узнать ключ массива php

array_key_exists

(PHP 4 >= 4.0.7, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

array_key_exists — Проверяет, присутствует ли в массиве указанный ключ или индекс

Описание

Список параметров

Массив с проверяемыми ключами.

Возвращаемые значения

Возвращает true в случае успешного выполнения или false в случае возникновения ошибки.

array_key_exists() ищет ключи только на первом уровне массива. Внутренние ключи в многомерных массивах найдены не будут.

Примеры

Пример #1 Пример использования array_key_exists()

Пример #2 array_key_exists() и isset()

Примечания

Смотрите также

User Contributed Notes 39 notes

If you want to take the performance advantage of isset() while keeping the NULL element correctly detected, use this:

Benchmark (100000 runs):
array_key_exists() : 205 ms
is_set() : 35ms
isset() || array_key_exists() : 48ms

Note:
The code for this check is very fast, so you shouldn’t warp the code into a single function like below, because the overhead of calling a function dominates the overall performance.

function array_check(. )
<
return (isset(..) || array_key_exists(. ))
>

You’ll notice several notes on this page stating that isset() is significantly faster than array_key_exists(). This may be true except for one small hitch. isset() will return false for arrays keys that have there value set to NULL, which is therefore not entirely accurate.

= array();
$foo [ ‘bar’ ] = NULL ;

Beware that if the array passed to array_key_exists is NULL, the return value will also be NULL.

This is undocumented behaviour, moreover the documentation (and return typehint) suggest that the array_key_exists function only returns boolean value. But that’s not the case.

Rudi’s multidimensional array_key_exists function was not working for me, so i built one that is.
Enjoy.

The way array_key_exists handles null, float, boolean, and ‘integer-representing string’ keys is inconsistent in itself and, in the case of bool and float, with the way these are converted when used as array offset.

array (
» => 1,
0 => 2,
1 => 3,
4 => 4,
’08’ => 5,
8 => 6,
)
null is a key.
false is not a key.
true is not a key.
4.6 is not a key.
«08» is a key.
«8» is a key.

Well, and you get this warning three times (on the bools and the float, but not on the null):

Warning: array_key_exists() [function.array-key-exists]: The first argument should be either a string or an integer in /var/www/php/test.php on line 6

I’ve got a new take on the multi key function I would like to share.

Very simple case-insensitive array_key_exists:

bool (in_array(strtolower($needle), array_map(‘strtolower’, array_keys($haystack))))

array_key_exists doesn’t work with objects implementing ArrayAccess interface. It also ignores possible __get() method in such objects, despite the fact it accepts object as a second parameter. It works only with ‘real’ properties.

Here is an example with array_key_exists switching between content-types :

The argument of array_key_exists() vs. isset() came up in the workplace today, so I conducted a little benchmark to see which is faster:

?>

On Windows, the output is similar to

array_key_exists(): 0.504 [82.895%] seconds
isset(): 0.104 [17.105%] seconds

On Mac or Linux, isset() is faster but only by a factor of approximately 1.5.

Источник

array_keys

(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

array_keys — Возвращает все или некоторое подмножество ключей массива

Описание

Список параметров

Массив, содержащий возвращаемые ключи.

Если указано, будут возвращены только ключи у которых значения элементов массива совпадают с этим параметром.

Определяет использование строгой проверки на равенство (===) при поиске.

Возвращаемые значения

Примеры

Пример #1 Пример использования array_keys()

Результат выполнения данного примера:

Смотрите также

User Contributed Notes 28 notes

It’s worth noting that if you have keys that are long integer, such as ‘329462291595’, they will be considered as such on a 64bits system, but will be of type string on a 32 bits system.

?>

will return on a 64 bits system:

but on a 32 bits system:

I hope it will save someone the huge headache I had 🙂

Here’s how to get the first key, the last key, the first value or the last value of a (hash) array without explicitly copying nor altering the original array:

Since 5.4 STRICT standards dictate that you cannot wrap array_keys in a function like array_shift that attempts to reference the array.

Invalid:
echo array_shift( array_keys( array(‘a’ => ‘apple’) ) );

But Wait! Since PHP (currently) allows you to break a reference by wrapping a variable in parentheses, you can currently use:

echo array_shift( ( array_keys( array(‘a’ => ‘apple’) ) ) );

However I would expect in time the PHP team will modify the rules of parentheses.

There’s a lot of multidimensional array_keys function out there, but each of them only merges all the keys in one flat array.

Here’s a way to find all the keys from a multidimensional array while keeping the array structure. An optional MAXIMUM DEPTH parameter can be set for testing purpose in case of very large arrays.

NOTE: If the sub element isn’t an array, it will be ignore.

output:
array(
‘Player’ => array(),
‘LevelSimulation’ => array(
‘Level’ => array(
‘City’ => array()
)
),
‘User’ => array()
)

array (size=4)
0 => string ‘e’ (length=1)
1 => int 1
2 => int 2
3 => int 0

—-
expected to see:
dude dude dude

Sorry for my english.

I wrote a function to get keys of arrays recursivelly.

Here’s a function I needed to collapse an array, in my case from a database query. It takes an array that contains key-value pairs and returns an array where they are actually the key and value.

?>

Example usage (pseudo-database code):

= db_query ( ‘SELECT name, value FROM properties’ );

/* This will return an array like so:

/* Now this array looks like:

?>

I found this handy for using with json_encode and am using it for my project http://squidby.com

This function will print all the keys of a multidimensional array in html tables.
It will help to debug when you don?t have control of depths.

An alternative to RQuadling at GMail dot com’s array_remove() function:

The position of an element.

One can apply array_keys twice to get the position of an element from its key. (This is the reverse of the function by cristianDOTzuddas.) E.g., the following may output «yes, we have bananas at position 0».

Hope this helps someone.

# array_keys() also return the key if it’s boolean but the boolean will return as 1 or 0. It will return empty if get NULL value as key. Consider the following array:

Array
(
[ 0 ] => first_index
[ 1 ] => 1
[ 2 ] => 0
[ 3 ] => 4
[ 4 ] => 08
[ 5 ] => 8
[ 6 ] =>
)

This function will extract keys from a multidimensional array

Array
(
[color] => Array
(
[1stcolor] => blue
[2ndcolor] => red
[3rdcolor] => green
)

[size] => Array
(
[0] => small
[1] => medium
[2] => large
)

Array
(
[0] => color
[1] => 1stcolor
[2] => 2ndcolor
[3] => 3rdcolor
[4] => size
[5] => 0
[6] => 1
[7] => 2
)

All the cool notes are gone from the site.

Here’s an example of how to get all the variables passed to your program using the method on this page. This prints them out so you can see what you are doing.

Simple ways to prefixing arrays;

[1] => Array
(
[product_id] => 2
[product_name] => Bar
)

I was looking for a function that deletes either integer keys or string keys (needed for my caching).
As I didn’t find a function I came up with my own solution.
I didn’t find the propiest function to post to so I will post it here, hope you find it useful.

?>

You can of course define constants to have a nicer look, I have chosen these: EXTR_INT = 1; EXTR_STRING = 2
EXTR_INT will return an array where keys are only integer while
EXTR_STRING will return an array where keys are only string

A needed a function to find the keys which contain part of a string, not equalling a string.

Источник

array_search

(PHP 4 >= 4.0.5, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

array_search — Осуществляет поиск данного значения в массиве и возвращает ключ первого найденного элемента в случае успешного выполнения

Описание

Список параметров

Если needle является строкой, сравнение происходит с учётом регистра.

Возвращаемые значения

Примеры

Пример #1 Пример использования array_search()

Смотрите также

User Contributed Notes 45 notes

in (PHP 5 >= 5.5.0) you don’t have to write your own function to search through a multi dimensional array

$userdb=Array
(
(0) => Array
(
(uid) => ‘100’,
(name) => ‘Sandra Shush’,
(url) => ‘urlof100’
),

(1) => Array
(
(uid) => ‘5465’,
(name) => ‘Stefanie Mcmohn’,
(pic_square) => ‘urlof100’
),

(2) => Array
(
(uid) => ‘40489’,
(name) => ‘Michael’,
(pic_square) => ‘urlof40489’
)
);

simply u can use this

$key = array_search(40489, array_column($userdb, ‘uid’));

About searcing in multi-dimentional arrays; two notes on «xfoxawy at gmail dot com»;

It perfectly searches through multi-dimentional arrays combined with array_column() (min php 5.5.0) but it may not return the values you’d expect.

Secondly, if your array is big, I would recommend you to first assign a new variable so that it wouldn’t call array_column() for each element it searches. For a better performance, you could do;

It’s what the document stated «may also return a non-Boolean value which evaluates to FALSE.»

the recursive function by tony have a small bug. it failes when a key is 0

here is the corrected version of this helpful function:

If you are using the result of array_search in a condition statement, make sure you use the === operator instead of == to test whether or not it found a match. Otherwise, searching through an array with numeric indicies will result in index 0 always getting evaluated as false/null. This nuance cost me a lot of time and sanity, so I hope this helps someone. In case you don’t know what I’m talking about, here’s an example:

for searching case insensitive better this:

About searcing in multi-dimentional arrays;
note on «xfoxawy at gmail dot com» and turabgarip at gmail dot com;

$xx = array_column($array, ‘NAME’, ‘ID’);
will produce an array like :
$xx = [
[ID_val] => NAME_val
[ID_val] => NAME_val
]

$yy = array_search(‘tesxt’, array_column($array, ‘NAME’, ‘ID’));
will output expected ID;

I was going to complain bitterly about array_search() using zero-based indexes, but then I realized I should be using in_array() instead.

The essence is this: if you really want to know the location of an element in an array, then use array_search, else if you only want to know whether that element exists, then use in_array()

Be careful when search for indexes from array_keys() if you have a mixed associative array it will return both strings and integers resulting in comparison errors

/* The above prints this, as you can see we have mixed keys
array(3) <
[0]=>
int(0)
[1]=>
string(3) «car»
[2]=>
int(1)
>
*/

hallo every body This function matches two arrays like
search an array like another or not array_match which can match

hey i have a easy multidimensional array search function

Despite PHP’s amazing assortment of array functions and juggling maneuvers, I found myself needing a way to get the FULL array key mapping to a specific value. This function does that, and returns an array of the appropriate keys to get to said (first) value occurrence.

But again, with the above solution, PHP again falls short on how to dynamically access a specific element’s value within the nested array. For that, I wrote a 2nd function to pull the value that was mapped above.

To expand on previous comments, here are some examples of
where using array_search within an IF statement can go
wrong when you want to use the array key thats returned.

Take the following two arrays you wish to search:

I needed a way to return the value of a single specific key, thus:

Better solution of multidimensional searching.

FYI, remember that strict mode is something that might save you hours.

one thing to be very aware of is that array_search() will fail if the needle is a string and the array itself contains values that are mixture of numbers and strings. (or even a string that looks like a number)

The problem is that unless you specify «strict» the match is done using == and in that case any string will match a numeric value of zero which is not what you want.

also, php can lookup an index pretty darn fast. for many scenarios, it is practical to maintain multiple arrays, one in which the index of the array is the search key and the normal array that contains the data.

//very fast lookup, this beats any other kind of search

I had an array of arrays and needed to find the key of an element by comparing actual reference.
Beware that even with strict equality (===) php will equate arrays via their elements recursively, not by a simple internal pointer check as with class objects. The === can be slow for massive arrays and also crash if they contain circular references.

This function performs reference sniffing in order to return the key for an element that is exactly a reference of needle.

A simple recursive array_search function :

A variation of previous searches that returns an array of keys that match the given value:

I needed a function, that returns a value by specifying a keymap to the searched value in a multidimensional array and came up with this.

My function get_key_in_array() needed some improvement:

An implementation of a search function that uses a callback, to allow searching for objects of arbitrary complexity:

For instance, if you have an array of objects with an id property, you could search for the object with a specific id like this:

For a more complex example, this function takes an array of key/value pairs and returns the key for the first item in the array that has all those properties with the same values.

The final step is a function that returns the item, rather than its key, or null if no match found:

Источник

Как в php найти ключ в массиве по значению

Для того что бы определить ключ массива зная его значения, можно использовать как минимум три варианта решения.

Выше массив значений, где ключи и значения уникальны. Подчеркиваю, что значения уникальны. Если в ваших примерах будут встречаться одинаковые значения, то будут возвращены ключи, первых значений одинаковых элементов.

Пример 1

В нем мы используем PHP ф-ю array_search, и ищем ключ, значение у которого «simply»:

Пример 2

Используем цикл «foreach» для обхода всех элементов массива, и условный оператор «if» для сравнения значений.

Для значения «Ipsum», ответом будет ключ «int(12)»

Пример 3

Пожалуй самый длинный и самый странный из вариантов, это использование функции «array_walk» и передачи по ссылке найденного ключа «$search_key» через use:

Результатом будет или NULL в случае если ключ не был найден, или «int(10)» в случае найденного значения «Lorem».

Какой итог этого всего. Не морочьте себе голову, а используйте то что уже есть в PHP встроенное, а это готовую ф-ю «array_search».

Раньше, на заре своей карьеры PHP программиста, я часто писал подобные велосипеды как из примеров 2 и 3. Со временем, я поумнел, и начал заглядывать в документацию PHP и искать может уже есть что-то готовое. А сейчас, при существования гитхаба и ему подобных, скорость разработки можно увеличить еще на порядок больше. Удачи!

С вашим WordPress сайтом проблемы? нужен дополнительный функционал? нестандартный плагин или сверстать новую страницу?
Тогда напишите мне через форму обратной связи, и я постараюсь вам помочь.

Источник

in_array

(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

in_array — Проверяет, присутствует ли в массиве значение

Описание

Список параметров

Возвращаемые значения

Примеры

Пример #1 Пример использования in_array()

Второго совпадения не будет, потому что in_array() регистрозависима, таким образом, программа выведет:

Пример #2 Пример использования in_array() с параметром strict

Результат выполнения данного примера:

Пример #3 Пример использования in_array() с массивом в качестве параметра needle

Результат выполнения данного примера:

Смотрите также

User Contributed Notes 38 notes

Loose checking returns some crazy, counter-intuitive results when used with certain arrays. It is completely correct behaviour, due to PHP’s leniency on variable types, but in «real-life» is almost useless.

The solution is to use the strict checking option.

// First three make sense, last four do not

If you’re working with very large 2 dimensional arrays (eg 20,000+ elements) it’s much faster to do this.

Remember to only flip it once at the beginning of your code though!

# foo it is found in the array or one of its sub array.

For a case-insensitive in_array(), you can use array_map() to avoid a foreach statement, e.g.:

Determine whether an object field matches needle.

= array( new stdClass (), new stdClass () );
$arr [ 0 ]-> colour = ‘red’ ;
$arr [ 1 ]-> colour = ‘green’ ;
$arr [ 1 ]-> state = ‘enabled’ ;

in_array() may also return NULL if the second argument is NULL and strict types are off.

If the strict mode is on, then this code would end up with the TypeError

In a high-voted example, an array is given that contains, amongst other things, true, false and null, against which various variables are tested using in_array and loose checking.

If you have an array like:
$arr = array(0,1,2,3,4,5);

Add an extra if() to adrian foeder’s comment to make it work properly:

If you found yourself in need of a multidimensional array in_array like function you can use the one below. Works in a fair amount of time

This code will search for a value in a multidimensional array with strings or numbers on keys.

I just struggled for a while with this, although it may be obvious to others.

If you have an array with mixed type content such as:

?>

be sure to use the strict checking when searching for a string in the array, or it will match on the 0 int in that array and give a true for all values of needle that are strings strings.

I found out that in_array will *not* find an associative array within a haystack of associative arrays in strict mode if the keys were not generated in the *same order*:

?>

I had wrongly assumed the order of the items in an associative array were irrelevant, regardless of whether ‘strict’ is TRUE or FALSE: The order is irrelevant *only* if not in strict mode.

I would like to add something to beingmrkenny at gmail dot com comparison post. After debugging a system, i discovered a security issue in our system and his post helped me find the problem.

In my additional testing i found out that not matter what you search for in an array, except for 0 and null, you get true as the result if the array contains true as the value.

Examples as php code :

Such the best practice in our case is to use strict mode. Which was not so obvious.

Kelvin’s case-insensitive in_arrayi is fine if you desire loose typing, but mapping strtolower onto the array will (attempt to) cast all array members to string. If you have an array of mixed types, and you wish to preserve the typing, the following will work:

// Note
// You can’t use wildcards and it does not check variable type
?>

A first idea for a function that checks if a text is in a specific column of an array.
It does not use in_array function because it doesn’t check via columns.
Its a test, could be much better. Do not use it without test.

Beware when using this function to validate user input:

$a = array(‘0’ => ‘Opt 1’, ‘1’ => ‘Opt 2’, ‘2’ => ‘Opt 3’);
$v = ‘sql injection’;
var_dump(in_array($v, array_keys($a)));

This will result : true;

If you need to find if a value in an array is in another array you can use the function:

The top voted notes talked about creating strict comparison function, because in_array is insufficient, because it has very lenient type checking (which is PHP default behaviour).

The thing is, in_array is already sufficient. Because as a good programmer, you should never have an array which contains ; all in one array anyway.

It’s better to fix how you store data and retrieve data from user, rather than fixing in_array() which is not broken.

If you’re creating an array yourself and then using in_array to search it, consider setting the keys of the array and using isset instead since it’s much faster.

Recursive in array using SPL

If array contain at least one true value, in_array() will return true every times if it is not false or null

Be careful to use the strict parameter with truth comparisons of specific strings like «false»:

?>

The above example prints:

False is truthy.
False is not truthy.

This function is for search a needle in a multidimensional haystack:

When using numbers as needle, it gets tricky:

Note this behaviour (3rd statement):

in_array(0, array(42)) = FALSE
in_array(0, array(’42’)) = FALSE
in_array(0, array(‘Foo’)) = TRUE
in_array(‘0’, array(‘Foo’)) = FALSE

Watch out for this:

Yes, it seems that is_array thinks that a random string and 0 are the same thing.
Excuse me, that’s not loose checking, that’s drunken logic.
Or maybe I found a bug?

hope this function may be useful to you, it checks an array recursively (if an array has sub-array-levels) and also the keys, if wanted:

If you have a multidimensional array filled only with Boolean values like me, you need to use ‘strict’, otherwise in_array() will return an unexpected result.

Hope this helps somebody, cause it took me some time to figure this out.

If you search for numbers, in_array will convert any strings in your array to numbers, dropping any letters/characters, forcing a numbers-to-numbers comparison. So if you search for 1234, it will say that ‘1234abcd’ is a match. Example:

Esta función falla con las letras acentuadas y con las eñes. Por tanto, no sirve para los caracteres UTF-8.
El siguiente código falla para na cadena = «María Mañas», no reconoce ni la «í» ni la «ñ»:

// ¿La cadena está vacía?
if (empty ($cadena))
<
$correcto = false;
>
else
<
$nombreOapellido = mb_strtoupper ($cadena, «utf-8»);
$longitudCadena = mb_strlen ($cadena, «utf-8»);

Esta función falla con las letras acentuadas y con las eñes. Por tanto, no sirve para los caracteres UTF-8.
El siguiente código falla para na cadena = «María Mañas», no reconoce ni la «í» ni la «ñ»:

// ¿La cadena está vacía?
if (empty ($cadena))
<
$correcto = false;
>
else
<
$nombreOapellido = mb_strtoupper ($cadena, «utf-8»);
$longitudCadena = mb_strlen ($cadena, «utf-8»);

I needed a version of in_array() that supports wildcards in the haystack. Here it is:

$haystack = array( ‘*krapplack.de’ );
$needle = ‘www.krapplack.de’ ;

var_dump(in_array(‘invalid’, array(0,10,20)));
The above code gives true since the ‘invalid’ is getting converted to 0 and checked against the array(0,10,20)

but var_dump(in_array(‘invalid’, array(10,20))); gives ‘false’ since 0 not there in the array

A function to check an array of values within another array.

Second element ‘123’ of needles was found as first element of haystack, so it return TRUE.

If third parameter is not set to Strict then, the needle is found in haystack eventhought the values are not same. the limit behind the decimal seems to be 6 after which, the haystack and needle match no matter what is behind the 6th.

In PHP array function the in_array() function mainly used to check the item are available or not in array.

1. Non-strict validation
2. Strict validation

1. Non-strict validation:
This method to validate array with some negotiation. And it allow two parameters.

Note: the Example 1, we use only two parameter. Because we can’t mention `false` value. Because In default the in_array() take `false` as a boolean value.

In above example,
Example 1 : The `key1` is not value in the array. This is key of the array. So this scenario the in_array accept the search key as a value of the array.
Example 2: The value `577` is not in the value and key of the array. It is some similar to the value `579`. So this is also accepted.

So this reason this type is called non-strict function.

2. Strict validation
This method to validate array without any negotiation. And it have three parameters. If you only mention two parameter the `in_array()` function take as a non-strict validation.

This is return `true` only the search string is match exactly with the array value with case sensitivity.

Источник

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