I've looked into various different ways of array's, arraylist's, dictionaries... but as I'm used to PHP I'm not entirely sure on the best way I could collect the following information.
My program loops through each user, and if their is a location ID, I want to add that to some sort of collection / array. It's expected that different users will have the same location ID.
If the location ID is the same, I need to increase an integer of how many occurrence for that location ID.
Example:
User1 - Location1
User2 - Location3
User3 - Location3
Location1 = 1
Location3 = 2
Also I need to somehow append each user ID to this collection. So Location3 / 2 occurrences / user2/user3
I've been trying to figure out the best way of doing this for about two hours now, and all the different methods of multidimensional arrays, arraylists, dictionaries is all a little confusing as it all seems abstract to my PHP knowledge. I think C# handles arrays in an entirely different way.
Essentially, the collection with unique location ID's / occurrences / and users collection needs to be stored in something that can be passed to somewhere else in my program as an argument.
I've made a PHP script which does exactly what I'm after
foreach($call["data"] as $v)
{
// Foreach USER ($v containing their unique ID and location ID.)
$user_id = $v["id"];
$location_id = $v["location"]["id"];
// This adds the location ID as the key within the array, followed by every user who has it. I don't need a count in this case, as I could just count the number of users.
$collection[$location_id][$user_id] = null;
}
This in return creates this array when printed using print_r
[106078429431815] => Array
(
[620790873] =>
[626276302] =>
[100000152470577] =>
)
(Small part of the output). - Added PHP Example. Anyone know how I can get C# to collect the same information in the same way my PHP array does?