134

Need to store values from foreach loop into an array, need help doing that.

The code below does not work, only stores the last value, tried $items .= ..., but that is not doing the trick either, any help will be appreciated.

foreach($group_membership as $i => $username) {
    $items = array($username);
}

print_r($items);
2
  • 14
    .= appends text. [] appends onto an array.
    – Skilldrick
    Jun 15, 2010 at 13:40
  • By far Skilldrick nailed it with the one liner above no need to go any further. Jan 17, 2020 at 19:20

9 Answers 9

307

Declare the $items array outside the loop and use $items[] to add items to the array:

$items = array();
foreach($group_membership as $username) {
 $items[] = $username;
}

print_r($items);
2
  • 7
    Also, don't extract the key ($i) if you're not going to use it. Jun 15, 2010 at 13:44
  • what would happen if some of the $username are null? We have a similar situation where records are coming form an API, and somehow we are ending up with some null records in the array.
    – pixelwiz
    Apr 16, 2018 at 15:34
16

Use

$items[] = $username;
3
  • 10
    Just make sure $items = array(); appears before the loop.
    – Skilldrick
    Jun 15, 2010 at 13:38
  • Can you help explain why you have to declare $items = array(); before the loop. I did something like this and didn't declare it and it still works. Is it better to add it or is it not required?
    – robk27
    Mar 17, 2017 at 12:46
  • Check this out @robk27 stackoverflow.com/questions/8246047/… Oct 12, 2018 at 14:32
8

Try

$items = array_values ( $group_membership );
1
  • 1
    Well I assume the foreach loop is doing more than that, otherwise this is the best solution. Jun 15, 2010 at 13:46
8
<?php 
$items = array();
$count = 0;
foreach($group_membership as $i => $username) { 
 $items[$count++] = $username; 
} 
print_r($items); 
?>
4
  • 3
    No need for $count stuff. Just $array[] = $thing;
    – user985818
    Feb 6, 2016 at 14:14
  • I am going to hold off on downvoting this answer although: 1. It is a code-only answer that 2.Teaches developers unnecessary/bad practices ...because this is a great chance to do the Disciplined thing and make Stackoverflow a better resource. Jun 27, 2019 at 7:04
  • I have issue where my array returns only last element that was pushed into array. Using count as suggested by you resolved my issue.
    – armin
    Jun 19, 2020 at 5:53
  • Great answer for having different values with same name in associative arrays. Thanks. Jul 17, 2021 at 23:28
2

You can try to do my answer,

you wrote this:

<?php
foreach($group_membership as $i => $username) {
    $items = array($username);
}

print_r($items);
?>

And in your case I would do this:

<?php
$items = array();
foreach ($group_membership as $username) { // If you need the pointer (but I don't think) you have to add '$i => ' before $username
    $items[] = $username;
} ?>

As you show in your question it seems that you need an array of usernames that are in a particular group :) In this case I prefer a good sql query with a simple while loop ;)

<?php
$query = "SELECT `username` FROM group_membership AS gm LEFT JOIN users AS u ON gm.`idUser` = u.`idUser`";
$result = mysql_query($query);
while ($record = mysql_fetch_array($result)) { \
    $items[] = $username; 
} 
?>

while is faster, but the last example is only a result of an observation. :)

2

This is how you do it:

foreach($orders as $item){
   $transactionIds[]  =   $item->generated_order_id;
}

dump($transactionIds);

This is assuming $orders collection has a field called 'generated_order_id'.

0
$items=array(); 
$j=0; 

foreach($group_membership as $i => $username){ 
    $items[$j++]=$username; 
}

Just try the above in your code .

1
  • This code-only answer should not be used by any developers. The counter and incrementing are not necessary at all. Jun 27, 2019 at 7:05
0

Just to save you too much typos:

foreach($group_membership as $username){
        $username->items = array(additional array to add);
    }
    print_r($group_membership);
-1

this question seem quite old but incase you come pass it, you can use the PHP inbuilt function array_push() to push data in an array using the example below.

<?php
    $item = array();
    foreach($group_membership as $i => $username) {
        array_push($item, $username);
    }
    print_r($items);
?>
1
  • Making iterated function calls is inefficient. The square brace pushing syntax (suggested 8 years earlier) will be more efficient. This answer should not be used to push single elements into an array. (and the declaration of $i is useless) Jun 27, 2019 at 7:07

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