31

I have a common pattern which Im sure there must be a built-in array function in PHP to handle but just can't see it.

I have multiple arrays such as the following:

$testArray = array (
    'subArray1' => array(
        'key1' => "Sub array 1 value 1",
        'key2' => "Sub array 1 value 1"
    ),
    'subArray2' => array(
        'key1' => "Sub array 2 value 1",
        'key2' => "Sub array 2 value 2"
    )
);

I need to get the key1 values from each subArray, of which there can be any number.

I always end up just looping over each array to get the required values, but I'm sure there must be an easier, more efficient way to handle this.

I am currently using the following simple foreach to parse the arrays:

$preparedSubs = array();

foreach($testArray as $subArray) {
    $preparedSubs[] = $subArray['key1'];
}

It's as short as I can make it, but as I said I'm sure there is a PHP construct that would handle this better.

2
  • You want to get the key1 value from each subArray and store it into another array ?
    – ro ko
    Apr 22, 2012 at 13:36
  • @Rohan - preferably the value belonging to that key, or both the key and the value together. Ill post the foreach loop im using currently Apr 22, 2012 at 13:38

2 Answers 2

39

Before PHP 5.5, this would be the most efficient solution:

$key = 'key1';

$output = array_map(function($item) use ($key) {
    return $item[$key];
}, $testArray);

As of PHP 5.5, there is now an array_column function for this (see COil's answer).

3
  • 5
    Note: PHP Closures are supported from php 5.3, so this method will ok from 5.3 and is not necessary after 5.5
    – Andron
    Sep 30, 2015 at 13:29
  • Below answer works too :) its much simpler Thank you Nov 28, 2016 at 11:42
  • 1
    This question was asked before PHP 5.5 was released. I updated my question to reflect that when COil's answer was added 3 years later :-)
    – cmbuckley
    Nov 29, 2016 at 12:58
28

As of PHP 5.5 you can use the array_column() function:

$key = 'key1';

$testArray = array (
    'subArray1' => array(
        'key1' => "Sub array 1 value 1",
        'key2' => "Sub array 1 value 2"
    ),
    'subArray2' => array(
        'key1' => "Sub array 2 value 1",
        'key2' => "Sub array 2 value 2"
    )
);

$output = array_column($testArray, $key);
var_dump($output);

Will output:

array(2) {
  [0]=>
  string(19) "Sub array 1 value 1"
  [1]=>
  string(19) "Sub array 2 value 1"
}

The only difference with the accepted answer is that you lose the original key name, but I think this is not a problem in your case.

1
  • 6
    +1 for the new native function. You could keep the original keys with array_combine(array_keys($testArray), array_column($testArray, $key)).
    – cmbuckley
    Jan 21, 2015 at 17:21

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