John,

>>
>> Why does the non-existent key in the array below evaluate to the
>> first char of the array value?
>>
>> $foo = '' ;
>> $foo['one']['two'] = 'test-value' ;
>>
>> // Evaluates to: string(1) "t"
>> var_dump( $foo['one']['two']['three'] ) ;
>>

JH> Strings are arrays. PHP probably takes the string 'three' and converts it to 
JH> a integer to see what "key" of the string you're requesting.

JH> $foo = 'bar';
JH> echo $foo[1]; //should echo 'a'

JH> Does that help or do you need a deeper explanation (that I probably can't 
JH> provide!) ;)

I think you are probably right - but this behaviour causes problems.
For example:

$foo['one']['two'] = "test-string" ;

// Evaluates to TRUE (not what's wanted!)
isset( $foo['one']['two']['three'] ) ;

I need a reliable way to test for the non-existence of a
multi-dimensional key. Any ideas? I guess I could convert the keys
into a string via a loop and compare that, but there must be a more
elegant way, surely?


------------------ 
Geoff Caplan

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