Re: Thinking out loud - a continuation...

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[snip]On 3/27/2012 12:21 AM, Robert Cummings wrote:
I think you need two things... the recursive post processor that removes the string indexes for the children. And then a function that creates a JavaScript array expression from an object or array. The question I have for you... is given the following array structure that might be generated from my previous code:

<?php

array
(
    'exec-001' => array
    (
        'name' => 'exec-001',
        'children' => array
        (
            'sub-exec-011' => array
            (
                'name' => 'sub-exec-011',
                'children' => array
                (
                    'sub-sub-exec-111' => array
                    (
                        'name' => 'sub-sub-exec-111',
                        'children' => array()
                    ),
                    'sub-sub-exec-112' => array
                    (
                        'name' => 'sub-sub-exec-112',
                        'children' => array()
                    )
                )
            ),
            'sub-exec-012' => array
            (
                'name' => 'sub-exec-012',
                'children' => array
                (
                    'sub-sub-exec-121' => array
                    (
                        'name' => 'sub-sub-exec-121',
                        'children' => array()
                    ),
                    'sub-sub-exec-122' => array
                    (
                        'name' => 'sub-sub-exec-122',
                        'children' => array()
                    )
                )
            )
        )
    ),
    'exec-002' => array
    (
        'name' => 'exec-002',
        'children' => array
        (
            'sub-exec-021' => array
            (
                'name' => 'sub-exec-021',
                'children' => array
                (
                    'sub-sub-exec-211' => array
                    (
                        'name' => 'sub-sub-exec-211',
                        'children' => array()
                    ),
                    'sub-sub-exec-212' => array
                    (
                        'name' => 'sub-sub-exec-212',
                        'children' => array()
                    )
                )
            ),
            'sub-exec-022' => array
            (
                'name' => 'sub-exec-022',
                'children' => array
                (
                    'sub-sub-exec-221' => array
                    (
                        'name' => 'sub-sub-exec-221',
                        'children' => array()
                    ),
                    'sub-sub-exec-222' => array
                    (
                        'name' => 'sub-sub-exec-222',
                        'children' => array()
                    )
                )
            )
        )
    )
);

?>

On first blush, I think you want the following structure (from your recent posts):

<?php

array
(
    0 => array
    (
        'name' => 'exec-001',
        'children' => array
        (
            0 => array
            (
                'name' => 'sub-exec-011',
                'children' => array
                (
                    0 => array
                    (
                        'name' => 'sub-sub-exec-111',
                        'children' => array()
                    ),
                    1 => array
                    (
                        'name' => 'sub-sub-exec-112',
                        'children' => array()
                    )
                )
            ),
            1 => array
            (
                'name' => 'sub-exec-012',
                'children' => array
                (
                    0 => array
                    (
                        'name' => 'sub-sub-exec-121',
                        'children' => array()
                    ),
                    1 => array
                    (
                        'name' => 'sub-sub-exec-122',
                        'children' => array()
                    )
                )
            )
        )
    ),
    1 => array
    (
        'name' => 'exec-002',
        'children' => array
        (
            0 => array
            (
                'name' => 'sub-exec-021',
                'children' => array
                (
                    0 => array
                    (
                        'name' => 'sub-sub-exec-211',
                        'children' => array()
                    ),
                    1 => array
                    (
                        'name' => 'sub-sub-exec-212',
                        'children' => array()
                    )
                )
            ),
            1 => array
            (
                'name' => 'sub-exec-022',
                'children' => array
                (
                    0 => array
                    (
                        'name' => 'sub-sub-exec-221',
                        'children' => array()
                    ),
                    1 => array
                    (
                        'name' => 'sub-sub-exec-222',
                        'children' => array()
                    )
                )
            )
        )
    )
);

?>

Essentially, entries at the root and entries for the children are just auto indexed array items but the actual entries in those arrays retain the associative index structure for retrieval of the specific information. let me know and I can probably whip you up something.

Robert that looks correct. Here is an example of the JSON that the guy provided for me -

 var json = {
        id: "node02",
        name: "0.2",
        data: {},
        children: [{
            id: "node13",
            name: "1.3",
            data: {},
            children: [{
                id: "node24",
                name: "2.4",
                data: {},
                children: [{
                    id: "node35",
                    name: "3.5",
                    data: {},
                    children: [{
                        id: "node46",
                        name: "4.6",
                        data: {},
                        children: []
                    }]
                }, {
                    id: "node37",
                    name: "3.7",
                    data: {},
                    children: [{
                        id: "node48",
                        name: "4.8",
                        data: {},
                        children: []
                    }, {
                        id: "node49",
                        name: "4.9",
                        data: {},
                        children: []
                    }, {
                        id: "node410",
                        name: "4.10",
                        data: {},
                        children: []
                    }, {
                        id: "node411",
                        name: "4.11",
                        data: {},
                        children: []
                    }]
                },
Of course he properly closes up the JSON. I inserted id's (just an auto-incrementing number) and the data portion where needed. The name: is the part that has been the result of what you did before.

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