0

I've got an array in PHP:

$wxCode = array(
    'VC' => 'nearby',
    'MI' => 'shallow',
    'PR' => 'partial',
    'BC' => 'patches of',
    'DR' => 'low drifting',
    'BL' => 'blowing',
    'SH' => 'showers',
    'TS' => 'thunderstorm',
    'FZ' => 'freezing',
    'DZ' => 'drizzle',
    'RA' => 'rain',
    'SN' => 'snow',
    'SG' => 'snow grains',
    'IC' => 'ice crystals',
    'PE' => 'ice pellets',
    'GR' => 'hail',
    'GS' => 'small hail',  // and/or snow pellets
    'UP' => 'unknown',
    'BR' => 'mist',
    'FG' => 'fog',
    'FU' => 'smoke',
    'VA' => 'volcanic ash',
    'DU' => 'widespread dust',
    'SA' => 'sand',
    'HZ' => 'haze',
    'PY' => 'spray',
    'PO' => 'well-developed dust/sand whirls',
    'SQ' => 'squalls',
    'FC' => 'funnel cloud, tornado, or waterspout',
    'SS' => 'sandstorm/duststorm');

and I've got a little if here:

    if (substr($part,0,1) == '-') {
        $prefix = 'light ';
        $part = substr($part,1);
    }
    elseif (substr($part,0,1) == '+') {
        $prefix = 'heavy ';
        $part = substr($part,1);
    }
    else $prefix = '';

However, I want to write a function that with turn the following string: -RA into the following text, based on the array and the if: light rain.

How would I do this?

2 Answers 2

2

You're almost there actually. Just use $part as the key to your $wxCode array:

$wxCode[$part]

If you don't have a prefix or:

$wxCode[substr($part, 1)]

If you do. You may need to use strtoupper() to make sure the two-letter code is all caps

1
$str = str_replace(array('-', '+'), array('light ', 'heavy '), $str);
$str = str_replace(array_keys($wxCode), array_values($wxCode), $str);

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.