On Apr 17, 2008, at 2:22 PM, Jim Lucas wrote:
Jim Lucas wrote:
Jim Lucas wrote:
Jason Pruim wrote:

On Apr 17, 2008, at 11:14 AM, Jim Lucas wrote:
Stut wrote:
On 17 Apr 2008, at 13:33, Jason Pruim wrote:
Maybe I'm showing my ignorance here in programming... Maybe it's because I delt with a kid who decided to scream for a good share of the night and I'm sleep deprived :) But in my current system I have this:

echo <<<HTML

      <div>
      <table border="1">
      <tr>
      <td><a href="?order=a">First Name</a></td>
      <td><a href="?order=b">Last Name</a></td>
      <td><a href="?order=c">Address 1</a></td>
      <td><a href="?order=d">Address 2</a></td>
      <td><a href="?order=e">City</a></td>
      <td><a href="?order=f">State</a></td>
      <td><a href="?order=g">Zip</a></td>
      <td><a href="?order=h">Code</a></td>
      <td><a href="?order=i">ID #</a></td>
HTML;

      while($row = mysqli_fetch_assoc($result)) {
          //display the info using heredoc syntac
echo <<<HTML
      <tr>
          <td>{$row['FName']}</td>
          <td>{$row['LName']}</td>
          <td>{$row['Add1']}</td>
          <td>{$row['Add2']}</td>
          <td>{$row['City']}</td>
          <td>{$row['State']}</td>
          <td>{$row['Zip']}</td>
          <td>{$row['XCode']}</td>
          <td>{$row['Record']}</td>
HTML;
}

What I want to do is take that first block of code, the one with the links for sorting, and instead of this: "<td><a href="?order=a">First Name</a></td>" I want to put something more like this: "<td><a href="?order=a"> $FIELDNAMES[$field{$id}]</a></td>" So I can grab the field names from the database, instead of hardcoding them into my program.

I think I am sleep deprived because the more I tried to clarify it... the harder it got for me to understand :)
echo <<<HTML
      <div>
      <table border="1">\
HTML;
$first = true;
while ($row = mysqli_fetch_assoc($result)) {
  if ($first)
  {
      echo '<tr>';
      foreach (array_keys($row) as $field) {
          echo '<td>'.htmlentities($field).'</td>';
      }
      echo '</tr>';
      $first = false;
  }
  // Output the row here as above
}
-Stut

Very good example, but I would remove data retrieval from the display of data.

<?php

$dataSet = array();
while ($row = mysqli_fetch_assoc($result)) {
   $dataSet[] = $row;
}

# do some other stuff

# now display
# Check to see if there is anything in the dataSet
if ( count($dataSet) > 0 ) {

   echo '<table>';

   # Get the names of the columns from the first result set
   $headers = array_keys($dataSet[0]);

   # Print the column names
   echo '<tr>';
   foreach ( $headers AS $column_name ) {
       echo "<th>{$column_name}</th>";
   }
   echo '</tr>';

   # Now print your data
   foreach ( $dataSet AS $row ) {
       echo <<<ROW
   <tr>
       <td>{$row['FName']}</td>
       <td>{$row['LName']}</td>
       <td>{$row['Add1']}</td>
       <td>{$row['Add2']}</td>
       <td>{$row['City']}</td>
       <td>{$row['State']}</td>
       <td>{$row['Zip']}</td>
       <td>{$row['XCode']}</td>
       <td>{$row['Record']}</td>
   </tr>
ROW;
   }
   echo '</table>';
}

?>

Both ideas worked great... Thank you!

Now I do still have one question, I decided that what Jim put up worked a little bit better for me so I'm going off of his code, what I want to do now though, is take this code:

       foreach ( $dataSet AS $row ) {
echo <<<ROW
           <tr>
           <td>{$row['FName']}</td>
           <td>{$row['LName']}</td>
           <td>{$row['Add1']}</td>
           <td>{$row['Add2']}</td>
           <td>{$row['City']}</td>
           <td>{$row['State']}</td>
           <td>{$row['Zip']}</td>
           <td>{$row['XCode']}</td>
           <td>{$row['Record']}</td>
           </tr>
ROW;
       }


And turn it into some kind of a loop that would pull the info dynamically so I can have something more like this:
<?PHP
while($dataSet <= $num_rows) {
   //print dynamic fields based off of field names
echo <<<ROW
   <tr>
<td>$dataSet['$field']</td>
</tr>
ROW;
}

?>

And what would print on the page would be something along the lines of:
<?PHP
echo <<<TEST
<tr>
<td>Jason</td>
<td>Pruim</td>
<td>My Address</td>
<td>My Other Address</td>
</tr>
TEST;
?>

Etc. Etc. Etc. I'm trying to avoid hardcoding things like field names so that I can use this software for multiple customers without having to completely customize it for everyone since so many parts will be the same.

Maybe though I'm trying to abstract the wrong part of the program... I could do it to a few other parts and just customize this one...

Need to think about that.

Any ideas are greatly appreciated :)


--

Jason Pruim
Raoset Inc.
Technology Manager
MQC Specialist
3251 132nd ave
Holland, MI, 49424-9337
www.raoset.com
[EMAIL PROTECTED]




This would do it.

foreach ( $dataSet AS $row ) {
   echo '<tr><td>.join('</td><td>', $row).'</td></tr>';
}

I should shoot my own foot, you should encode the values before you do this.
Something like this would do the job
foreach ( $dataSet AS $row ) {
   echo '<tr><td>;
   echo join('</td><td>', array_map('htmlentities', $row));
   echo '</td></tr>';
}

Shoot, same typo

add a single quote at the end of the first echo line

I did notice that, it was an easy fix :)

I'll definitely be reading up on join... It works perfectly for what I'm doing! I may have to rewrite a few other functions I have that are using the actual field names... Thanks Jim!


--

Jason Pruim
Raoset Inc.
Technology Manager
MQC Specialist
3251 132nd ave
Holland, MI, 49424-9337
www.raoset.com
[EMAIL PROTECTED]




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