Your code has lots of issues
As others pointed out, in if ($kota=$end) {
, you are assigning $end
to $kota
and always return true
i.e. the code in the IF clause always execute
PHP has function scope. Simply put, variables declared inside a function cannot be used outside, and vice versa. Use parameters to pass your $kode
into the function.
Use of bare strings i.e. V
and W
in $kode ["T"]= array (70, V, W);
and other places. This is highly recommended against, and PHP does warn you about this.
As other pointed out, $jalur=$start.$path[$i];
would overwrite $jalur
every time. The for-loop outside is meaningless. You would use .=
the append-to operator. Note that you also need to initialize your variable before using this operator.
$kota
is always a string in your code, because in a foreach
loop, the variable before =>
symbol means get the key of the array, and array keys can only be either String or integer. That said, for ($i=1; $i < count ($kota); $i++){
is meaningless because count($kota)
cannot be greater than 1 - your for loop actually never runs.
This is blatantly meaningless to append a variable with an empty string as in echo "".$hasil;
I guess this is what you want.
<?php
$kode ["J"] = array (20, 'C', 'D', 'F');
$kode ["K"] = array (50, 'B', 'G', 'U');
$kode ["T"] = array (70, 'V', 'W');
function kota ($kode, $start, $end){
$jalur = $start;
if (is_array($kode)) {
foreach ($kode as $kota => $path){
if ($kota == $end) {
for ($i = 1; $i < count($path); ++$i) {
$jalur .= '-' . $path[$i];
}
}
}
return $jalur;
}
}
$start = "J";
$end = "T";
$hasil = kota($kode, $start, $end);
echo $hasil;
?>
This code give you the string which starts with $start
and all other elements except the first element in $kode[$end]
if($kota==$end)
? (note the double=
)$kode
as argument to the function$jalur=$start.$path[$i];
should be$jalur.=$start.$path[$i];
(note the.=
which means to append)