258

We have two PHP5 objects and would like to merge the content of one into the second. There are no notion of subclasses between them so the solutions described in the following topic cannot apply.

How do you copy a PHP object into a different object type

//We have this:
$objectA->a;
$objectA->b;
$objectB->c;
$objectB->d;

//We want the easiest way to get:
$objectC->a;
$objectC->b;
$objectC->c;
$objectC->d;

Remarks:

  • These are objects, not classes.
  • The objects contain quite a lot of fields so a foreach would be quite slow.
  • So far we consider transforming objects A and B into arrays then merging them using array_merge() before re-transforming into an object but we can't say we are proud if this.
1
  • 33
    "The objects contain quite a lot of fields so a foreach would be quite slow." - Computers are pretty fast, 'quite slow' is often fast enough. Apr 27, 2009 at 23:57

12 Answers 12

513

If your objects only contain fields (no methods), this works:

$obj_merged = (object) array_merge((array) $obj1, (array) $obj2);

This actually also works when objects have methods. (tested with PHP 5.3 and 5.6)

7
  • 4
    You may also use array_merge_recursive to have a deep copy behavior. You may also be interested in array_replace_recursive. The differences are explained in detail here: brian.serveblog.net/2011/07/31/php-array_replace-vs-array_merge Nov 27, 2013 at 9:43
  • 12
    The object resulting from this will be an instance of stdclass. While it does "work" in a sense on objects with methods, it effectively ruins the object in that case (by removing the methods).
    – Brilliand
    Feb 5, 2015 at 0:34
  • 1
    To confirm @Brilliand 's comment, this does not work with Laravel objects in a Laravel collection Aug 22, 2017 at 9:59
  • 1
    This will not work if there is an integer key in the object. Consider the following example : $arr1 = array('a' => 9, 'b' => 'asd'); $arr2 = array('a' => 10, 'd' => 'qwert', 0 => 100, 1 => 200, 4 => 400); $arr3 = array_merge($arr1, $arr2); echo(print_r($arr3, 1)); Actual Output : Array ( [a] => 10 [b] => asd [d] => qwert [0] => 100 [1] => 200 [2] => 400 ) Desired Output : Array ( [a] => 10 [b] => asd [d] => qwert [0] => 100 [1] => 200 [4] => 400 )
    – Souvik
    Jan 23, 2018 at 8:29
  • 2
    Is it just me or is this answer a verbatim copy of an answer that had already been posted for months? stackoverflow.com/a/794356/151509
    – maryisdead
    May 9, 2019 at 15:44
38
foreach($objectA as $k => $v) $objectB->$k = $v;
3
  • 10
    This is faster than the accepted answer in PHP versions < 7 (estimated 50% faster). But in PHP >= 7 the accepted answer is something like 400% faster. See here: sandbox.onlinephpfunctions.com/code/…
    – yunzen
    Jan 25, 2017 at 11:32
  • How can we use or get the merged data here?
    – user6632933
    Jul 25, 2018 at 8:17
  • 1
    @ramedju In this example $objectB holds the merged data.
    – Kornel
    Jul 25, 2018 at 21:11
28

You could create another object that dispatches calls to magic methods to the underlying objects. Here's how you'd handle __get, but to get it working fully you'd have to override all the relevant magic methods. You'll probably find syntax errors since I just entered it off the top of my head.

class Compositor {
  private $obj_a;
  private $obj_b;

  public function __construct($obj_a, $obj_b) {
    $this->obj_a = $obj_a;
    $this->obj_b = $obj_b;
  }

  public function __get($attrib_name) {
    if ($this->obj_a->$attrib_name) {
       return $this->obj_a->$attrib_name;
    } else {
       return $this->obj_b->$attrib_name;
    }
  }
}

Good luck.

5
  • Complete implementation would probably need __isset(), __unset() and implement Interator interface.
    – Kornel
    Jan 18, 2009 at 19:50
  • @porneL: what is Interator Interface?
    – Pim Jager
    Jan 18, 2009 at 22:29
  • 2
    I'd edit his comment, but you can't do that. I think he means Iterator Jan 18, 2009 at 22:41
  • I like very much your solution, Allain, but I'm afraid it means we have to rewrite our entire application if we decide to use it.
    – Veynom
    Jan 19, 2009 at 8:26
  • 3
    Ok... then pick the way that doesn't require a complete rewrite. Jan 19, 2009 at 14:18
11

I understand that using the generic objects [stdClass()] and casting them as arrays answers the question, but I thought the Compositor was a great answer. Yet I felt it could use some feature enhancements and might be useful for someone else.

Features:

  • Specify reference or clone
  • Specify first or last entry to take precedence
  • Multiple (more than two) object merging with syntax similarity to array_merge
  • Method linking: $obj->f1()->f2()->f3()...
  • Dynamic composites: $obj->merge(...) /* work here */ $obj->merge(...)

Code:

class Compositor {

    protected $composite = array();
    protected $use_reference;
    protected $first_precedence;

    /**
     * __construct, Constructor
     *
     * Used to set options.
     *
     * @param bool $use_reference whether to use a reference (TRUE) or to copy the object (FALSE) [default]
     * @param bool $first_precedence whether the first entry takes precedence (TRUE) or last entry takes precedence (FALSE) [default]
     */
    public function __construct($use_reference = FALSE, $first_precedence = FALSE) {
        // Use a reference
        $this->use_reference = $use_reference === TRUE ? TRUE : FALSE;
        $this->first_precedence = $first_precedence === TRUE ? TRUE : FALSE;

    }

    /**
     * Merge, used to merge multiple objects stored in an array
     *
     * This is used to *start* the merge or to merge an array of objects.
     * It is not needed to start the merge, but visually is nice.
     *
     * @param object[]|object $objects array of objects to merge or a single object
     * @return object the instance to enable linking
     */

    public function & merge() {
        $objects = func_get_args();
        // Each object
        foreach($objects as &$object) $this->with($object);
        // Garbage collection
        unset($object);

        // Return $this instance
        return $this;
    }

    /**
     * With, used to merge a singluar object
     *
     * Used to add an object to the composition
     *
     * @param object $object an object to merge
     * @return object the instance to enable linking
     */
    public function & with(&$object) {
        // An object
        if(is_object($object)) {
            // Reference
            if($this->use_reference) {
                if($this->first_precedence) array_push($this->composite, $object);
                else array_unshift($this->composite, $object);
            }
            // Clone
            else {
                if($this->first_precedence) array_push($this->composite, clone $object);
                else array_unshift($this->composite, clone $object);
            }
        }

        // Return $this instance
        return $this;
    }

    /**
     * __get, retrieves the psudo merged object
     *
     * @param string $name name of the variable in the object
     * @return mixed returns a reference to the requested variable
     *
     */
    public function & __get($name) {
        $return = NULL;
        foreach($this->composite as &$object) {
            if(isset($object->$name)) {
                $return =& $object->$name;
                break;
            }
        }
        // Garbage collection
        unset($object);

        return $return;
    }
}

Usage:

$obj = new Compositor(use_reference, first_precedence);
$obj->merge([object $object [, object $object [, object $...]]]);
$obj->with([object $object]);

Example:

$obj1 = new stdClass();
$obj1->a = 'obj1:a';
$obj1->b = 'obj1:b';
$obj1->c = 'obj1:c';

$obj2 = new stdClass();
$obj2->a = 'obj2:a';
$obj2->b = 'obj2:b';
$obj2->d = 'obj2:d';

$obj3 = new Compositor();
$obj3->merge($obj1, $obj2);
$obj1->c = '#obj1:c';
var_dump($obj3->a, $obj3->b, $obj3->c, $obj3->d);
// obj2:a, obj2:b, obj1:c, obj2:d
$obj1->c;

$obj3 = new Compositor(TRUE);
$obj3->merge($obj1)->with($obj2);
$obj1->c = '#obj1:c';
var_dump($obj3->a, $obj3->b, $obj3->c, $obj3->d);
// obj1:a, obj1:b, obj1:c, obj2:d
$obj1->c = 'obj1:c';

$obj3 = new Compositor(FALSE, TRUE);
$obj3->with($obj1)->with($obj2);
$obj1->c = '#obj1:c';
var_dump($obj3->a, $obj3->b, $obj3->c, $obj3->d);
// obj1:a, obj1:b, #obj1:c, obj2:d
$obj1->c = 'obj1:c';
6
  • 2
    Just to point out: Call-time pass-by-reference was marked as deprecated in PHP 5.3.0 and removed in PHP 5.4.0 (resulting in a raised Fatal Error). To correct the issue: Replacing foreach($objects as &$object) $this->with(&$object); with foreach($objects as &$object) $this->with($object); corrects the issue. Source: [php.net/manual/en/language.references.pass.php]
    – wes.hysell
    Dec 16, 2013 at 22:16
  • 2
    Additionally: if($this->first_precedence) array_push($this->composite, &$object); else array_unshift($this->composite, &$object); should be replaced with if($this->first_precedence) array_push($this->composite, $object); else array_unshift($this->composite, $object);
    – wes.hysell
    Dec 16, 2013 at 22:20
  • 1
    so to summarize your comments remove Ampersand (&) from $object inside: foreach (first comment)... array_push, array_unshift (second comment) Apr 5, 2015 at 0:48
  • 1
    @Chris I updated the code to fix the issues per the comments above. Apr 8, 2015 at 17:41
  • In your 'Usage' code, you misspelled Compositor as Compositer
    – Xesau
    Sep 26, 2015 at 16:00
8

A very simple solution considering you have object A and B:

foreach($objB AS $var=>$value){
    $objA->$var = $value;
}

That's all. You now have objA with all values from objB.

1
  • Why would you not just do: $objB = $objA;
    – Scottymeuk
    Jun 13, 2013 at 15:15
2

The \ArrayObject class has the possibility to exchange the current array to disconnect the original reference. To do so, it comes with two handy methods: exchangeArray() and getArrayCopy(). The rest is plain simple array_merge() of the provided object with the ArrayObjects public properties:

class MergeBase extends ArrayObject
{
     public final function merge( Array $toMerge )
     {
          $this->exchangeArray( array_merge( $this->getArrayCopy(), $toMerge ) );
     }
 }

The usage is as easy as this:

 $base = new MergeBase();

 $base[] = 1;
 $base[] = 2;

 $toMerge = [ 3,4,5, ];

 $base->merge( $toMerge );
1
  • This actually should be the accepted answer. The only thing nice would be if merge($array) would actually request an \ArrayObject as well.
    – kaiser
    Sep 23, 2016 at 7:34
2

a solution To preserve,both methods and properties from merged onjects is to create a combinator class that can

  • take any number of objects on __construct
  • access any method using __call
  • accsess any property using __get

class combinator{
function __construct(){       
    $this->melt =  array_reverse(func_get_args());
      // array_reverse is to replicate natural overide
}
public function __call($method,$args){
    forEach($this->melt as $o){
        if(method_exists($o, $method)){
            return call_user_func_array([$o,$method], $args);
            //return $o->$method($args);
            }
        }
    }
public function __get($prop){
        foreach($this->melt as $o){
          if(isset($o->$prop))return $o->$prop;
        }
        return 'undefined';
    } 
}

simple use

class c1{
    public $pc1='pc1';
    function mc1($a,$b){echo __METHOD__." ".($a+$b);}
}
class c2{
    public $pc2='pc2';
    function mc2(){echo __CLASS__." ".__METHOD__;}
}

$comb=new combinator(new c1, new c2);

$comb->mc1(1,2);
$comb->non_existing_method();  //  silent
echo $comb->pc2;
2
  • Thats very clever, hats off to that. I don't think i would be comfortable with methods not being defined on the resulting objects class though.
    – Slytherin
    Dec 9, 2016 at 14:35
  • thanks ?.. for the hat ... It was just for fun and I agree with you about confort in use mostly regarding autocomplete in netbeans or other editor
    – bortunac
    Dec 10, 2016 at 17:32
1

I would go with linking the second object into a property of the first object. If the second object is the result of a function or method, use references. Ex:

//Not the result of a method
$obj1->extra = new Class2();

//The result of a method, for instance a factory class
$obj1->extra =& Factory::getInstance('Class2');
1

To merge any number of raw objects

function merge_obj(){
    foreach(func_get_args() as $a){
        $objects[]=(array)$a;
    }
    return (object)call_user_func_array('array_merge', $objects);
}
1

This snippet of code will recursively convert that data to a single type (array or object) without the nested foreach loops. Hope it helps someone!

Once an Object is in array format you can use array_merge and convert back to Object if you need to.

abstract class Util {
    public static function object_to_array($d) {
        if (is_object($d))
            $d = get_object_vars($d);

        return is_array($d) ? array_map(__METHOD__, $d) : $d;
    }

    public static function array_to_object($d) {
        return is_array($d) ? (object) array_map(__METHOD__, $d) : $d;
    }
}

Procedural way

function object_to_array($d) {
    if (is_object($d))
        $d = get_object_vars($d);

    return is_array($d) ? array_map(__FUNCTION__, $d) : $d;
}

function array_to_object($d) {
    return is_array($d) ? (object) array_map(__FUNCTION__, $d) : $d;
}

All credit goes to: Jason Oakley

0

Here is a function that will flatten an object or array. Use this only if you are sure your keys are unique. If you have keys with the same name they will be overwritten. You will need to place this in a class and replace "Functions" with the name of your class. Enjoy...

function flatten($array, $preserve_keys=1, &$out = array(), $isobject=0) {
        # Flatten a multidimensional array to one dimension, optionally preserving keys.
        #
        # $array - the array to flatten
        # $preserve_keys - 0 (default) to not preserve keys, 1 to preserve string keys only, 2 to preserve all keys
        # $out - internal use argument for recursion
        # $isobject - is internally set in order to remember if we're using an object or array
        if(is_array($array) || $isobject==1)
        foreach($array as $key => $child)
            if(is_array($child))
                $out = Functions::flatten($child, $preserve_keys, $out, 1); // replace "Functions" with the name of your class
            elseif($preserve_keys + is_string($key) > 1)
                $out[$key] = $child;
            else
                $out[] = $child;

        if(is_object($array) || $isobject==2)
        if(!is_object($out)){$out = new stdClass();}
        foreach($array as $key => $child)
            if(is_object($child))
                $out = Functions::flatten($child, $preserve_keys, $out, 2); // replace "Functions" with the name of your class
            elseif($preserve_keys + is_string($key) > 1)
                $out->$key = $child;
            else
                $out = $child;

        return $out;
}
0

Let's keep it simple!

function copy_properties($from, $to, $fields = null) {
    // copies properties/elements (overwrites duplicates)
    // can take arrays or objects 
    // if fields is set (an array), will only copy keys listed in that array
    // returns $to with the added/replaced properties/keys
    $from_array = is_array($from) ? $from : get_object_vars($from);
    foreach($from_array as $key => $val) {
        if(!is_array($fields) or in_array($key, $fields)) {
            if(is_object($to)) {
                $to->$key = $val;
            } else {
                $to[$key] = $val;
            }
        }
    }
    return($to);
}

If that doesn't answer your question, it will surely help towards the answer. Credit for the code above goes to myself :)

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