Section 4.0. Introduction


4.0. Introduction

Arrays are lists: lists of people, lists of sizes, lists of books. To store a group of related items in a variable, use an array. Like a list on a piece of paper, the elements in array have an order. Usually, each new item comes after the last entry in the array, but just as you can wedge a new entry between a pair of lines already in a paper list, you can do the same with arrays in PHP.

In many languages, there is only one type of array: this is called a numerical array (or just an array). In a numerical array, if you want to find an entry, you need to know its position within the array, known as an index. Positions are identified by numbers: they start at 0 and work upward one by one.

In some languages, there is also another type of array: an associative array, also known as a hash. In an associative array, indexes aren't integers, but strings. So in a numerical array of U.S. presidents, "Abraham Lincoln" might have index 16; in the associative-array version, the index might be "Honest." However, while numerical arrays have a strict ordering imposed by their keys, associative arrays frequently make no guarantees about the key ordering. Elements are added in a certain order, but there's no way to determine the order later.

In a few languages, there are both numerical and associative arrays. But usually the numerical array $presidents and the associative array $presidents are distinct arrays. Each array type has a specific behavior, and you need to operate on it accordingly. PHP has both numerical and associative arrays, but they don't behave independently.

In PHP, numerical arrays are associative arrays, and associative arrays are numerical arrays. So which kind are they really? Both and neither. The line between them constantly blurs back and forth from one to another. At first, this can be disorienting, especially if you're used to rigid behavior, but soon you'll find this flexibility an asset.

To assign multiple values to an array in one step, use array( ):

$fruits = array('Apples', 'Bananas', 'Cantaloupes', 'Dates');

Now, the value of $fruits[2] is 'Cantaloupes'.

array( ) is very handy when you have a short list of known values. The same array is also produced by:

$fruits[0] = 'Apples'; $fruits[1] = 'Bananas'; $fruits[2] = 'Cantaloupes'; $fruits[3] = 'Dates';

and:

$fruits[] = 'Apples'; $fruits[] = 'Bananas'; $fruits[] = 'Cantaloupes'; $fruits[] = 'Dates';

Assigning a value to an array with an empty subscript is shorthand for adding a new element to the end of the array. So PHP looks up the length of $fruits and uses that as the position for the value you're assigning. This assumes, of course, that $fruits isn't set to a scalar value, such as 3, and isn't an object. PHP complains if you try to treat a non-array as an array; however, if this is the first time you're using this variable, PHP automatically converts it to an array and begins indexing at 0.

An identical feature is the function array_push( ), which pushes a new value on top of the array stack. However, the $foo[] notation is the more traditional PHP style; it's also faster. But sometimes, using array_push( ) more accurately conveys the stack nature of what you're trying to do, especially when combined with array_pop( ) , which removes the last element from an array and returns it.

So far, we've placed integers and strings only inside arrays. However, PHP allows you to assign any data type you want to an array element: booleans, integers, floating-point numbers, strings, objects, resources, NULL, and even other arrays. So you can pull arrays or objects directly from a database and place them into an array:

while ($row = mysql_fetch_row($r)) {     $fruits[] = $row; } while ($obj = mysql_fetch_object($s)) {     $vegetables[] = $obj; }

The first while statement creates an array of arrays; the second creates an array of objects. See Recipe 4.2 for more on storing multiple elements per key.

To define an array using not integer keys but string keys, you can also use array( ), but specify the key/value pairs with =>:

$fruits = array('red' => 'Apples', 'yellow' => 'Bananas',                 'beige' => 'Cantaloupes', 'brown' => 'Dates');

Now, the value of $fruits['beige'] is 'Cantaloupes'. This is shorthand for:

$fruits['red'] = 'Apples'; $fruits['yellow'] = 'Bananas'; $fruits['beige'] = 'Cantaloupes'; $fruits['brown'] = 'Dates';

Each array can only hold one unique value for each key. Adding:

$fruits['red'] = 'Strawberry';

overwrites the value of 'Apples'. However, you can always add another key at a later time:

$fruits['orange'] = 'Orange';

The more you program in PHP, the more you find yourself using associative arrays instead of numerical ones. Instead of creating a numeric array with string values, you can create an associative array and place your values as its keys. If you want, you can then store additional information in the element's value. There's no speed penalty for doing this, and PHP preserves the ordering. Plus, looking up or changing a value is easy because you already know the key.

The easiest way to cycle though an array and operate on all or some of the elements inside is to use foreach:

$fruits = array('red' => 'Apples', 'yellow' => 'Bananas',                 'beige' => 'Cantaloupes', 'brown' => 'Dates'); foreach ($fruits as $color => $fruit) {     print "$fruit are $color.\n"; } Apples are red. Bananas are yellow. Cantaloupes are beige. Dates are brown.

Each time through the loop, PHP assigns the next key to $color and the key's value to $fruit. When there are no elements left in the array, the loop finishes.

To break an array apart into individual variables, use list( ):

$fruits = array('Apples', 'Bananas', 'Cantaloupes', 'Dates'); list($red, $yellow, $beige, $brown) = $fruits;




PHP Cookbook, 2nd Edition
PHP Cookbook: Solutions and Examples for PHP Programmers
ISBN: 0596101015
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2006
Pages: 445

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