924

PHP treats all arrays as associative, so there aren't any built in functions. Can anyone recommend a fairly efficient way to check if an array "is a list" (contains only numeric keys starting from 0)?

Basically, I want to be able to differentiate between this:

$sequentialArray = [
    'apple', 'orange', 'tomato', 'carrot'
];

and this:

$assocArray = [
    'fruit1' => 'apple',
    'fruit2' => 'orange',
    'veg1' => 'tomato',
    'veg2' => 'carrot'
];
4
  • 13
    This method has caveats, but often I just do if (isset($array[0])), which is simple and fast. Of course, you should first be sure the array isn't empty, and you should have some knowledge on the possible contents of the array so that the method couldn't fail (like mixed numeric/associative, or non-sequential). Mar 12, 2016 at 17:58
  • 1
    @OlleHärstedt Not according to US High Court. ;-)
    – MC Emperor
    Mar 6, 2020 at 13:56
  • 1
    @MCEmperor Wiki's own page about "tomato" states it's a fruit en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomato definitions change drastically when money comes into play :P Just ask Jaffa "cake" about it
    – James
    Apr 18, 2021 at 23:33
  • 16
    PHP 8.1 introduces a new function for it: array_is_list: stackoverflow.com/a/69859866/7082164
    – JSowa
    Nov 5, 2021 at 22:30

60 Answers 60

790
Answer recommended by PHP Collective

Since 8.1 PHP has a simple answer, array_is_list().

For the legacy code you can use the following function (wrapping it in function_exists() to make it portable):

if (!function_exists('array_is_list')) {
    function array_is_list(array $arr)
    {
        if ($arr === []) {
            return true;
        }
        return array_keys($arr) === range(0, count($arr) - 1);
    }
}

And then you can use the this function with any PHP version.

var_dump(array_is_list([])); // true
var_dump(array_is_list(['a', 'b', 'c'])); // true
var_dump(array_is_list(["0" => 'a', "1" => 'b', "2" => 'c'])); // true
var_dump(array_is_list(["1" => 'a', "0" => 'b', "2" => 'c'])); // false
var_dump(array_is_list(["a" => 'a', "b" => 'b', "c" => 'c'])); // false
15
  • 43
    Very elegant solution. Note that it returns TRUE in the (ambiguous) case of an empty array. Jan 8, 2016 at 0:09
  • 37
    I think it is more useful to think of sequential arrays as a special case of associative arrays. So every array is associative, but only some are sequential. Therefore, a function isSequential() would make more sense than isAssoc(). In such a function, the empty array should be seen as sequential. The formula could be array() === $arr || !isAssoc($arr).
    – donquixote
    Feb 21, 2016 at 2:03
  • 24
    I think this would avoid a lot of potential cpu time and memory if one would check if isset($arr[0]) is false before extracting all the keys as is it clearly associative if the array is not empty but has no element in 0 position. As "most" real associative arrays have strings as keys this should be a nice optimisation for the general case of such function.
    – OderWat
    May 24, 2017 at 23:57
  • 14
    @OderWat - Your optimization should use array_key_exists instead of isset because if the zero element is a null value, the isset will return false incorrectly. A null value should ordinarily be a legitimate value in such an array.
    – OCDev
    Sep 3, 2017 at 19:55
  • 2
    Since PHP 8.1.0 there is array_is_list(): Determines if the given array is a list. An array is considered a list if its keys consist of consecutive numbers from 0 to count($array)-1. This is contrary to if (array() === $arr) return false; but it considers an empty array is a sequence with exactly 0 elements.
    – codekandis
    Mar 23, 2022 at 13:47
489

To merely check whether the array has non-integer keys (not whether the array is sequentially-indexed or zero-indexed):

function has_string_keys(array $array) {
  return count(array_filter(array_keys($array), 'is_string')) > 0;
}

If there is at least one string key, $array will be regarded as an associative array.

11
  • 27
    This method is much better than it seems. If count(filtered_array) == count(original_array), then it is an assoc array. If count(filtered_array) == 0, then it is an indexed array. If count(filtered_array) < count(original_array), then the array has both numeric and string keys.
    – Jamol
    Jan 31, 2012 at 13:31
  • 7
    @MikePretzlaw of course it iterates; there is (obviously) no possible way to determine whether all the keys of the array are ints without looking at all the keys in the array. I assume the non-iterating alternatives we're supposed to be seeing below are ones like $isIndexed = array_values($arr) === $arr;? To which I ask: how do you think array_values() works? How do you think === applied to arrays works? The answer is of course that they also iterate over the array.
    – Mark Amery
    Dec 25, 2015 at 16:25
  • 6
    @ARW "PHP seems to cast everything to an int in an array definition if it can." - yep, that's exactly what happens. The biggest WTF is that it even does this to floats; if you try var_dump([1.2 => 'foo', 1.5 => 'bar']); you'll discover that you get the array [1 => 'bar']. There's no way whatsoever to find out a key's original type. Yes, all this is awful; PHP's arrays are by far the worst part of the language, and most of the damage is irreparable and owes to the idea of using a single construct for traditional arrays and traditional hashmaps being an awful one from the beginning.
    – Mark Amery
    Dec 25, 2015 at 16:35
  • 41
    @MarkAmery The above, while simple, guarantees a 100% walk of the array. It would be more efficient, especially if you're dealing with large arrays, if you were checking for string or int and broke out on the first you found. For instance: function isAssociative($arr) { foreach ($arr as $key => $value) { if (is_string($key)) return true; } return false; }
    – Thought
    Feb 18, 2016 at 17:27
  • 2
    @Thought Your code work very fast but it cannot detect sequential array. Example array(1 => 'a', 0 => 'b', 2 => 'c') will become false (sequential array) while it should be true (associative array). toolsqa.com/data-structures/array-in-programming I'm not sure is the key must be ascending order? (0, 1, ...)
    – vee
    May 21, 2019 at 16:42
148

Surely this is a better alternative.

<?php
$arr = array(1,2,3,4);
$isIndexed = array_values($arr) === $arr;
9
  • 55
    This will duplicate the values in the array, which is potentially very expensive. You're much better off examining the array keys.
    – user229044
    Jan 20, 2011 at 15:47
  • 8
    I just used ==; I don't think there is a need for === here. But to answer the "unset and it doesn't work": once you unset the first element, it's no longer an integer-indexed array starting at 0. So IMO it does work. Aug 2, 2012 at 21:32
  • 4
    Agree with @grantwparks: A sparse array isn't indexed. Interestingly because there's no way to actually delete an element out of the middle of an indexed array PHP is basically declaring all arrays as associative and numeric is just a 'make up the key for me' version. Jan 14, 2013 at 1:01
  • 7
    The only problem I have with this is that the === will waste time checking if the values are equal, even though we are only interested in the keys. For this reason I prefer the $k = array_keys( $arr ); return $k === array_keys( $k ); version.
    – Jesse
    Jan 20, 2013 at 7:05
  • 5
    An added note, this fails on arrays specified with numeric keys that are out of order. e.g. $myArr = array ( 0 => 'a', 3 => 'b', 4 => 1, 2 => 2, 1 => '3' ); One potential work around is running ksort($arr) before doing the test
    – Scott
    Jun 5, 2013 at 21:58
79

Many commenters in this question don't understand how arrays work in PHP. From the array documentation:

A key may be either an integer or a string. If a key is the standard representation of an integer, it will be interpreted as such (i.e. "8" will be interpreted as 8, while "08" will be interpreted as "08"). Floats in key are truncated to integer. The indexed and associative array types are the same type in PHP, which can both contain integer and string indices.

In other words, there is no such thing as an array key of "8" because it will always be (silently) converted to the integer 8. So trying to differentiate between integers and numeric strings is unnecessary.

If you want the most efficient way to check an array for non-integer keys without making a copy of part of the array (like array_keys() does) or all of it (like foreach does):

function keyedNext( &$arr, &$k){
    $k = key($arr);
    return next($arr);
}

for ($k = key(reset($my_array)); is_int($k); keyedNext($my_array,$k))
    $onlyIntKeys = is_null($k);

This works because key() returns NULL when the current array position is invalid and NULL can never be a valid key (if you try to use NULL as an array key it gets silently converted to "").

7
  • This doesn't work for non-sequential integer keys. Try it with [2 => 'a', 4 => 'b'].
    – DavidJ
    Sep 4, 2012 at 12:29
  • 2
    @DavidJ, What do you mean by "doesn't work"? It successfully determines that all the keys are integers. Are you claiming that an array like the one you posted shouldn't be considered a "numeric array"? Mar 16, 2013 at 0:29
  • 7
    A non-associative array must have keys ranging from 0 to count($array)-1, in this strict order. A preliminary check with is_array() may help. Add an increasing variable to check the key sequence: for ($k = 0, reset($array) ; $k === key($array) ; next($array)) ++$k; That settles the deal.
    – ofavre
    Jun 25, 2013 at 15:52
  • 3
    Using foreach instead of explicit iteration is about twice faster.
    – ofavre
    Jun 26, 2013 at 9:06
  • 2
    If you want to make this into a function: function isAssocStr($array) { for (reset($array); is_int(key($array)); next($array)) { if (is_null(key($array))) return false; } return true; }
    – Katrina
    Feb 18, 2015 at 17:15
53

PHP 8.1 adds a built-in function to determine whether an array is a list with those semantics, or not. the function is array_is_list:

$list = ["a", "b", "c"];

array_is_list($list); // true

$notAList = [1 => "a", 2 => "b", 3 => "c"];

array_is_list($notAList); // false

$alsoNotAList = ["a" => "a", "b" => "b", "c" => "c"];

array_is_list($alsoNotAList); // false

Please note that this function returns true on empty arrays.

array_is_list([]); // true

reference

7
  • 4
    Thanks for pointing out the native solution! You might add that there also is a polyfill in packagist.org/packages/symfony/polyfill-php81 so this should be resolved once and for all for anyone using PHP 7.1 and above. Just use symfony/polyfill-php81 provided by composer.
    – davil
    Jun 23, 2021 at 8:42
  • It's a shame that this answer will never get to the top. Jan 22, 2022 at 20:40
  • Have faith. Stack Overflow will soon roll out their Trending sort algorithm and it will have an easier time getting noticed. Feb 11, 2022 at 12:06
  • I made an array_is_assoc function that first checks if array is empty (which returns True) and otherwise returns ! array_is_list()
    – Stephen R
    Dec 8, 2022 at 22:31
  • @MarcelHernandez Agreed. SO needs an algorithm that notices new answers that get upvotes, to account for changes in a language.
    – Stephen R
    Dec 8, 2022 at 22:33
42

As stated by the OP:

PHP treats all arrays as associative

it is not quite sensible (IMHO) to write a function that checks if an array is associative. So first thing first: what is a key in a PHP array?:

The key can either be an integer or a string.

That means there are 3 possible cases:

  • Case 1. all keys are numeric / integers.
  • Case 2. all keys are strings.
  • Case 3. some keys are strings, some keys are numeric / integers.

We can check each case with the following functions.

Case 1: all keys are numeric / integers.

Note: This function returns true for empty arrays too.

//! Check whether the input is an array whose keys are all integers.
/*!
    \param[in] $InputArray          (array) Input array.
    \return                         (bool) \b true iff the input is an array whose keys are all integers.
*/
function IsArrayAllKeyInt($InputArray)
{
    if(!is_array($InputArray))
    {
        return false;
    }

    if(count($InputArray) <= 0)
    {
        return true;
    }

    return array_unique(array_map("is_int", array_keys($InputArray))) === array(true);
}

Case 2: all keys are strings.

Note: This function returns true for empty arrays too.

//! Check whether the input is an array whose keys are all strings.
/*!
    \param[in] $InputArray          (array) Input array.
    \return                         (bool) \b true iff the input is an array whose keys are all strings.
*/
function IsArrayAllKeyString($InputArray)
{
    if(!is_array($InputArray))
    {
        return false;
    }

    if(count($InputArray) <= 0)
    {
        return true;
    }

    return array_unique(array_map("is_string", array_keys($InputArray))) === array(true);
}

Case 3. some keys are strings, some keys are numeric / integers.

Note: This function returns true for empty arrays too.

//! Check whether the input is an array with at least one key being an integer and at least one key being a string.
/*!
    \param[in] $InputArray          (array) Input array.
    \return                         (bool) \b true iff the input is an array with at least one key being an integer and at least one key being a string.
*/
function IsArraySomeKeyIntAndSomeKeyString($InputArray)
{
    if(!is_array($InputArray))
    {
        return false;
    }

    if(count($InputArray) <= 0)
    {
        return true;
    }

    return count(array_unique(array_map("is_string", array_keys($InputArray)))) >= 2;
}

It follows that:


Now, for an array to be a "genuine" array that we are all accustomed to, meaning:

  • Its keys are all numeric / integers.
  • Its keys are sequential (i.e. increasing by step 1).
  • Its keys start from zero.

We can check with the following function.

Case 3a. keys are numeric / integers, sequential, and zero-based.

Note: This function returns true for empty arrays too.

//! Check whether the input is an array whose keys are numeric, sequential, and zero-based.
/*!
    \param[in] $InputArray          (array) Input array.
    \return                         (bool) \b true iff the input is an array whose keys are numeric, sequential, and zero-based.
*/
function IsArrayKeyNumericSequentialZeroBased($InputArray)
{
    if(!is_array($InputArray))
    {
        return false;
    }

    if(count($InputArray) <= 0)
    {
        return true;
    }

    return array_keys($InputArray) === range(0, count($InputArray) - 1);
}

Caveats / Pitfalls (or, even more peculiar facts about array keys in PHP)

Integer keys

The keys for these arrays are integers:

array(0 => "b");
array(13 => "b");
array(-13 => "b");          // Negative integers are also integers.
array(0x1A => "b");         // Hexadecimal notation.

String keys

The keys for these arrays are strings:

array("fish and chips" => "b");
array("" => "b");                                   // An empty string is also a string.
array("[email protected]" => "b");    // Strings may contain non-alphanumeric characters.
array("stack\t\"over\"\r\nflow's cool" => "b");     // Strings may contain special characters.
array('$tα€k↔øv∈rflöw⛄' => "b");                    // Strings may contain all kinds of symbols.
array("functіon" => "b");                           // You think this looks fine? Think again! (see https://stackoverflow.com/q/9246051/1402846)
array("ま말轉转ДŁ" => "b");                         // How about Japanese/Korean/Chinese/Russian/Polish?
array("fi\x0sh" => "b");                            // Strings may contain null characters.
array(file_get_contents("https://www.google.com/images/nav_logo114.png") => "b");   // Strings may even be binary!

Integer keys that look like strings

If you think the key in array("13" => "b") is a string, you are wrong. From the doc here:

Strings containing valid integers will be cast to the integer type. E.g. the key "8" will actually be stored under 8. On the other hand "08" will not be cast, as it isn't a valid decimal integer.

For example, the key for these arrays are integers:

array("13" => "b");
array("-13" => "b");                        // Negative, ok.

But the key for these arrays are strings:

array("13." => "b");
array("+13" => "b");                        // Positive, not ok.
array("-013" => "b");
array("0x1A" => "b");                       // Not converted to integers even though it's a valid hexadecimal number.
array("013" => "b");                        // Not converted to integers even though it's a valid octal number.
array("18446744073709551616" => "b");       // Not converted to integers as it can't fit into a 64-bit integer.

What's more, according to the doc,

The size of an integer is platform-dependent, although a maximum value of about two billion is the usual value (that's 32 bits signed). 64-bit platforms usually have a maximum value of about 9E18, except for Windows, which is always 32 bit. PHP does not support unsigned integers.

So the key for this array may or may not be an integer - it depends on your platform.

array("60000000000" => "b");                // Array key could be integer or string, it can fit into a 64-bit (but not 32-bit) integer.

Even worse, PHP tends to be buggy if the integer is near the 231 = 2,147,483,648 boundary (see bug 51430, bug 52899). For example, on my local environment (PHP 5.3.8 on XAMPP 1.7.7 on Windows 7), var_dump(array("2147483647" => "b")) gives

array(1) {
    [2147483647]=>
    string(1) "b"
}   

but on this live demo on codepad (PHP 5.2.5), the same expression gives

array(1) {
    ["2147483647"]=>
    string(1) "b"
}

So the key is an integer in one environment but a string in another, even though 2147483647 is a valid signed 32-bit integer.

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  • 2
    Except, as I mention below, it involves creating a duplicate array to the one being checked, making it very expensive for large arrays, and a potential source of out of memory crashes on shared hosts.
    – podperson
    Jun 2, 2015 at 15:48
  • I am suprised you can cast "-13" to a string, but not "+13". I guess nobody would write "+13" instead of "13", but it is still somewhat weired
    – Tobias
    Oct 28, 2020 at 14:45
37

Speed-wise:

function isAssoc($array)
{
    return ($array !== array_values($array));
}

Memory-wise:

function isAssoc($array)
{
    $array = array_keys($array); return ($array !== array_keys($array));
}
1
  • the following array: array(02=>11,1,2,456); is shown as not having numerical keys using the above algorithm, even if 02===2 Nov 18, 2015 at 9:50
31

Actually the most efficient way is thus:

function is_assoc($array){
   $keys = array_keys($array);
   return $keys !== array_keys($keys);
}

This works because it compares the keys (which for a sequential array are always 0,1,2 etc) to the keys of the keys (which will always be 0,1,2 etc).

Laravel use this approach.

2
  • 1
    Clever, but not good. Why is this "most efficient"? It would be a lot more readable to just compare the array_keys($a) to range(0, count($a)). The most clever solution is rarely the best one in my experience. Especially when being clever adds literally no value over the obvious and clean alternative.
    – Shane H
    Jul 31, 2012 at 1:45
  • 2
    It's not efficient insofar as it involves calling array_keys vs. just checking until you find a non-sequential integer index. Under the hood you're doing that anyway, but you already duplicated a big array.
    – podperson
    Mar 21, 2017 at 21:50
23
function checkAssoc($array){
    return  ctype_digit( implode('', array_keys($array) ) );
}
5
  • 2
    This is the only answer (at the time of my comment) that can deal with the following: $array = array(0=>'blah', 2=>'yep', 3=>'wahey')
    – Shabbyrobe
    Aug 3, 2010 at 11:01
  • but array('1'=>'asdf', '2'=>'too') will be regarded as associative array while it's actually not (the keys are actually string) Apr 14, 2011 at 7:41
  • 1
    @CaptainkurO You mean numerical. It is an associative array.
    – devios1
    Feb 21, 2012 at 16:51
  • 1
    This function returns true if the keys are: zero, integers (positive only), an empty string, or any combination of the above, such as the string "09". This function does not take the order of the keys into account. So array(0=>'blah', 2=>'yep', 3=>'wahey'), array(0=>'blah', 2=>'yep', 1=>'wahey') and array('blah', 'yep', 'wahey') are all associative according to this function, while array('a'=>'blah', 'b'=>'yep', 'c'=>'wahey') is not.
    – Pang
    Nov 23, 2012 at 1:23
  • 1
    @CaptainkurO you are incorrect. '1' and '2' will be stored as integers. Read the quoted part of squirrel's answer from May 11, 2011 at 19:34. PHP does not store string keys that look exactly like integers. It converts those to integers. May 19, 2013 at 4:52
18

I've used both array_keys($obj) !== range(0, count($obj) - 1) and array_values($arr) !== $arr (which are duals of each other, although the second is cheaper than the first) but both fail for very large arrays.

This is because array_keys and array_values are both very costly operations (since they build a whole new array of size roughly that of the original).

The following function is more robust than the methods provided above:

function array_type( $obj ){
    $last_key = -1;
    $type = 'index';
    foreach( $obj as $key => $val ){
        if( !is_int( $key ) || $key < 0 ){
            return 'assoc';
        }
        if( $key !== $last_key + 1 ){
            $type = 'sparse';
        }
        $last_key = $key;
    }
    return $type;
}

Also note that if you don't care to differentiate sparse arrays from associative arrays you can simply return 'assoc' from both if blocks.

Finally, while this might seem much less "elegant" than a lot of "solutions" on this page, in practice it is vastly more efficient. Almost any associative array will be detected instantly. Only indexed arrays will get checked exhaustively, and the methods outlined above not only check indexed arrays exhaustively, they duplicate them.

0
16

Here is another simple but powerful logic ( which is also used by great Laravel framework in it's internal mechanism )

/**
 * Determines if an array is associative.
 * @param  array  $array
 * @return bool
 */
function isAssoc(array $array)
{
    $keys = array_keys($array);

    return array_keys($keys) !== $keys;
}
1
  • 3
    Thanks! I use Laravel, so I can just use the native Arr::isAssoc Mar 8, 2021 at 6:54
14

I think the following two functions are the best way to go for checking 'if an array is associative or numeric'. Since 'numeric' could mean only numeric keys or only sequential numeric keys, two functions are listed below that check either condition:

function is_indexed_array(&$arr) {
  for (reset($arr); is_int(key($arr)); next($arr));
  return is_null(key($arr));
}

function is_sequential_array(&$arr, $base = 0) {
  for (reset($arr), $base = (int) $base; key($arr) === $base++; next($arr));
  return is_null(key($arr));
}

The first function checks if each key is an integer value. The second function checks if each key is an integer value and in addition checks if all keys are sequential starting at $base, which defaults to 0 and thus can be omitted if you do not need to specify another base value. key($my_array) returns null if the read pointer is moved past the end of the array, which is what ends the for loop and makes the statement after the for loop return true if all keys were integer. If not, the loop ends prematurely because a key is of type string, and the statement after the for loop will return false. The latter function in addition adds one to $base after each compare, to be able to check if the next key is of the correct value. The strict compare makes it also check if the key is of type integer. The $base = (int) $base part in the first section of the for loop can be left out when $base is omitted or if you make sure it is only called using an integer. But since I can't be sure for everybody, I left it in. The statement is executed only once, anyway. I think these are the most efficient solutions:

  • Memory wise: No copying of data or key ranges. Doing an array_values or array_keys may seem shorter (less code) but keep in mind what goes on in the background once you make that call. Yes there are more (visible) statements than in some other solutions, but that is not what counts, is it?
  • Time wise: Besides the fact that copying/extracting data and/or keys also takes time, this solution is more efficient than doing a foreach. Again a foreach may seem more efficient to some because it is shorter in notation, but in the background foreach also calls reset, key and next to do it's looping. But in addition it also calls valid to check the end condition, which is avoided here due to the combination with the integer check.

Remember that an array key can only be an integer or a string, and a strictly numeric string such as "1" (but not "01") will be translated into an integer. Which is what makes checking for an integer key the only needed operation besides counting if you want the array to be sequential. Naturally, if is_indexed_array returns false the array can be seen as associative. I say 'seen', because in fact they all are.

2
  • 1
    This is the best answer. The definition of "associative" or "numeric" array depends on the specific situation.
    – Pato
    May 2, 2013 at 18:38
  • If foreach is less efficient than the method used here then, aside from the inconvenience of using two different functions, the performance of this solution is better than mine (the preceding). I suspect it isn't, since foreach is recommended as the fastest way to go through an array.
    – podperson
    Oct 13, 2019 at 5:19
9

One way to approach this is to piggyback on json_encode, which already has its own internal method of differentiating between an associative array and an indexed array in order to output the correct JSON.

You can do this by checking to see if the first character returned after encoding is a { (associative array) or a [ (indexed array).

// Too short :)
function is_assoc($arr) {
    ksort($arr);
    return json_encode($arr)[0] === '{';
}
2
  • The ksort() is not necessary in my opinion. This solution is working but it has to test if $arr is null and if json_encode fails, so a try/catch. + it is not really optimal if $arr is big.
    – lucbonnin
    Oct 12, 2018 at 7:36
  • seems expensive
    – oriadam
    May 19, 2021 at 9:49
8
function array_is_assoc(array $a) {
    $i = 0;
    foreach ($a as $k => $v) {
        if ($k !== $i++) {
            return true;
        }
    }
    return false;
}

Fast, concise, and memory efficient. No expensive comparisons, function calls or array copying.

1
  • No function call, copying or expensive comparison, seems very efficient indeed.
    – PaulH
    Jan 6, 2022 at 21:31
7

This function can handle:

  • array with holes in index (e.g. 1,2,4,5,8,10)
  • array with "0x" keys: e.g. key '08' is associative while key '8' is sequential.

the idea is simple: if one of the keys is NOT an integer, it is associative array, otherwise it's sequential.

function is_asso($a){
    foreach(array_keys($a) as $key) {if (!is_int($key)) return TRUE;}
    return FALSE;
}
2
  • 1
    "if one of the keys is NOT an integer, it is associative array, otherwise it's sequential" - huh? No, this is simply wrong. There's room for argument over what constitutes an "associative" array, but the meaning of "sequential" is pretty unambiguous, and it's not the same as all keys being numbers.
    – Mark Amery
    Jan 2, 2016 at 16:39
  • If one of the keys is NOT an integer it IS associative by nature, however, it is only sequential if the keys go from 0 - length (array) - 1. It is NUMERIC however, if all the keys are only numbered, but may or may not work with many array functions that require a sequential array. If you convert the numeric array with holes into sequential by running array_values( array ) on it, then it would be converted to sequential.
    – geilt
    Sep 5, 2018 at 8:10
7

There are many answers already, but here is the method that Laravel relies on within its Arr class:

/**
 * Determines if an array is associative.
 *
 * An array is "associative" if it doesn't have sequential numerical keys beginning with zero.
 *
 * @param  array  $array
 * @return bool
 */
public static function isAssoc(array $array)
{
    $keys = array_keys($array);

    return array_keys($keys) !== $keys;
}

Source: https://github.com/laravel/framework/blob/5.4/src/Illuminate/Support/Arr.php

3
  • 1
    @Casey array_keys($keys) will return a sequential array of numbers (0...X) which has the same length of the original array. For example array_keys(["a", "b", "c"]) = [0, 1, 2]; array_keys([0, 1, 2]) = [0, 1, 2] (it's a sequential array because [0, 1, 2] !== [0, 1, 2]). Another example: array_keys(["a" => 5, "b" => 7, "c" => 10]) = ["a", "b", "c"]; array_keys(["a", "b", "c"]) = [0, 1, 2] (it's an associative array because ["a", "b", "c"] !== [0, 1, 2]). Hope it's clear (hard to explain extensively in a comment, at least for me)
    – valepu
    Sep 4, 2018 at 13:46
  • This algorithm is crazy, easy, understandable.
    – Benyi
    Oct 10, 2018 at 6:59
  • This will not work if you have a sequential array of associative rows.
    – lucbonnin
    Oct 12, 2018 at 5:01
6

I noticed two popular approaches for this question: one using array_values() and other using key(). To find out which is faster, I wrote a small program:

$arrays = Array(
  'Array #1' => Array(1, 2, 3, 54, 23, 212, 123, 1, 1),
  'Array #2' => Array("Stack", 1.5, 20, Array(3.4)),
  'Array #3' => Array(1 => 4, 2 => 2),
  'Array #4' => Array(3.0, "2", 3000, "Stack", 5 => "4"),
  'Array #5' => Array("3" => 4, "2" => 2),
  'Array #6' => Array("0" => "One", 1.0 => "Two", 2 => "Three"),
  'Array #7' => Array(3 => "asdf", 4 => "asdf"),
  'Array #8' => Array("apple" => 1, "orange" => 2),
);

function is_indexed_array_1(Array &$arr) {
  return $arr === array_values($arr);
}

function is_indexed_array_2(Array &$arr) {
  for (reset($arr), $i = 0; key($arr) === $i++; next($arr))
    ;
  return is_null(key($arr));
}

// Method #1
$start = microtime(true);
for ($i = 0; $i < 1000; $i++) {
  foreach ($arrays as $array) {
    $dummy = is_indexed_array_1($array);
  }
}
$end = microtime(true);
echo "Time taken with method #1 = ".round(($end-$start)*1000.0,3)."ms\n";

// Method #2
$start = microtime(true);
for ($i = 0; $i < 1000; $i++) {
  foreach ($arrays as $array) {
    $dummy = is_indexed_array_2($array);
  }
}
$end = microtime(true);
echo "Time taken with method #1 = ".round(($end-$start)*1000.0,3)."ms\n";

Output for the program on PHP 5.2 on CentOS is as follows:

Time taken with method #1 = 10.745ms
Time taken with method #2 = 18.239ms

Output on PHP 5.3 yielded similar results. Obviously using array_values() is much faster.

1
  • bad benchmark. You didn't test for big arrays. On my computer starting at 10K+ elements method #2 is faster. Try with $arrays = Array( 'Array #1' => range(0, 50000), );
    – nonsensei
    Jul 4, 2016 at 11:07
6

Most answers have sub-optimal time/space complexity or are changing semantics. So, here is another answer with the fastest and most functionally correct solution:

function is_sequential_array(Array &$a) {
    $n = count($a);
    for($i=0; $i<$n; $i++) {
        if(!array_key_exists($i, $a)) {
            return false;
        }
    }
    return true;
}

This answer has following advantages over other answers:

  1. Space complexity of O(1) (many answers here use O(n) space!)
  2. Does not apply equality on keys (which is an unwanted and expensive operation)
  3. Treats input array as immutable (many answers have implicitly created a copy by applying mutating functions)
  4. Uses function array_key_exists instead of isset (remember, isset additionally checks for 'is not null', thereby changing semantics)
  5. Worst-case time complexity is O(n) (many answers here have best-case time complexity of O(n))
4

After some local benchmarking, debugging, compiler probing, profiling, and abusing 3v4l.org to benchmark across more versions (yes, I got a warning to stop) and comparing against every variation I could find...

I give you an organically derived best-average-worst-case scenario associative array test function that is at worst roughly as good as or better than all other average-case scenarios.

/**
 * Tests if an array is an associative array.
 *
 * @param array $array An array to test.
 * @return boolean True if the array is associative, otherwise false.
 */
function is_assoc(array &$arr) {
    // don't try to check non-arrays or empty arrays
    if (FALSE === is_array($arr) || 0 === ($l = count($arr))) {
        return false;
    }

    // shortcut by guessing at the beginning
    reset($arr);
    if (key($arr) !== 0) {
        return true;
    }

    // shortcut by guessing at the end
    end($arr);
    if (key($arr) !== $l-1) {
        return true;
    }

    // rely on php to optimize test by reference or fast compare
    return array_values($arr) !== $arr;
}

From https://3v4l.org/rkieX:

<?php

// array_values
function method_1(Array &$arr) {
    return $arr === array_values($arr);
}

// method_2 was DQ; did not actually work

// array_keys
function method_3(Array &$arr) {
    return array_keys($arr) === range(0, count($arr) - 1);
}

// foreach
function method_4(Array &$arr) {
    $idx = 0;
    foreach( $arr as $key => $val ){
        if( $key !== $idx )
            return FALSE;
        ++$idx;
    }
    return TRUE;
}

// guessing
function method_5(Array &$arr) {
    global $METHOD_5_KEY;
    $i = 0;
    $l = count($arr)-1;

    end($arr);
    if ( key($arr) !== $l )
        return FALSE;

    reset($arr);
    do {
        if ( $i !== key($arr) )
            return FALSE;
        ++$i;
        next($arr);
    } while ($i < $l);
    return TRUE;
}

// naieve
function method_6(Array &$arr) {
    $i = 0;
    $l = count($arr);
    do {
        if ( NULL === @$arr[$i] )
            return FALSE;
        ++$i;
    } while ($i < $l);
    return TRUE;
}

// deep reference reliance
function method_7(Array &$arr) {
    return array_keys(array_values($arr)) === array_keys($arr);
}


// organic (guessing + array_values)
function method_8(Array &$arr) {
    reset($arr);
    if ( key($arr) !== 0 )
        return FALSE;

    end($arr);
    if ( key($arr) !== count($arr)-1 )
        return FALSE;

    return array_values($arr) === $arr;
}

function benchmark(Array &$methods, Array &$target, $expected){    
    foreach($methods as $method){
        $start = microtime(true);
        for ($i = 0; $i < 2000; ++$i) {
            //$dummy = call_user_func($method, $target);
            if ( $method($target) !== $expected ) {
                echo "Method $method is disqualified for returning an incorrect result.\n";
                unset($methods[array_search($method,$methods,true)]);
                $i = 0;
                break;
            }
        }
        if ( $i != 0 ) {
            $end = microtime(true);
            echo "Time taken with $method = ".round(($end-$start)*1000.0,3)."ms\n";
        }
    }
}



$true_targets = [
    'Giant array' => range(0, 500),
    'Tiny array' => range(0, 20),
];


$g = range(0,10);
unset($g[0]);

$false_targets = [
    'Large array 1' => range(0, 100) + ['a'=>'a'] + range(101, 200),
    'Large array 2' => ['a'=>'a'] + range(0, 200),
    'Tiny array' => range(0, 10) + ['a'=>'a'] + range(11, 20),
    'Gotcha array' => $g,
];

$methods = [
    'method_1',
    'method_3',
    'method_4',
    'method_5',
    'method_6',
    'method_7',
    'method_8'
];


foreach($false_targets as $targetName => $target){
    echo "==== Benchmark using $targetName expecing FALSE ====\n";
    benchmark($methods, $target, false);
    echo "\n";
}
foreach($true_targets as $targetName => $target){
    echo "==== Benchmark using $targetName expecting TRUE ====\n";
    benchmark($methods, $target, true);
    echo "\n";
}
4

For those using Laravel:

Arr::isAssoc returns true if the given array is an associative array. An array is considered "associative" if it doesn't have sequential numerical keys beginning with zero:

use Illuminate\Support\Arr;

$isAssoc = Arr::isAssoc(['product' => ['name' => 'Desk', 'price' => 100]]);

// true

$isAssoc = Arr::isAssoc([1, 2, 3]);

// false

https://laravel.com/docs/8.x/helpers#method-array-isassoc

3

I know it's a bit pointless adding an answer to this huge queue, but here's a readable O(n) solution that doesn't require duplicating any values:

function isNumericArray($array) {
    $count = count($array);
    for ($i = 0; $i < $count; $i++) {
        if (!isset($array[$i])) {
            return FALSE;
        }
    }
    return TRUE;
}

Rather than check the keys to see if they are all numeric, you iterate over the keys that would be there for a numeric array and make sure they exist.

2
  • one more point. array in form [1,2,null,4] will fail, but it is correct array. so i've added some enhancement at stackoverflow.com/a/25206156/501831 with addition array_key_exists check)
    – lazycommit
    Aug 8, 2014 at 18:14
  • -1; isset() is the wrong tool here because it will return false if the value is set but is null, as pointed out by @lazycommit.
    – Mark Amery
    Jan 2, 2016 at 16:55
3

By using xarray PHP extension

You can do this very fast (about 30+ times faster in PHP 5.6):

if (array_is_indexed($array)) {  }

Or:

if (array_is_assoc($array)) {  }
3

answers are already given but there's too much disinformation about performance. I wrote this little benchmark script that shows that the foreach method is the fastest.

Disclaimer: following methods were copy-pasted from the other answers

<?php

function method_1(Array &$arr) {
    return $arr === array_values($arr);
}

function method_2(Array &$arr) {
    for (reset($arr), $i = 0; key($arr) !== $i++; next($arr));
    return is_null(key($arr));
}

function method_3(Array &$arr) {
    return array_keys($arr) === range(0, count($arr) - 1);
}

function method_4(Array &$arr) {
    $idx = 0;
    foreach( $arr as $key => $val ){
        if( $key !== $idx )
            return FALSE;
        $idx++;
    }
    return TRUE;
}




function benchmark(Array $methods, Array &$target){    
    foreach($methods as $method){
        $start = microtime(true);
        for ($i = 0; $i < 1000; $i++)
            $dummy = call_user_func($method, $target);

        $end = microtime(true);
        echo "Time taken with $method = ".round(($end-$start)*1000.0,3)."ms\n";
    }
}



$targets = [
    'Huge array' => range(0, 30000),
    'Small array' => range(0, 1000),
];
$methods = [
    'method_1',
    'method_2',
    'method_3',
    'method_4',
];
foreach($targets as $targetName => $target){
    echo "==== Benchmark using $targetName ====\n";
    benchmark($methods, $target);
    echo "\n";
}

results:

==== Benchmark using Huge array ====
Time taken with method_1 = 5504.632ms
Time taken with method_2 = 4509.445ms
Time taken with method_3 = 8614.883ms
Time taken with method_4 = 2720.934ms

==== Benchmark using Small array ====
Time taken with method_1 = 77.159ms
Time taken with method_2 = 130.03ms
Time taken with method_3 = 160.866ms
Time taken with method_4 = 69.946ms
3

A lot of the solutions here are elegant and pretty, but don't scale well, and are memory intensive or CPU intensive. Most are creating 2 new data points in memory with this solution from both sides of the comparison. The larger the array the harder and longer the process and memory used, and you lose the benefit of short circuit evaluation. I Did some testing with a few different ideas. Trying to avoid array_key_exists as it is costly, and also avoiding creating new large datasets to compare. I feel this is a simple way to tell if an array is sequential.

public function is_sequential( $arr = [] ){
    if( !is_array( $arr ) || empty( $arr ) ) return false;

    $i = 0;

    $total = count( $arr );

    foreach( $arr as $key => $value ) if( $key !== $i++ ) return false;

    return true;
}

You run a single count on the main array and store a single integer. You then loop through the array and check for an exact match while iterating the counter. You should have from 1 to count. If it fails it will short circuit out which gives you performance boost when it is false.

Originally I did this with a for loop and checking for isset( $arr[$i] ) but this will not detect null keys which requires array_key_exists, and as we know that is the worst function to use for speed.

Constantly updating variables via foreach to check along with the iterator never growing past it's integer size let's PHP use it's built in memory optimization, caching and garbage collection to keep you at very low resource usage.

Also, I will argue that using array_keys in a foreach is silly when you can simply run $key => $value and check the key. Why create the new data point? Once you abstract away the array keys you've consumed more memory immediately.

2

Here's the method I use:

function is_associative ( $a )
{
    return in_array(false, array_map('is_numeric', array_keys($a)));
}

assert( true === is_associative(array(1, 2, 3, 4)) );

assert( false === is_associative(array('foo' => 'bar', 'bar' => 'baz')) );

assert( false === is_associative(array(1, 2, 3, 'foo' => 'bar')) );

Note that this doesn't account for special cases like:

$a = array( 1, 2, 3, 4 );

unset($a[1]);

assert( true === is_associative($a) );

Sorry, can't help you with that. It's also somewhat performant for decently sized arrays, as it doesn't make needless copies. It is these little things that makes Python and Ruby so much nicer to write in... :P

2
<?php

function is_list($array) {
    return array_keys($array) === range(0, count($array) - 1);
}

function is_assoc($array) {
    return count(array_filter(array_keys($array), 'is_string')) == count($array);
}

?>

Both of these examples, which scored the most points do not work correctly with arrays like $array = array('foo' => 'bar', 1)

1
  • +1 Your is_list() is IMO the best answer. Some people don't have a clue about time & space complexity, and native vs PHP scripted function...
    – Déjà vu
    Nov 16, 2012 at 15:00
2

This would work too (demo):

function array_has_numeric_keys_only(array $array)
{
    try {
        SplFixedArray::fromArray($array, true);
    } catch (InvalidArgumentException $e) {
        return false;
    }
    return true;
}

Please note that the main point of this answer is to inform you about the existence of SplFixedArray and not to encourage you to use Exceptions for these kinds of tests.

2

I think the definition of a scalar array will vary by application. That is, some applications will require a more strict sense of what qualifies as a scalar array, and some applications will require a more loose sense.

Below I present 3 methods of varying strictness.

<?php
/**
 * Since PHP stores all arrays as associative internally, there is no proper
 * definition of a scalar array.
 * 
 * As such, developers are likely to have varying definitions of scalar array,
 * based on their application needs.
 * 
 * In this file, I present 3 increasingly strict methods of determining if an
 * array is scalar.
 * 
 * @author David Farrell <[email protected]>
 */

/**
 * isArrayWithOnlyIntKeys defines a scalar array as containing
 * only integer keys.
 * 
 * If you are explicitly setting integer keys on an array, you
 * may need this function to determine scalar-ness.
 * 
 * @param array $a
 * @return boolean
 */ 
function isArrayWithOnlyIntKeys(array $a)
{
    if (!is_array($a))
        return false;
    foreach ($a as $k => $v)
        if (!is_int($k))
            return false;
    return true;
}

/**
 * isArrayWithOnlyAscendingIntKeys defines a scalar array as
 * containing only integer keys in ascending (but not necessarily
 * sequential) order.
 * 
 * If you are performing pushes, pops, and unsets on your array,
 * you may need this function to determine scalar-ness.
 * 
 * @param array $a
 * @return boolean
 */ 
function isArrayWithOnlyAscendingIntKeys(array $a)
{
    if (!is_array($a))
        return false;
    $prev = null;
    foreach ($a as $k => $v)
    {
        if (!is_int($k) || (null !== $prev && $k <= $prev))
            return false;
        $prev = $k;
    }
    return true;
}

/**
 * isArrayWithOnlyZeroBasedSequentialIntKeys defines a scalar array
 * as containing only integer keys in sequential, ascending order,
 * starting from 0.
 * 
 * If you are only performing operations on your array that are
 * guaranteed to either maintain consistent key values, or that
 * re-base the keys for consistency, then you can use this function.
 * 
 * @param array $a
 * @return boolean
 */
function isArrayWithOnlyZeroBasedSequentialIntKeys(array $a)
{
    if (!is_array($a))
        return false;
    $i = 0;
    foreach ($a as $k => $v)
        if ($i++ !== $k)
            return false;
    return true;
}
2

One more fast from source. Fit encoding of json_encode (and bson_encode). So has javascript Array compliance.

function isSequential($value){
    if(is_array($value) || ($value instanceof \Countable && $value instanceof \ArrayAccess)){
        for ($i = count($value) - 1; $i >= 0; $i--) {
            if (!isset($value[$i]) && !array_key_exists($i, $value)) {
                return false;
            }
        }
        return true;
    } else {
        throw new \InvalidArgumentException(
            sprintf('Data type "%s" is not supported by method %s', gettype($value), __METHOD__)
        );
    }
}
7
  • 2
    Why isset and array_key_exists? wouldn't the latter be enough?
    – mcfedr
    Jun 30, 2015 at 21:33
  • 1
    @mcfedr yes, it would - the isset() check here is completely redundant.
    – Mark Amery
    Jan 2, 2016 at 16:58
  • @mcfedr, @mark-amery because of performance reasons. isset() is faster than array_key_exists(). see ilia.ws/archives/…
    – lazycommit
    Jan 29, 2016 at 7:58
  • @lazycommit Its going to depend on your array then on whether its better with or without, not that its likely to have an array with lots of nulls, but then its also not that likely you have array large enough that there would be noticeable performance difference by using both checks
    – mcfedr
    Jan 29, 2016 at 8:25
  • 2
    if you need to check if it would fit json_encode, you could simply check the first symbol of the string, returned by json_encode($your_arr) -- whether it's [ or { ;-)
    – pilat
    Mar 29, 2017 at 20:07
2

Could this be the solution?

  public static function isArrayAssociative(array $array) {
      reset($array);
      return !is_int(key($array));
  }

The caveat is obviously that the array cursor is reset but I'd say probably the function is used before the array is even traversed or used.

6
  • This function returns false for both array("a", "b") and array("a", "b" => "B") as it only checks the first key. BTW, is_long is just an alias of is_int.
    – Pang
    Nov 24, 2012 at 2:20
  • 1
    quite frankly I think this would be very effective in the vast majority of cases, and is far more efficient than the alternatives. If you understand the consequences of this method, and realize it will work for you, it's likely the best choice. Jan 30, 2015 at 19:58
  • This is simply wrong; it only looks at the first key.
    – Mark Amery
    Jan 2, 2016 at 16:59
  • @MarkAmery the question asked how to differentiate purely sequential arrays from purely associative arrays. This answer does exactly that and is the most efficient of them all. Having undefined behavior for mixed arrrays is perfectly fine in the context of the question. +1
    – Tobia
    Jul 20, 2016 at 8:30
  • @Tobia I don't think most people would agree with you classifying, say, [7 => 'foo', 2 => 'bar'] as a "mixed" array that is partly but not "purely" sequential. That seems like a plainly incorrect use of words to me.
    – Mark Amery
    Jul 20, 2016 at 8:57

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