113

This question on 'How to tell if a PHP array is empty' had me thinking of this question

Is there a reason that count should be used instead of empty when determining if an array is empty or not?

My personal thought would be if the 2 are equivalent for the case of empty arrays you should use empty because it gives a boolean answer to a boolean question. From the question linked above, it seems that count($var) == 0 is the popular method. To me, while technically correct, makes no sense. E.g. Q: $var, are you empty? A: 7. Hmmm...

Is there a reason I should use count == 0 instead or just a matter of personal taste?

As pointed out by others in comments for a now deleted answer, count will have performance impacts for large arrays because it will have to count all elements, whereas empty can stop as soon as it knows it isn't empty. So, if they give the same results in this case, but count is potentially inefficient, why would we ever use count($var) == 0?

5
  • I'm assuming your intention is to limit the conversation exclusively to arrays, but it might be worth noting that the game changes completely if you are working with objects (e.g., that implement Countable, Iterator, etc.).
    – user212218
    Apr 7, 2011 at 15:33
  • 10
    An empty array is equal to false in PHP - no need for empty() or count().
    – Cobby
    Aug 30, 2012 at 1:39
  • @Cobby Code please. Feb 17, 2017 at 6:54
  • @TheRealChx101 As in, just do: if (!$myArray) { echo "array is empty"; } sandbox.onlinephpfunctions.com/code/…
    – Cobby
    Mar 20, 2017 at 2:49
  • 1
    Nowadays, the popular option in the linked question is using empty().
    – PhoneixS
    Nov 2, 2017 at 9:04

12 Answers 12

118

I generally use empty. Im not sure why people would use count really - If the array is large then count takes longer/has more overhead. If you simply need to know whether or not the array is empty then use empty.

12
  • 4
    These functions indeed differ when the array is not empty.
    – Jacco
    Feb 7, 2010 at 14:40
  • 2
    @Jacco: Im not disputing that. But if youre testing it its empty, i dont see what relevance that has - its a question with a boolean result which is what the function will return. In regards to what is considered empty in dont see how those criteria would produce the wrong answer unless the var your testing isnt an array inwhich case thats an entirely different issue. Feb 7, 2010 at 16:54
  • 30
    @prodigitalson I would say that count is O(1), since PHP stores the number of elements internally. Check out this answer stackoverflow.com/a/5835419/592454
    – elitalon
    May 21, 2012 at 13:03
  • 4
    @eliton: but still - even in if there is no or little difference in performance why use count if you dont need the count? May 21, 2012 at 13:16
  • 5
    empty() is too forgiving of errors. I just spent 2 hours debugging a subclass that tested empty() on a private member variable of its superclass (the scope of the superclass's member variable SHOULD have been protected, but empty() returned no errors — the result was simply that something that should have happened, didn't happen: the non-existence of the member variable in the subclass was treated exactly the same way as though this member variable, an array, was empty — i.e., as though it had no elements). This is problematic, and another example of PHP being too forgiving. Apr 5, 2017 at 4:59
55

I was curious to see which one was actually faster so I made a simple script to benchmark those functions.

<?php

function benchmark($name, $iterations, $action){
    $time=microtime(true);
    for($i=0;$i<=$iterations;++$i){
        $action();
    }
    echo $name . ' ' . round(microtime(true)-$time, 6) . "\n";
}

$iterations = 1000000;
$x = array();
$y = range(0, 10000000);
$actions = array(
    "Empty empty()" => function() use($x){
        empty($x);
    },
    "Empty count()" => function() use($x){
        count($x);
    },
    "Full empty()" => function() use($y){
        empty($y);
    },
    "Full count()" => function() use($y){
        count($y);
    },
    ############
    "IF empty empty()" => function() use($x){
        if(empty($x)){ $t=1; }
    },
    "IF empty count()" => function() use($x){
        if(count($x)){ $t=1; }
    },
    "IF full empty()" => function() use($y){
        if(empty($y)){ $t=1; }
    },
    "IF full count()" => function() use($y){
        if(count($y)){ $t=1; }
    },
    ############
    "OR empty empty()" => function() use($x){
        empty($x) OR $t=1;
    },
    "OR empty count()" => function() use($x){
        count($x) OR $t=1;
    },
    "OR full empty()" => function() use($y){
        empty($y) OR $t=1;
    },
    "OR full count()" => function() use($y){
        count($y) OR $t=1;
    },
    ############
    "IF/ELSE empty empty()" => function() use($x){
        if(empty($x)){ $t=1; } else { $t=2; }
    },
    "IF/ELSE empty count()" => function() use($x){
        if(count($x)){ $t=1; } else { $t=2; }
    },
    "IF/ELSE full empty()" => function() use($y){
        if(empty($y)){ $t=1; } else { $t=2; }
    },
    "IF/ELSE full count()" => function() use($y){
        if(count($y)){ $t=1; } else { $t=2; }
    },
    ############
    "( ? : ) empty empty()" => function() use($x){
        $t = (empty($x) ? 1 : 2);
    },
    "( ? : ) empty count()" => function() use($x){
        $t = (count($x) ? 1 : 2);
    },
    "( ? : ) full empty()" => function() use($y){
        $t = (empty($y) ? 1 : 2);
    },
    "( ? : ) full count()" => function() use($y){
        $t = (count($y) ? 1 : 2);
    }
);

foreach($actions as $name => $action){
    benchmark($name, $iterations, $action);
}
//END

Since I was doing it I also tried to check the performance doing operations that would normally be associated with count()/empty()

Using PHP 5.4.39:

Empty empty() 0.118691
Empty count() 0.218974
Full empty() 0.133747
Full count() 0.216424
IF empty empty() 0.166474
IF empty count() 0.235922
IF full empty() 0.120642
IF full count() 0.248273
OR empty empty() 0.123875
OR empty count() 0.258665
OR full empty() 0.157839
OR full count() 0.224869
IF/ELSE empty empty() 0.167004
IF/ELSE empty count() 0.263351
IF/ELSE full empty() 0.145794
IF/ELSE full count() 0.248425
( ? : ) empty empty() 0.169487
( ? : ) empty count() 0.265701
( ? : ) full empty() 0.149847
( ? : ) full count() 0.252891

Using HipHop VM 3.6.1 (dbg)

Empty empty() 0.210652
Empty count() 0.212123
Full empty() 0.206016
Full count() 0.204722
IF empty empty() 0.227852
IF empty count() 0.219821
IF full empty() 0.220823
IF full count() 0.221397
OR empty empty() 0.218813
OR empty count() 0.220105
OR full empty() 0.229118
OR full count() 0.221787
IF/ELSE empty empty() 0.221499
IF/ELSE empty count() 0.221274
IF/ELSE full empty() 0.221879
IF/ELSE full count() 0.228737
( ? : ) empty empty() 0.224143
( ? : ) empty count() 0.222459
( ? : ) full empty() 0.221606
( ? : ) full count() 0.231288

Conclusions if you're using PHP:

  1. empty() is much much faster than count() in both scenarios, with an empty and populated array

  2. count() performs the same with a full or empty array.

  3. Doing a simple IF or just a Boolean operation is the same.

  4. IF/ELSE is very slightly more efficient than ( ? : ). Unless you're doing billions of iterations with expressions in the middle it is completely insignificant.

Conclusions if you're using HHVM:

  1. empty() is a teeny-weeny bit faster than count() but insignificantly so.

    [ The rest is the same as in PHP ]

In conclusion of the conclusion, if you just need to know if the array is empty always use empty();

This was just a curious test simply done without taking many things into account. It is just a proof of concept and might not reflect operations in production.

4
  • Thanks for the sample testing code.... I just used it and found that if($x){ is faster than if(empty($x)){ (only works if you know that $x has been declared).
    – Redzarf
    Mar 13, 2019 at 14:03
  • Your test code is really bad. You adding a lot of additional stuff, like an anonym function call. If I remove and I just run the bare code (for cycle after each other) then I get a huge difference. And I mean in that case the faster if there are no count and empty calls in the if statement. Then it comes the empty and lasts the count. But compared to yours in bare case, the empty is ten times faster! Simple array test: 0.104662, empty: 0.177659, count: 1.175125 on PHP 5.6 otherwise your code gives the same result on this version too like your mentioned. Just it's fake results. Jul 6, 2020 at 8:09
  • @golddragon007 Their answer is still more useful than your comment, since 1)They're not nasty about it and 2)They actually show their work. Please consider being nicer, since this is a community for helping others, not insulting them. Jan 22, 2021 at 20:16
  • I have used isset($x[0]), empty($x) was faster, but better than count($x) Aug 8, 2021 at 13:34
18

I think it's only personal preference. Some people might say empty is faster (e.g. http://jamessocol.com/projects/count_vs_empty.php) while others might say count is better since it was originally made for arrays. empty is more general and can be applied to other types.

php.net gives the following warning for count though :

count() may return 0 for a variable that isn't set, but it may also return 0 for a variable that has been initialized with an empty array. Use isset() to test if a variable is set.

In other words, if the variable is not set, you will get a notice from PHP saying it's undefined. Therefore, before using count, it would be preferable to check the variable with isset. This is not necessary with empty.

3
  • 3
    It's interesting that an argument in favor of count is that it was originally made for arrays... yet objects can implement Countable, and you can pass scalar values to count() and get a valid result.
    – user212218
    Jan 3, 2012 at 16:04
  • 1
    count() may return 0 for a variable that isn't set, but it may also.... Official documentation using modal verbs to express its uncertainty :p
    – nawfal
    Nov 20, 2015 at 4:47
  • Just a comment on the isset() point. If you're worried about notices in PHP you should have already declared your array. If you let PHP dynamically declare your array, you'll get a notice at that point as well. I think the real point of the warning on php.net is that you shouldn't use count to determine if an array has been declared or not as it yields the same result as an empty array would. Mar 8, 2017 at 20:53
12

Is there a reason that count should be used instead of empty when determining if an array is empty or not?

There is, when you need to do something on non-empty array knowing it's size:

if( 0 < ( $cnt = count($array) ) )
{
 echo "Your array size is: $cnt";
}
else
 echo "Too bad, your array is empty :(";

But I wouldn't recommend using count, unless you are 100% sure, that what you are counting is an array. Lately I have been debugging code, where on error function was returning FALSE instead of empty array, and what I discovered was:

var_dump(count(FALSE));

output:

int 1

So since then I am using empty or if(array() === $array) to be sure that I have array that is empty.

1
  • I know this answer is old. It is worth saying that from 7.2 it will also throw warning (and 1 as reult), and from 8.0 it will throw fatal error.
    – Styx
    May 5, 2022 at 15:27
6

count() seems to work better with array-like interfaces that implement ArrayAccess/Countable. empty() returns false for these kinds of objects even if they have no elements. Typically these classes will implement the Countable interface, so if the question is "Does this collection contain elements?" without making an assumption about the implementation, then count() is a better option.

4
  • 1
    Do you mean "empty returns false for these kinds of objects even if they have no elements"?
    – alexw
    Aug 14, 2016 at 18:31
  • Yes. There is no interface to allow a class to define whether it is "empty" or not. And it wouldn't really make sense for there to be one.
    – Ryan
    Aug 15, 2016 at 3:54
  • +1 Using count would be a more flexible and extensible solution if ever it makes sense for your code to accept a collection implemented a "common" way… IMO that might be the only pertinent criteria for defining if you use count or other ways...
    – ClemC
    Apr 19, 2019 at 21:31
  • The huge downside of count() as of 7.2 is that it can no longer take empty variables.
    – Ryan
    Apr 26, 2019 at 4:24
5

Alternatively, you can cast the variable as a boolean (implicitly or explicitly):

if( $value )
{
  // array is not empty
}

if( (bool) $value )
{
  // array is still not empty
}

This method does generate an E_NOTICE if the variable is not defined, similarly to count().

For more information, see the PHP Manual page on type comparisons.

1
  • 1
    This is the best way to check, only use empty() if you're explicitly trying to avoid triggering an E_NOTICE (which is generally a bad idea, IMO). Blatantly using empty will lead to buggy code.
    – Cobby
    Aug 30, 2012 at 1:41
3

There is no strong reason to prefer count($myArray) == 0 over empty($myArray). They have identical semantics. Some might find one more readable than the other. One might perform marginally better than the other but it's not likely to be a significant factor in the vast majority of php applications. For all practical purposes, the choice is a matter of taste.

2
  • 2
    What about the "performance" thing? Using explanation of "practial purposes" leads to bad habits. Use count when you need count, use empty when you need to check if collection is empty. Of course there are edge cases like strings or nulls, but programmer needs to think about his code. You may disagree, you're allowed to.
    – Namek
    Sep 9, 2014 at 7:37
  • some times, with count($myArray) if $myArray is a booleen like a value FALSE, the count is not working (tested on php5.3).
    – Mimouni
    Jan 3, 2017 at 8:41
3

My personal preference is more for coding elegance (in relation to my specific use-case). I agree with Dan McG inasmuch that count() isn't responding with the correct datatype (in this case boolean) for the test in question forcing the developer to write more code to fill an 'if' statement.

Whether this has any significant impact on performance is only debatable for extremely large arrays (which you probably won't have enough memory allocation for anyway in most setups).

Particularly when it comes to PHP's $_POST array, it seems much more "logical" in my opinion to write/see:

if ( !empty ( $_POST ) ) {
    // deal with postdata
}
3

Hope this might help someone even though it has already been answered (and debated some what). In my own scenario, I know all my arrays all have 7 elements (checks were made earlier in my code) and I am performing an array_diff which of course returns an array of zero when equal.

I had 34 sec for count and 17 sec for empty. Both give me the same calculations so my code is still fine.

However you can also try the == or === as in PHP - Check if two arrays are equal. The best I would say is try count vs empty vs == empty array, then see which gives your own best perfs. In my case count was the slowest so I am using empty now... will be checking serialize next

1

Sometimes using empty is a must. For example this code:

$myarray = array();

echo "myarray:"; var_dump($myarray); echo "<br>";
echo "case1 count: ".count($myarray)."<br>";
echo "case1 empty: ".empty($myarray)."<br>";

$glob = glob('sdfsdfdsf.txt');

echo "glob:"; var_dump($glob); echo "<br>";
echo "case2 count: ".count($glob)."<br>";
echo "case2 empty: ".empty($glob);

If you run this code like this: http://phpfiddle.org/main/code/g9x-uwi

You get this output:

myarray:array(0) { } 
case1 count: 0
case1 empty: 1

glob:bool(false) 
case2 count: 1
case2 empty: 1

So if you count the empty glob output you get wrong output. You should check for emptiness.

From glob documentation:

Returns an array containing the matched files/directories, an empty array if no file matched or FALSE on error.
Note: On some systems it is impossible to distinguish between empty match and an error.

Also check this question: Why count(false) return 1?

1

Since a variable parsed as negative would return int(1) with count()

I prefer ($array === [] || !$array) to test for an empty array.

Yes, we should expect an empty array, but we shouldn't expect a good implementation on functions without enforced return types.

Examples with count()

var_dump(count(0));
> int(1)
var_dump(count(false));
> int(1)
0

I remade my mind guys, thanks.

Ok, there is no difference between the usage of empty and count. Technically, count should be used for arrays, and empty could be used for arrays as well as strings. So in most cases, they are interchangeable and if you see the php docs, you will see the suggestion list of count if you are at empty and vice versa.

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