Okay, that's neat and I get what you're saying with xml_process() to
handle this.
>From what I'm reading, it would not allow this sort of procedure, but
please let me know otherwise:
======================================================
echo "<td>" . $ServerName;
if ($ServerType)
{
echo " <i>(" . $ServerType . ")</i></td>\n";
} else {
echo "</td>\n";
}
if ($ServerStatus == "Down")
{
echo "<td><i>" . $ServerStatus . "</i></td>\n";
} else {
echo "<td>" . $ServerPopulation . "</td>\n";
}
======================================================
So, what would print in the first and 2nd column would depend upon the
results of one of two variables (1st column relies upon if there's a
$ServerType or not, 2nd column relies upon the $ServerStatus not being
"Down").
My problem is still my own, I can't get it so that when I parse, the
information is placed into an array that can then be used for sorting.
This would be ideal for me as I plan on reading from more than one .xml
(different structures as well) on the same page if I can get this to
work.
I guess what I'm asking for is a method to parse information into an
array and then sort it by any part of the array. I attempted the
$ServerArray[$this->ServerName][$this->ServerStatus] = $data in the
parse section (where $data = current node value), but it didn't work.
Again, thanks for all your help so far and in advance for any help you
can provide.
~Confused PHP user
> From: @ Edwin [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>
> "Geoff Hankerson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > You don't need to do client-side transformation (although you could
> > check user agent and do it client-side if the browser supports it).
> > You can use Php's XSLT functions see the manual for more info.
> >
> > I was just suggesting this as a potential option. It may not be
> > appropriate in this situation. I don't really know enough about the
> > programming challenge we are looking at to say for sure
>
> I see. I thought you were saying that use XSLT and access the
> xml file directly--my apologies.
>
> Anyway, _that_ is certainly a potential option... :)
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