawberry'; $fruits['red'][ ] = 'apple'; $fruits['yellow'][ ] = 'banana';
Or, if you're processing items in a loop:
while (list($color,$fruit) = mysql_fetch_array($r)) {
$fruits[$color][ ] = $fruit;
}
To print the entries, loop through the array:
foreach ($fruits as $color=>$color_fruit) {
// $color_fruit is an array
foreach ($color_fruit as $fruit) {
print "$fruit is colored $color.<br>";
}
}
foreach ($fruits as $color=>$color_fruit) {
print "$color colored fruits include " .
pc_array_to_comma_string($color_fruit) . "<br>";
}