Other answers work, but it is good to know that the generated JSON will have the following form (in this example I use an hypothetical "name" field for your customers):
{
"5587d2c3cd8348455b26feab": {
"_id": {
"$id": "5587d2c3cd8348455b26feab"
},
"name": "Robert"
},
"5587d2c3cd8348455b26feac": {
"_id": {
"$id": "5587d2c3cd8348455b26feac"
},
"name": "John"
}
}
So in case you don't want the Object _id
to be the key of each of your result objects you can add a false
parameter to iterator_to_array
.
Your code would be:
echo json_encode(iterator_to_array($customers, false), true);
This creates the same result as
$result = Array();
foreach ($customers as $entry) {
array_push($result, $entry);
}
echo json_encode($result, true);
which is an array of JSON objects
[
{
"_id": {
"$id": "5587d2c3cd8348455b26feab"
},
"name": "Robert"
},
{
"_id": {
"$id": "5587d2c3cd8348455b26feac"
},
"name": "John"
}
]