PHP-and-MySQL/C2/Multi-Dimensional-Arrays/English-timed
From Script | Spoken-Tutorial
Revision as of 11:13, 10 July 2014 by Pratik kamble (Talk | contribs)
Time | Narration |
00:00 | A multidimensional array is an array in which you can store other arrays. |
00:06 | It is very similar to an associative array. |
00:09 | However, the associates for this array are arrays themselves. |
00:14 | For a better understanding, let us start the program. |
00:19 | I will create a program that lets you see the position of a letter in the English
alphabet. |
00:26 | For example, if I give the value 1, it should echo out "A" in position 1. |
00:33 | If I give the value two it would say "B" in position 2. |
00:38 | And for three, it will say "C" is in position 3, and so on. |
00:43 | First I will create my own array. |
00:53 | And just for easy viewing, I will bring this down. |
00:58 | You are quite welcome to do so yourself. |
01:01 | And inside. I will create my own array, which I will call ‘ABC’. |
01:10 | That will be the array. |
01:15 | Instead of putting a value here, as we did before, we have an array inside. |
01:24 | And inside these, will be the values, for example, Capital A, B, C and D. |
01:32 | And these values will be separated by commas. |
01:41 | And then we type “123” and that is equal to an array. |
01:46 | Now we’re just going to have ‘1,2,3,4, and that’s it. |
01:53 | Down here, I’ll show you how to echo out specific data inside the array. |
01:59 | We’ll call our main array. |
02:02 | And we’ll call this array as well. |
02:05 | And then the position of what you want inside the array. So it is an array inside an array. |
02:13 | So I will just type ‘echo’ and then ‘alpha’ which is our main array. |
02:19 | And then inside square brackets, ‘ABC’. |
02:23 | And next, inside square brackets, the position of the element if you want to retrieve. |
02:30 | Now, for example, is going to echo "A". |
02:35 | Let us give that a run - and we got "A". |
02:47 | Changing this to ‘123’, will hopefully give us "1". |
02:54 | As you can see here. |
02:57 | So we've made our two basic arrays inside our main arrays, and we’ve learnt to call it. |
03:05 | Now I’m going to create a new program to find out the position of a letter in relation to its number. |
03:13 | I’m going to type up here ‘ postion = 0’, since 0 is the beginning. |
03:30 | Now I will echo out ‘Letter something is in position something’. |
03:39 | This is going to be quite simple. |
03:42 | We enter a position here, say 3. Since C is in position 3 in the alphabet, we get C. |
03:53 | So , to echo out our letter, if I am going to replace the first blank with ‘alpha’. |
04:02 | ABC |
04:05 | 'pos' |
04:07 | as 'pos' represents our position. |
04:11 | So then, the position will be - Alpha... 123 |
04:19 | And then the position, ‘pos’. |
04:23 | At the moment, position is equal to 0. |
04:29 | We type ’echo something’. So this is position zero. |
04:36 | Position zero inside the internal array “ABC”. So in actual fact, we are saying that A is in position 0, |
04:47 | which is this array, 123 and that is position zero. So actually we are saying letter A is in position one. |
04:56 | Lets run this. Okay. A is in position 1. Let’s change this to 1. |
05:05 | Refresh. Letter B is in position 2. Now what I will do to make this application fully functional and easy to navigate, is eliminate the necessity to write zero for 1. |
05:21 | So I will put ‘-1’ at the end and put 1 in brackets for better legibility. |
05:28 | So, position one minus one is infact zero. So, writing 1 will give the same result as writing 0. Writing 2 will give us the same result as writing 1...letter B is in position 2. |
05:43 | If I put 1 then we get A is in position 1. So if I put zero here; there is no position -1; so we get “letter in position”. So we don’t have the letter or the position. |
06:01 onwards | So, I’ve made that a bit more user-friendly. Thanks for watching! |