A good php editor, with code completion, will help prevent this.
I like phpEdit. It even has a built-in syntax checker, which would have caught
your error immediately.
Dotan Cohen wrote:
On 27/02/07, Jochem Maas <jochem@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Dotan Cohen wrote:
> On 27/02/07, Brad Bonkoski <bbonkoski@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> perhaps look into the array_push() function
http://www.php.net/array_push
>>
>
> Thanks, but I cannot use array_push() as I don't know the name of the
> array that I'll be pushing to. There are four calls to the listFiles
> function, and each will populate a different array.
the use of array_push() is not needed but the premise that it cannot
be used is wrong - the array inside the function is always called $files.
your problem is due to a simple typo, you could have checked the
actual return
value of the function and seen that it does return the array:
var_dump( listFiles($thumbnailsDirectory) );
That's what I was doing with this code:
print"<pre>";
print_r($thumbnailsFiles);
print"</pre>";
Thanks, all. Silly typo does it every time!
Dotan Cohen
http://what-is-what.com/what_is/xmp.html
http://lyricslist.com/lyrics/artist_albums/287/k_s_choice.html
--
PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php