On Mon, 2008-11-17 at 11:54 -0500, Shiplu wrote: > On Fri, Nov 14, 2008 at 8:13 PM, Daniel Kolbo <kolb0057@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > Hello, > > > > I am trying to do something like the following: > > > > <?php > > > > function hello($var1 = 'default1', $var2 = 'default2') { > > echo "$var1:$var2"; > > } > > > > $func= "hello"; > > $args = "'yo','bob'"; > > $func($args); > > > > ?> > > > > I understand why this outputs: > > 'yo','bob':default2 > > However, I want it to output: > > yo:bob > > > > Is this possible? I tried using different combinations of {}, but I cannot > > seem to get it to happen. I need some kind of "preprocessor" feature > > perhaps. > > Its possible. use eval. > > eval("$func($args);"); If you used eval in the above statement (yes, you did) then you answered the problem incorrectly: <?php $func = 'hello'; $args = array( 'yo', 'bob' ); call_user_func_array( $func, $args ); ?> Cheers, Rob. -- http://www.interjinn.com Application and Templating Framework for PHP -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php