3

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.

2
  • In your example, you don't need to because you can just use $arr1 instead: $arr2 = $arr1;. So probably you want to add some information what specifically is the point here.
    – hakre
    Jun 5, 2012 at 9:16
  • This is not a terrific minimal reproducible example because the sample data has identical associative elements. Your plain English description of the requirements may be not be accurately expressing your goal or may confuse readers who do not use English as a first language. Changing the element value for, say, b in one of the arrays would help to crystalize what is desired in the result array. Mar 19, 2023 at 22:11

3 Answers 3

8

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); 
2
  • thanks, it works with array_intersect_key but only if I switch arguments
    – Alex
    Jun 5, 2012 at 10:45
  • As an addition, for those who may want to compare keys but provide the keys as values, you can use array_flip as well, eg. $arr2 = array_intersect_key($arr1, array_flip($arr2));
    – Tim Malone
    Aug 19, 2016 at 10:49
4

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.

0
1

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);
0

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