$animals = array('cat', 'dog', 'horse', 'elephant');
foreach($animals as $animal)
{
var_dump($animal);
next($animals);
}
The code above outputs: cat, dog, horse, elephant. I thought the next
function should move the internal pointer of $animals
and, thus, I should be getting this output instead: cat, horse.
How do I make the internal pointer of $animals move forward (and backwards) such that it is affected in the foreach?
EDIT 1:
From the manual:
As foreach relies on the internal array pointer changing it within the loop may lead to unexpected behavior.
Nonetheless, I think this is what I need to do.
EDIT 2:
Per "Your Common Sense"'s link, I will provide a more detailed explanation of my problem. Here's some psuedo code:
array $foos;
start loop of $foos
- do thing #1
- do thing #2
- do thing #3
- keep doing thing #3 while the current value of $foos in the loop meets a certain criteria
loop
When execution returns to the start of the loop, it should continue from the last array accessed by #3. Note that the array is associative, thus a for ($i = 0 ...
approach won't work.