There is only ever one product returned at one time. When the product has an ingredient, my code works as intended. When it does not, I am getting:
Undefined offset: 0
Which references the line of code: if ($response_decoded['products'][0]['ingredients'] != null){
I understand this is because there is no ingredient, but there will be times when this is the case, it is unavoidable.
So, at this point:
$request->setMethod(HTTP_Request2::METHOD_GET);
$request->setBody("{body}");
try
{
$response = $request->send();
$result = $response->getBody();
$response_decoded = json_decode($result,true);
print_r($response_decoded);
...I am getting back:
Array ( [products] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [gtin] => 05052909299653 [tpnb] => 065738756 [tpnc] => 272043262 [description] => Tesco Lemon And Lime Zero 2L [brand] => TESCO [qtyContents] => Array ( [quantity] => 2000 [totalQuantity] => 2000 [quantityUom] => ml [netContents] => 2L e ) [productCharacteristics] => Array ( [isFood] => [isDrink] => 1 [healthScore] => 70 [isHazardous] => [storageType] => Ambient [isNonLiquidAnalgesic] => [containsLoperamide] => ) [ingredients] => Array ( [0] => Carbonated Water [1] => Citric Acid [2] =>
And so on...
I then do:
// check for ingredient array
if ($response_decoded['products'][0]['ingredients'] != null){
// can now target ingredient array
$ingredients = $response_decoded['products'][0]['ingredients'];
So rather than just != null
I believe I need to check before hand if 'ingredients' even exists. I though I could use array_key_exists
to do this.
if (array_key_exists('products', $response_decoded)) {
echo "Product is there";
}
else{
echo "Product is not there";
}
Now that works, it tells me if product exists... But how to check if ingredient for product exists?