Could you give the exact mappings, especially to see what is the owning side and what is the reverse side? It looks like x.info is mapped OneToMany instead of ManyToOne. Does every x have one or many infos? Or the other way around?
On Thursday, 13 February 2014 22:13:25 UTC+1, Parsifal wrote: > > When I use this: > SELECT x, y FROM Entities\blah x JOIN x.info y > I get the array below that is fine and could foreach. > Array > ( > [0] => Array > ( > [id] => 1 > [clientId] => 1 > [orderId] => 3 > [productId] => 1 > [info] => Array > ( > [id] => 1 > [productId] => 1 > [optVar1] => foo > ) > ) > ) > but if I use: > SELECT x, y.optVar1 FROM Entities\blah x JOIN x.info y > I get the array below that is odd and cannot foreach. > Array > ( > [0] => Array > ( > [0] => Array > ( > [id] => 1 > [clientId] => 1 > [orderId] => 3 > [productId] => 1 > ) > [optVar1] => foo > ) > ) > > Not sure if intentionally I am getting a correct array like this or I > am doing something wrong? what should I do If I want to just use > y.optVar1 but to get an array like this first one? > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "doctrine-user" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/doctrine-user. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.
