You can put an @  symbol in front each item that is throwing the error.
That may take some time though.  You could use something like

find /htdocs_folder -name \*.php -print | xargs sed -i
s/\$array_name/@$array_name/g

That might get you what you're looking for.  But be cautious because this
method does not create a backup file for you.   You can do a quick check
(but not fool proof) by using this command

find /htdocs_folder -name \*.php -print | xargs grep "\$array_name" | more

You may need to remove the slash in front of the $ sign.

Matt

On Wed, Jun 1, 2011 at 6:26 PM, Merlin Morgenstern <merli...@fastmail.fm>wrote:

> Hi there,
>
> I am working on a pretty huge site with thousands of files with php code.
> Unfortunatelly the app throws a ton of notices du to missing '' in arrays.
> Of course I could simply disable the output on the dev server to surpress
> notices, but I would rather like to get it fixed.
>
> Has somebody a good idea on how to fix this automated somehow with regex?
>
> The vars are right now: $var[element] and should be $var['element']
>
> I was looking into sed, but I was hoping that there is also a way in php.
> Has anybody a hint on how to get the regex done?
>
> I appreciate any help on that.
>
> Best regards,
>
> Merlin
>
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