27

I'm sure this question has been asked before, my apologies for not finding it first.

The original array:

[0] => Array
    (
        [categoryId] => 1
        [eventId] => 2
        [eventName] => 3
        [vendorName] => 4
    )

[1] => Array
    (
        [categoryId] => 5
        [eventId] => 6
        [eventName] => 7
        [vendorName] => 8
    )

[2] => Array
    (
        [categoryId] => 9
        [eventId] => 10
        [eventName] => 11
        [vendorName] => 12
    )

My hoped for result out of: print_r(get_values_from_a_key_in_arrays('categoryId', $array));

[0] => 1
[1] => 5
[2] => 9

I'm just looking for something cleaner than writing my own foreach based function. If foreach is the answer, I already have that in place.

Edit: I don't want to use a hard-coded key, I was just showing an example call to the solution. Thanks! ^_^

Quick Grab Solution for PHP 5.3:

private function pluck($key, $data) {
    return array_reduce($data, function($result, $array) use($key) {
        isset($array[$key]) && $result[] = $array[$key];
        return $result;
    }, array());
}
5
  • 2
    This is known as plucking, and is not a default PHP function. You can easily write it yourself though.
    – Joost
    May 18, 2012 at 21:19
  • Really cool. I've done this before, but I never knew that the technical name for it was plucking.
    – Moses
    May 18, 2012 at 21:45
  • This is nice, but array_reduce() is the WRONG function. It's intended to "reduce the array to a single value." This is also true in other languages. You should rewrite with array_map() or array_walk() ...which will also simplify the code.
    – doublejosh
    Jun 24, 2016 at 21:56
  • @doublejosh I disagree. array_reduce is fine here. It's reducing an array of arrays to an array of values.
    – Michael
    Jul 27, 2016 at 23:13
  • The inner operation is indeed a reduce, I must have looked at the outer operation when I complained about the usage.
    – doublejosh
    Jul 27, 2016 at 23:16

8 Answers 8

34

So, the cool thing about higher-order collection/iterator functions such as pluck, filter, each, map, and friends is that they can be mixed and matched to compose a more complex set of operations.

Most languages provide these types of functions (look for packages like collection, iterator, or enumeration/enumerable)...some provide more functions than others and you will commonly see that the functions are named differently across languages (i.e. collect == map, reduce == fold). If a function doesn't exist in your language, you can create it from the ones that do exist.

As for your test case...we can use array_reduce to implement pluck. The first version I posted relied on array_map; however, I agree with @salathe that array_reduce is more succinct for this task; array_map is an OK option, but you end up having to do more work in the end. array_reduce can look a bit odd at first, but if the callback is neatly organized, all is well.

A less naive pluck would also check to see if it can "call" (a function/method) on the iterated value. In the naive implementation below, we assume the structure to be a hash (associative array).

This will setup the test-case data (Fixtures):

<?php

$data[] = array('categoryId' => 1,    'eventId' => 2,  'eventName' => 3,  'vendorName' => 4);
$data[] = array('categoryId' => 5,    'eventId' => 6,  'eventName' => 7,  'vendorName' => 8);
$data[] = array('categoryId' => 9,    'eventId' => 10, 'eventName' => 11, 'vendorName' => 12);
$data[] = array(/* no categoryId */   'eventId' => 10, 'eventName' => 11, 'vendorName' => 12);
$data[] = array('categoryId' => false,'eventId' => 10, 'eventName' => 11, 'vendorName' => 12);
$data[] = array('categoryId' => 0.0,  'eventId' => 10, 'eventName' => 11, 'vendorName' => 12);

Choose the version of pluck you'd prefer

$preferredPluck = 'pluck_array_reduce'; // or pluck_array_map

"pluck" for PHP 5.3+: array_reduce provides a terse implementation though not as easy to reason about as the array_map version:

function pluck_array_reduce($key, $data) {
  return array_reduce($data, function($result, $array) use($key){
    isset($array[$key]) &&
      $result[] = $array[$key];

    return $result;
  }, array());
}

"pluck" for PHP 5.3+: array_map isn't perfect for this so we have to do more checking (and it still doesn't account for many potential cases):

function pluck_array_map($key, $data) {
  $map = array_map(function($array) use($key){
    return isset($array[$key]) ? $array[$key] : null;
  }, $data);

  // is_scalar isn't perfect; to make this right for you, you may have to adjust
  return array_filter($map, 'is_scalar');
}

"pluck" for legacy PHP <5.3

We could have used the legacy create_function; however, it is bad form, not recommended, and also not at all elegant, thus, I've decided not to show it.

function pluck_compat($key, $data) {
  $map = array();
  foreach ($data as $array) {
    if (array_key_exists($key, $array)) {
      $map[] = $array[$key];
    }
  }
  unset($array);

  return $map;
}

Here we choose a version of "pluck" to call based on the version of PHP we are running. If you run the entire script, you should get the correct answer no matter what version you are on.

$actual   = version_compare(PHP_VERSION, '5.3.0', '>=')
          ? $preferredPluck('categoryId', $data)
          : pluck_compat('categoryId', $data);
$expected = array(1, 5, 9, false, 0.0);
$variance = count(array_diff($expected, $actual));

var_dump($expected, $actual);
echo PHP_EOL;
echo 'variance: ', $variance, PHP_EOL;

print @assert($variance)
    ? 'Assertion Failed'
    : 'Assertion Passed';

Notice there is no ending '?>'. That is because it isn't needed. More good can come of leaving it off than from keeping it around.

FWIW, it looks like this is being added to PHP 5.5 as array_column.

25
  • 1
    Woah, what version of PHP is this? I've never seen 'use', that's pretty awesome.
    – Caleb Gray
    May 18, 2012 at 21:39
  • use is provided in PHP 5.3 when they introduced anonymous functions (lambdas and closures): php.net/functions.anonymous May 18, 2012 at 21:49
  • For the sake of others that find this, do you mind using create_function, and just putting the array_map inside the array_filter call (getting rid of the $map variable)?
    – Caleb Gray
    May 18, 2012 at 21:50
  • 1
    P.S. The map/filter step can be done in one with array_reduce().
    – salathe
    May 18, 2012 at 22:17
  • 1
    Hi @salathe; you brought up a good point. I almost did my original implementation with array_reduce(); however, I generally reserve array_reduce for situations that can't be handled easily with something else. array_reduce is awesome; however, it takes just a tad more cognitive overhead to reason about. May 18, 2012 at 22:30
9

Mapping is what you need:

$input = array(
    array(
        'categoryId' => 1,
        'eventId' => 2,
        'eventName' => 3,
        'vendorName' => 4,
    ),
    array(
        'categoryId' => 5,
        'eventId' => 6,
        'eventName' => 7,
        'vendorName' => 8,
    ),
    array(
        'categoryId' => 9,
        'eventId' => 10,
        'eventName' => 11,
        'vendorName' => 12,
    ),
);

$result = array_map(function($val){
    return $val['categoryId'];
}, $input);

Or creating a function you wanted:

function get_values_from_a_key_in_arrays($key, $input){
    return array_map(function($val) use ($key) {
        return $val[$key];
    }, $input);
};

and then using it:

$result = get_values_from_a_key_in_arrays('categoryId', $array);

It will work in PHP >= 5.3, where anonymous callbacks are allowed. For earlier versions you will need to define callback earlier and pass its name instead of anonymous function.

11
  • can you make return $val['categoryId']; to be return $val[$key]; ?
    – Songo
    May 18, 2012 at 21:47
  • 1
    @Songo: Not without creating an array consisting of count($input) values of $key, one solution would be array_map(function($val, $key = 'categoryId') {return $val[$key];}, $input) -- but I can't see any benefit in doing that in a lambda function.
    – Alix Axel
    May 18, 2012 at 21:51
  • @Songo: The other solution would be: array_map(function($val, $key) {return $val[$key];}, $input, array_fill(0, count($input), 'categoryId')).
    – Alix Axel
    May 18, 2012 at 21:53
  • 1
    @Songo: I have added a function exactly as OP requested, so you should be satisfied ;)
    – Tadeck
    May 18, 2012 at 21:59
  • 1
    Don't use create_function(), if don't want array_map() with an anonymous function: instead, use a loop (which will be "faster" than calling the map callback anyway).
    – salathe
    May 18, 2012 at 22:15
6

There's no built-in function for this, but it's usually referred as "pluck".

1
  • As of PHP 5.5, there is a built-in: array_column.
    – bishop
    Oct 26, 2016 at 14:12
5
<?php
$a = array(
        array('a' => 1, 'b' => 2),
        array('a' => 2, 'b' => 2),
        array('a' => 3, 'b' => 2),
        array('a' => 4, 'b' => 2)
);

function get_a($v) {
        return $v['a'];
}

var_dump(array_map('get_a', $a));

You can use an create_function or an anonymous function (PHP 5.3 >=)

<?php
$a = array(
        array('a' => 1, 'b' => 2),
        array('a' => 2, 'b' => 2),
        array('a' => 3, 'b' => 2),
        array('a' => 4, 'b' => 2)
);

var_dump(array_map(create_function('$v', 'return $v["a"];'), $a));

I'd write a callback function, as above, and then use it with array_map.

4
  • if you're using PHP5.3 or above, you could write get_a as a lambda function, and make it even more compact. (edit... as I notice other answers are doing)
    – Spudley
    May 18, 2012 at 21:29
  • @Spudley: See my answer, which does it exactly in a way you mentioned.
    – Tadeck
    May 18, 2012 at 21:30
  • @Tadeck - yep, I saw it (and gave you +1), but only after I'd commented on this answer first.
    – Spudley
    May 18, 2012 at 21:31
  • create_function sucks and it's available prior to PHP 5.3.
    – Alix Axel
    May 18, 2012 at 21:54
4

As of PHP 5.5, use array_column:

$events = [
    [ 'categoryId' => 1, 'eventId' =>  2, 'eventName' =>  3, 'vendorName' =>  4 ],
    [ 'categoryId' => 5, 'eventId' =>  6, 'eventName' =>  7, 'vendorName' =>  8 ],
    [ 'categoryId' => 9, 'eventId' => 10, 'eventName' => 11, 'vendorName' => 12 ],
];

print_r(array_column($events, 'categoryId'));

See it online at 3v4l.

For versions before 5.5, you may consider using a polyfill.

3

There's no built in function. But one is easily made with array_map().

$array = array(
    array(
        "categoryID"   => 1,
        "CategoryName" => 2,
        "EventName"    => 3,
        "VendorName"   => 4
    ),
    array(
        "categoryID"   => 5,
        "CategoryName" => 6,
        "EventName"    => 7,
        "VendorName"   => 8
    ),
    array(
        "categoryID"   => 9,
        "CategoryName" => 10,
        "EventName"    => 11,
        "VendorName"   => 12
    )
);

$newArray = array_map(function($el) {
    return $el["categoryID"];
}, $array);

var_dump($newArray);
2

Where is lisp when you need it? Actually in php it is pretty easy to manage too. Just use the array_map function as illustrated below.

# bunch o data
$data = array();
$data[0] = array("id" => 100, "name" => 'ted');
$data[1] = array("id" => 200, "name" => 'mac');
$data[2] = array("id" => 204, "name" => 'bub');

# what you want to do to each bit of it
function pick($n) { return($n['id']); }
# what you get after you do that
$map = array_map("pick", $data);
# see for yourself
print_r($map);
0

You could use array_filter, and pass in a function based on the desired key.

Tadeck's answer is way better though.

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