On Friday, April 5, 2002, at 03:00 PM, Brian McLaughlin wrote:
> My problem is that when I assign an empty array to a variable, I get
> different results depending on whether that variable is in an object or
> not.
> In the case of assigning $a=array(); outside of an object, each element
> of
Thank you!!
Now I need to figure out how to put all this hair back in my head.
Brian
"Rick Emery" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> I corrected the syntax errors Erik found and added var_dump() after each
$t
> equation/assignment
>
> The proble
Hi Erik
Thanks for the reply. I'm not sure how I missed the opening { in my
message -- I copy/pasted the code. But the opening { is definitely there in
the code -- I'd get a nice error message if it weren't. I believe it's OK
to have a ; after the class def end-brace, but I removed it and I go
riginal Message-
From: Rick Emery [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, April 05, 2002 1:28 PM
To: 'Brian McLaughlin'; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [PHP] Arrays within classes
I corrected the syntax errors Erik found and added var_dump() after each $t
equation/assignment
The proble
I corrected the syntax errors Erik found and added var_dump() after each $t
equation/assignment
The problem is that you refer to $test->words. You should refer to
$test->words
BIG DIFFERENCE
$test->words means find the value of $words and look for that variable in
$test. That is, if $words ="a
I might be completely mistaken here, but it looks like there are a few
errors in your code:
- No starting brace for the test() method
- semi-colon used after class def end-brace
- no parentheses after "new test" instance assignment
Don't you want to keep your class as general as possible, and p
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