I have two arrays:
$arr1 = array('a' => 10, 'b' => 20);
$arr2 = array('a' => 10, 'b' => 20, 'c' => 30);
How can I use array_filter()
to drop elements from $arr2
that don't exist in $arr1
? Like "c" in my example.
There is a function specifically made for this purpose: array_intersect():
array_intersect — Computes the intersection of arrays
$arr2 = array_intersect($arr1, $arr2);
If you want to compare keys, not the values like array_intersect(), use array_intersect_key():
array_intersect_key — Computes the intersection of arrays using keys for comparison
$arr2 = array_intersect_key($arr1, $arr2);
If you want to compare key=>value
pairs, use array_intersect_assoc():
array_intersect_assoc — Computes the intersection of arrays with additional index check
$arr2 = array_intersect_assoc($arr1, $arr2);
$arr2 = array_intersect_key($arr1, array_flip($arr2));
Aug 19, 2016 at 10:49
Use in_array in your array_filter callback:
$arr2 = array_filter($arr2, function($e) use ($arr1) {
return in_array($e, $arr1);
});
Note that this will regard the values of the elements, not the keys. array_filter will not give you any key to work with so if that is what you need a regular foreach loop may be better suited.
To get the elements that exist in $arr2
which also exist in $arr1
(i.e. drop elements of $arr2
that don't exist in $arr1
), you can intersect based on the key like this:
array_intersect_key($arr2, $arr1); // [a] => 10, [b] => 20
Update
Since PHP 7 it's possible to pass mode
to array_filter()
to indicate what value should be passed in the provided callback function:
array_filter($arr2, function($key) use ($arr1) {
return isset($arr1[$key]);
}, ARRAY_FILTER_USE_KEY);
Since PHP 7.4 you can also drop the use ()
syntax by using arrow functions:
array_filter($arr2, fn($key) => isset($arr1[$key]), ARRAY_FILTER_USE_KEY);
$arr1
instead:$arr2 = $arr1;
. So probably you want to add some information what specifically is the point here.b
in one of the arrays would help to crystalize what is desired in the result array.