sorry, second array should be:

array(
    'Result' => array(
        0 => array(
            'userID' => 5,
            'name' => 'bill'
        ),
        1 => array(
            'userID' => 25,
            'name' => 'jane'
        )
    )
);


On Sun, Feb 27, 2011 at 11:34 PM, Greg Skerman <[email protected]> wrote:

> I'm having a bit of trouble with Set::combine when using it to deal with
> xml converted into an array.
>
> I am using the XML utility library, then Set::reverse() to flip it from an
> object into an array for easy traversal
>
> The problem is that if a child element only contains 1 record, it is
> formatted as such:
>
> array(
>     'Result' => array(
>         'userID' => 5,
>         'name' => 'bill'
>     )
> );
>
> but if the the same child element contains multiple records, it is
> formatted as such:
>
> array(
>     'Result' => array(
>         1 => array(
>             'userID' => 5,
>             'name' => 'bill'
>         ),
>         2 => array(
>             'userID' => 25,
>             'name' => 'jane'
>         )
>     )
> );
>
>
> how do I reliably reformat this array using Set::combine() to provide me
> with an array whos keys are userID and whos values are name?
>
> I've tried using Path1 as 'Result.{n}.userID' and Path2 as
> 'Result.{n}.name', however this will not work in the first instance as it is
> doesn't contain the {n} path....
>
>
>
>

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