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json_decode problem [message #178832] Fri, 10 August 2012 21:30 Go to next message
houghi is currently offline  houghi
Messages: 45
Registered: September 2011
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I am stuck with json_decode. I have a json file
http://houghi.org/Fun/imdb.json
I want it to look like http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0382932/quotes
Well, not completely. Just pure text.

e.g. the second one should be something like
quotenumber = qt0465193
Remy/nm0652663 Stage=observing what Emile is eating Quote=What are you eating?
Emile/nm0812307 Stage=pause Quote=I don't really know. I think it was some sort of wrapper once.
Remy/nm0652663 Quote=What? No! You're in Paris now, baby! My town! No brother of mine eats rejecta-menta in my town!

The code I have is extremely basic. I have been looking at many
websites, but am unable to figure it out what I must put in it to make
it work:

<?php
$json = file_get_contents("imdb.json");
$result = json_decode($json);
foreach($result->data->quotes as $p)
{
$qconst = $p->qconst;
echo "quotenumber = $qconst<br>";
//Some foreach here?
//No idea what to put here
}
?>

I do get the above part right, but I am lost on how to do the rest. I assume I
must do some other foreach. No idea where to start, even after many days
and websites.

houghi
--
You can have my keyboard ...
if you can pry it from my dead, cold, stiff fingers
Re: json_decode problem [message #178838 is a reply to message #178832] Sat, 11 August 2012 08:43 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Gregor Kofler is currently offline  Gregor Kofler
Messages: 69
Registered: September 2010
Karma: 0
Member
Am 2012-08-10 23:30, houghi meinte:
> I am stuck with json_decode. I have a json file
> http://houghi.org/Fun/imdb.json
> I want it to look like http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0382932/quotes
> Well, not completely. Just pure text.
>
> e.g. the second one should be something like
> quotenumber = qt0465193
> Remy/nm0652663 Stage=observing what Emile is eating Quote=What are you eating?
> Emile/nm0812307 Stage=pause Quote=I don't really know. I think it was some sort of wrapper once.
> Remy/nm0652663 Quote=What? No! You're in Paris now, baby! My town! No brother of mine eats rejecta-menta in my town!
>
> The code I have is extremely basic. I have been looking at many
> websites, but am unable to figure it out what I must put in it to make
> it work:
>
> <?php
> $json = file_get_contents("imdb.json");
> $result = json_decode($json);
> foreach($result->data->quotes as $p)
> {
> $qconst = $p->qconst;
> echo "quotenumber = $qconst<br>";
> //Some foreach here?
> //No idea what to put here
> }
> ?>
>
> I do get the above part right, but I am lost on how to do the rest. I assume I
> must do some other foreach.

foreach($p->lines as $l) {
echo $l->stage;

if(isset($l->quote)) {
echo $l->quote;
}

if(isset($l->chars) {
foreach($l->chars as $c) {
echo $c->char;
echo $c->nconst;
}
}

....
}


> No idea where to start, even after many days
> and websites.

And never heard of var_dump()?

Gregor


--
http://vxweb.net
Re: json_decode problem [message #178839 is a reply to message #178832] Sat, 11 August 2012 08:54 Go to previous messageGo to next message
houghi is currently offline  houghi
Messages: 45
Registered: September 2011
Karma: 0
Member
houghi wrote:
> I am stuck with json_decode. I have a json file
> http://houghi.org/Fun/imdb.json
> <?php
> $json = file_get_contents("imdb.json");
> $result = json_decode($json);
> foreach($result->data->quotes as $p)
> {
> $qconst = $p->qconst;
> echo "quotenumber = $qconst<br>";
> //Some foreach here?
> //No idea what to put here
> }
> ?>

As always one finds the answer shortly after posting, regardless how
many hours you were looking for the solution. (30-40 over a weeks
period)

The file I use is http://houghi.org/Fun/imdb.json

<?php
$json = file_get_contents("imdb.json");
$result = json_decode($json);
foreach($result->data->quotes as $p)
{
$qconst = $p->qconst;
print "quote=$qconst<br>\n";
$qconst = $p->lines;
foreach ($qconst as $q)
{
$quote = $q->quote;
$stage = $q->stage;
if ($stage != "") { $stage = '<i>['.$stage.']</i> ';}
$chars = $q->chars;
foreach ($q->chars as $r)
{
$char = $r->char." ";
$nconst = $r->nconst." ";
}
print $char.$nconst.$stage.$quote."<br>\n";
}
print "<hr>\n";
}
?>

It seems obvious now. Anybody an idea on how to improve it? I myself
will re-write the output to put the data it in a database (for personal
use).

houghi
--
You can have my keyboard ...
if you can pry it from my dead, cold, stiff fingers
Re: json_decode problem [message #178841 is a reply to message #178839] Sat, 11 August 2012 09:05 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Luuk is currently offline  Luuk
Messages: 329
Registered: September 2010
Karma: 0
Senior Member
On 11-08-2012 10:54, houghi wrote:
> houghi wrote:
>> I am stuck with json_decode. I have a json file
>> http://houghi.org/Fun/imdb.json
>> <?php
>> $json = file_get_contents("imdb.json");
>> $result = json_decode($json);
>> foreach($result->data->quotes as $p)
>> {
>> $qconst = $p->qconst;
>> echo "quotenumber = $qconst<br>";
>> //Some foreach here?
>> //No idea what to put here
>> }
>> ?>
>
> As always one finds the answer shortly after posting, regardless how
> many hours you were looking for the solution. (30-40 over a weeks
> period)
>
> The file I use is http://houghi.org/Fun/imdb.json
>
> <?php
> $json = file_get_contents("imdb.json");
> $result = json_decode($json);
> foreach($result->data->quotes as $p)
> {
> $qconst = $p->qconst;
> print "quote=$qconst<br>\n";
> $qconst = $p->lines;
> foreach ($qconst as $q)
> {
> $quote = $q->quote;
> $stage = $q->stage;
> if ($stage != "") { $stage = '<i>['.$stage.']</i> ';}
> $chars = $q->chars;
> foreach ($q->chars as $r)
> {
> $char = $r->char." ";
> $nconst = $r->nconst." ";
> }
> print $char.$nconst.$stage.$quote."<br>\n";
> }
> print "<hr>\n";
> }
> ?>
>
> It seems obvious now. Anybody an idea on how to improve it? I myself
> will re-write the output to put the data it in a database (for personal
> use).
>
> houghi
>

use isset() to check if a quote of stage exists....
(see post from Gregor)
Re: json_decode problem [message #178842 is a reply to message #178838] Sat, 11 August 2012 11:09 Go to previous messageGo to next message
houghi is currently offline  houghi
Messages: 45
Registered: September 2011
Karma: 0
Member
Gregor Kofler wrote:
>> I do get the above part right, but I am lost on how to do the rest. I assume I
>> must do some other foreach.
>
> foreach($p->lines as $l) {
> echo $l->stage;
>
> if(isset($l->quote)) {
> echo $l->quote;
> }
>
> if(isset($l->chars) {
> foreach($l->chars as $c) {
> echo $c->char;
> echo $c->nconst;
> }
> }
>
> ....
> }

Thanks.

>
>> No idea where to start, even after many days
>> and websites.
>
> And never heard of var_dump()?

Yes and I used it, but unfortunatly the outcome is meaningless to me.
Searching google is also very hard if you have no idea what you should
enter in the search. :-(

The sites I found that explained with examples (as that is the best way
I can learn) did not go into enough detail and were very basic.

houghi
--
This is written under the inluence of the following:
> Artist : James Brown
> Song : Instrumental Bridge 2
> Album : Live At The Apollo
Re: json_decode problem [message #178843 is a reply to message #178841] Sat, 11 August 2012 11:11 Go to previous messageGo to next message
houghi is currently offline  houghi
Messages: 45
Registered: September 2011
Karma: 0
Member
Luuk wrote:
> use isset() to check if a quote of stage exists....
> (see post from Gregor)

Indeed. Stoopid me. Thanks to pointing it out to me.

houghi
--
This is written under the inluence of the following:
> Artist : Guano Apes
> Song : Move A Little Closer
> Album : Guano Apes live
Re: json_decode problem [message #178844 is a reply to message #178838] Sun, 12 August 2012 11:44 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Thomas 'PointedEars'  is currently offline  Thomas 'PointedEars'
Messages: 701
Registered: October 2010
Karma: 0
Senior Member
Gregor Kofler wrote:

> Am 2012-08-10 23:30, houghi meinte:
>> <?php
>> $json = file_get_contents("imdb.json");
>> $result = json_decode($json);
>> foreach($result->data->quotes as $p)
>> {
>> $qconst = $p->qconst;
>> echo "quotenumber = $qconst<br>";
>> //Some foreach here?
>> //No idea what to put here
>> }
>> ?>
>>
>> I do get the above part right, but I am lost on how to do the rest. I
>> assume I must do some other foreach.
>
> foreach($p->lines as $l) {
> echo $l->stage;
>
> if(isset($l->quote)) {
> echo $l->quote;
> }
>
> if(isset($l->chars) {
> foreach($l->chars as $c) {
> echo $c->char;
> echo $c->nconst;
> }
> }
>
> ....
> }

FYI: isset() should not be used with properties, because it fails with
protected or private properties that have getters:

$ php -r 'class Foo { protected $_bar; public function __construct() {
$this->_bar = 42; } public function __get($name) { return $this->_bar; } }
$x = new Foo(); var_dump($x); var_dump($x->foo); var_dump(isset($x->foo));'
object(Foo)#1 (1) {
["_bar":protected]=>
int(42)
}
int(42)
bool(false)

I have run into this problem recently in an MVC-based commercial application
that I had written, where I was accessing a template variable (implemented
as item of a protected array property of the view class, accessed with
$this->foo). Not using isset() in the template would have saved me hours of
debugging. property_exists() would not work either from public context then
(it would always return FALSE).

isset() usually should also not be used with a json_decode() [0] return
value because JSON allows the `null' literal [1] as value which is parsed
into PHP's NULL value for which isset() returns FALSE [2]:

$ php -r "var_dump(json_decode('{\"foo\": null}'));"
object(stdClass)#1 (1) {
["foo"]=>
NULL
}

$ php -r "\$x = json_decode('{\"foo\": null}'); var_dump(isset(\$x->foo));"
bool(false)

Maybe is_null() or a strict comparison with NULL (whichever you prefer)
serves in general [3]; property_exists() [4] should serve with json_decode()
(where parsed properties are supposed to be public), unless the NULL value
should cause an existing property to be ignored by the program logic as
well.


PointedEars
___________
[0] <http://php.net/json_decode>
[1] <http://json.org/>
[2] <http://php.net/isset>
[3] <http://php.net/is_null>;
<http://www.php.net/manual/en/language.operators.comparison.php>
[4] <http://php.net/property_exists>
--
> If you get a bunch of authors […] that state the same "best practices"
> in any programming language, then you can bet who is wrong or right...
Not with javascript. Nonsense propagates like wildfire in this field.
-- Richard Cornford, comp.lang.javascript, 2011-11-14
Re: json_decode problem [message #178845 is a reply to message #178844] Sun, 12 August 2012 13:28 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Luuk is currently offline  Luuk
Messages: 329
Registered: September 2010
Karma: 0
Senior Member
On 12-08-2012 13:44, Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn wrote:
> $ php -r "\$x = json_decode('{\"foo\": null}'); var_dump(isset(\$x->foo));"
> bool(false)

php -r "\$y = null; \$x = json_decode('{\"foo\": null}');
var_dump(isset(\$y));"
Re: json_decode problem [message #178846 is a reply to message #178844] Sun, 12 August 2012 13:32 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Luuk is currently offline  Luuk
Messages: 329
Registered: September 2010
Karma: 0
Senior Member
On 12-08-2012 13:44, Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn wrote:
> Gregor Kofler wrote:
>
>> Am 2012-08-10 23:30, houghi meinte:
>>> <?php
>>> $json = file_get_contents("imdb.json");
>>> $result = json_decode($json);
>>> foreach($result->data->quotes as $p)
>>> {
>>> $qconst = $p->qconst;
>>> echo "quotenumber = $qconst<br>";
>>> //Some foreach here?
>>> //No idea what to put here
>>> }
>>> ?>
>>>
>>> I do get the above part right, but I am lost on how to do the rest. I
>>> assume I must do some other foreach.
>>
>> foreach($p->lines as $l) {
>> echo $l->stage;
>>
>> if(isset($l->quote)) {
>> echo $l->quote;
>> }
>>
>> if(isset($l->chars) {
>> foreach($l->chars as $c) {
>> echo $c->char;
>> echo $c->nconst;
>> }
>> }
>>
>> ....
>> }
>
> FYI: isset() should not be used with properties, because it fails with
> protected or private properties that have getters:
>
.....
.....
>


maybe you should not use
var_dump(isset(...));

it's pretty useless because:
isset() will always return 'true' of 'false'
Re: json_decode problem [message #178847 is a reply to message #178844] Sun, 12 August 2012 16:12 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Gregor Kofler is currently offline  Gregor Kofler
Messages: 69
Registered: September 2010
Karma: 0
Member
Am 2012-08-12 13:44, Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn meinte:
> Gregor Kofler wrote:
>
>> Am 2012-08-10 23:30, houghi meinte:
>>> <?php
>>> $json = file_get_contents("imdb.json");
>>> $result = json_decode($json);
>>> foreach($result->data->quotes as $p)
>>> {
>>> $qconst = $p->qconst;
>>> echo "quotenumber = $qconst<br>";
>>> //Some foreach here?
>>> //No idea what to put here
>>> }
>>> ?>
>>>
>>> I do get the above part right, but I am lost on how to do the rest. I
>>> assume I must do some other foreach.
>>
>> foreach($p->lines as $l) {
>> echo $l->stage;
>>
>> if(isset($l->quote)) {
>> echo $l->quote;
>> }
>>
>> if(isset($l->chars) {
>> foreach($l->chars as $c) {
>> echo $c->char;
>> echo $c->nconst;
>> }
>> }
>>
>> ....
>> }
>
> FYI: isset() should not be used with properties, because it fails with
> protected or private properties that have getters:

Thanks, for pointing out potential problems, though the returned object
is a stdClass instance and all properties are public.

(Anyway, I prefer to treat JSON responses as associative arrays.)

Gregor
Re: json_decode problem [message #178849 is a reply to message #178847] Sun, 12 August 2012 21:30 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Thomas 'PointedEars'  is currently offline  Thomas 'PointedEars'
Messages: 701
Registered: October 2010
Karma: 0
Senior Member
Gregor Kofler wrote:

> Am 2012-08-12 13:44, Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn meinte:
>> Gregor Kofler wrote:
>>> Am 2012-08-10 23:30, houghi meinte:
>>>> <?php
>>>> $json = file_get_contents("imdb.json");
>>>> $result = json_decode($json);
>>>> foreach($result->data->quotes as $p)
>>>> {
>>>> $qconst = $p->qconst;
>>>> echo "quotenumber = $qconst<br>";
>>>> //Some foreach here?
>>>> //No idea what to put here
>>>> }
>>>> ?>
>>>>
>>>> I do get the above part right, but I am lost on how to do the rest. I
>>>> assume I must do some other foreach.
>>>
>>> foreach($p->lines as $l) {
>>> echo $l->stage;
>>>
>>> if(isset($l->quote)) {
>>> echo $l->quote;
>>> }
>>>
>>> if(isset($l->chars) {
>>> foreach($l->chars as $c) {
>>> echo $c->char;
>>> echo $c->nconst;
>>> }
>>> }
>>>
>>> ....
>>> }
>>
>> FYI: isset() should not be used with properties, because it fails with
>> protected or private properties that have getters:
>
> Thanks, for pointing out potential problems, though the returned object
> is a stdClass instance and all properties are public.

Apparently you have missed (and snipped) the part of my answer that
discusses when and when not to use isset() with json_decode() return values,
and why.

> (Anyway, I prefer to treat JSON responses as associative arrays.)

The second argument passed to json_decode() being TRUE. ACK. However, that
does not help with the isset() issue.


PointedEars
--
Sometimes, what you learn is wrong. If those wrong ideas are close to the
root of the knowledge tree you build on a particular subject, pruning the
bad branches can sometimes cause the whole tree to collapse.
-- Mike Duffy in cljs, <news:Xns9FB6521286DB8invalidcom(at)94(dot)75(dot)214(dot)39>
Re: json_decode problem [message #178888 is a reply to message #178844] Mon, 20 August 2012 10:41 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Curtis Dyer is currently offline  Curtis Dyer
Messages: 34
Registered: January 2011
Karma: 0
Member
Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn <PointedEars(at)web(dot)de> wrote:

> Gregor Kofler wrote:
>
>> Am 2012-08-10 23:30, houghi meinte:

<snip>

>> foreach($p->lines as $l) {
>> echo $l->stage;
>>
>> if(isset($l->quote)) {
>> echo $l->quote;
>> }
>>
>> if(isset($l->chars) {
>> foreach($l->chars as $c) {
>> echo $c->char;
>> echo $c->nconst;
>> }
>> }
>>
>> ....
>> }
>
> FYI: isset() should not be used with properties, because it
> fails with protected or private properties that have getters:
>
> $ php -r 'class Foo { protected $_bar; public function
> __construct() { $this->_bar = 42; } public function __get($name)
> { return $this->_bar; } } $x = new Foo(); var_dump($x);
> var_dump($x->foo); var_dump(isset($x->foo));' object(Foo)#1 (1)
> {
> ["_bar":protected]=>
> int(42)
> }
> int(42)
> bool(false)
>
> I have run into this problem recently in an MVC-based commercial
> application that I had written, where I was accessing a template
> variable (implemented as item of a protected array property of
> the view class, accessed with $this->foo). Not using isset() in
> the template would have saved me hours of debugging.
> property_exists() would not work either from public context then
> (it would always return FALSE).

According to the PHP documentation, as of PHP 5.3.0,
`property_exists()' will also acknowledge protected and private
properties. [1]

When using at least PHP 5.1.0, one might also consider PHP
reflection to check for private and protected properties:

<?php

class Foo {
private $test;
}

$r = new ReflectionObject(new Foo());
var_dump($r->hasProperty('test')); /* bool(true) */

?>


<snip>

______
[1] <http://php.net/property_exists>

--
Curtis Dyer
<?$x='<?$x=%c%s%c;printf($x,39,$x,39);?>';printf($x,39,$x,39);?>
Re: json_decode problem [message #178889 is a reply to message #178888] Mon, 20 August 2012 11:30 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Jerry Stuckle is currently offline  Jerry Stuckle
Messages: 2598
Registered: September 2010
Karma: 0
Senior Member
On 8/20/2012 6:41 AM, Curtis Dyer wrote:
> Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn <PointedEars(at)web(dot)de> wrote:
>
>> Gregor Kofler wrote:
>>
>>> Am 2012-08-10 23:30, houghi meinte:
>
> <snip>
>
>>> foreach($p->lines as $l) {
>>> echo $l->stage;
>>>
>>> if(isset($l->quote)) {
>>> echo $l->quote;
>>> }
>>>
>>> if(isset($l->chars) {
>>> foreach($l->chars as $c) {
>>> echo $c->char;
>>> echo $c->nconst;
>>> }
>>> }
>>>
>>> ....
>>> }
>>
>> FYI: isset() should not be used with properties, because it
>> fails with protected or private properties that have getters:
>>
>> $ php -r 'class Foo { protected $_bar; public function
>> __construct() { $this->_bar = 42; } public function __get($name)
>> { return $this->_bar; } } $x = new Foo(); var_dump($x);
>> var_dump($x->foo); var_dump(isset($x->foo));' object(Foo)#1 (1)
>> {
>> ["_bar":protected]=>
>> int(42)
>> }
>> int(42)
>> bool(false)
>>
>> I have run into this problem recently in an MVC-based commercial
>> application that I had written, where I was accessing a template
>> variable (implemented as item of a protected array property of
>> the view class, accessed with $this->foo). Not using isset() in
>> the template would have saved me hours of debugging.
>> property_exists() would not work either from public context then
>> (it would always return FALSE).
>
> According to the PHP documentation, as of PHP 5.3.0,
> `property_exists()' will also acknowledge protected and private
> properties. [1]
>
> When using at least PHP 5.1.0, one might also consider PHP
> reflection to check for private and protected properties:
>
> <?php
>
> class Foo {
> private $test;
> }
>
> $r = new ReflectionObject(new Foo());
> var_dump($r->hasProperty('test')); /* bool(true) */
>
> ?>
>
>
> <snip>
>
> ______
> [1] <http://php.net/property_exists>
>

You should not need either. Properties are private or protected for a
reason!

--
==================
Remove the "x" from my email address
Jerry Stuckle
JDS Computer Training Corp.
jstucklex(at)attglobal(dot)net
==================
Re: json_decode problem [message #178890 is a reply to message #178888] Mon, 20 August 2012 14:45 Go to previous message
Thomas 'PointedEars'  is currently offline  Thomas 'PointedEars'
Messages: 701
Registered: October 2010
Karma: 0
Senior Member
Curtis Dyer wrote:

> Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn <PointedEars(at)web(dot)de> wrote:
>> FYI: isset() should not be used with properties, because it
>> fails with protected or private properties that have getters:
>>
>> $ php -r 'class Foo { protected $_bar; public function
>> __construct() { $this->_bar = 42; } public function __get($name)
>> { return $this->_bar; } } $x = new Foo(); var_dump($x);
>> var_dump($x->foo); var_dump(isset($x->foo));' object(Foo)#1 (1)
>> {
>> ["_bar":protected]=>
>> int(42)
>> }
>> int(42)
>> bool(false)
>>
>> I have run into this problem recently in an MVC-based commercial
>> application that I had written, where I was accessing a template
>> variable (implemented as item of a protected array property of
>> the view class, accessed with $this->foo). Not using isset() in
>> the template would have saved me hours of debugging.
>> property_exists() would not work either from public context then
>> (it would always return FALSE).
>
> According to the PHP documentation, as of PHP 5.3.0,
> `property_exists()' will also acknowledge protected and private
> properties. [1]

ACK:

$ php -r 'class Foo { private $bar; } var_dump(property_exists(new Foo(),
"bar"));'
bool(true)

$ php -r 'class Foo { private $bar; } var_dump(property_exists(new Foo(),
"baz"));'
bool(false)

$ php -r 'class Foo { protected $bar; } var_dump(property_exists(new Foo(),
"bar"));'
bool(true)

$ php -r 'class Foo { protected $bar; } var_dump(property_exists(new Foo(),
"baz"));'
bool(false)

$ php -v
PHP 5.3.10-1 (cli) (built: Feb 3 2012 10:03:01)
Copyright (c) 1997-2012 The PHP Group
Zend Engine v2.3.0, Copyright (c) 1998-2012 Zend Technologies
with XCache v1.3.2, Copyright (c) 2005-2011, by mOo
with Xdebug v2.1.0, Copyright (c) 2002-2010, by Derick Rethans
with Suhosin v0.9.32.1, Copyright (c) 2007-2010, by SektionEins GmbH

One could consider that an OOP bug. On the other hand, var_dump() also
dumps private and protected properties from public context:

$ php -r 'class Foo { private $bar; } var_dump(new Foo());'object(Foo)#1 (1)
{
["bar":"Foo":private]=>
NULL
}

$ php -r 'class Foo { protected $bar; } var_dump(new Foo());'
object(Foo)#1 (1) {
["bar":protected]=>
NULL
}

Either both functions are OOP-buggy, or none is.

> When using at least PHP 5.1.0, one might also consider PHP
> reflection to check for private and protected properties:
>
> <?php
>
> class Foo {
> private $test;
> }
>
> $r = new ReflectionObject(new Foo());
> var_dump($r->hasProperty('test')); /* bool(true) */
>
> ?>

Overkill in most cases.


PointedEars
--
realism: HTML 4.01 Strict
evangelism: XHTML 1.0 Strict
madness: XHTML 1.1 as application/xhtml+xml
-- Bjoern Hoehrmann
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