1

Let's say I have an array like so:

array(
  [0]=>1
  [1]=>3
  [3]=>5
  [15]=>6
);

Arbitrarily I want array[15] to be the first:

array(
  [15]=>6
  [0]=>1
  [1]=>3
  [3]=>5
);

What is the fastest and most painless way to do this?

Here are the things I've tried:

array_unshift - Unfortunately, my keys are numeric and I need to keep the order (sort of like uasort) this messes up the keys.

uasort - seems too much overhead - the reason I want to make my element the first in my array is to specifically avoid uasort! (Swapping elements on the fly instead of sorting when I need them)

3 Answers 3

2

Assuming you know the key of the element you want to shift, and that element could be in any position in the array (not necessarily the last element):

$shift_key = 15;

$shift = array($shift_key => $arr[$shift_key]);

$arr = $shift + $arr;

See demo

Updated - unset() not necessary. Pointed out by @FuzzyTree

1
  • 2
    unset isn't necessary because the union operator will use the value from the left array when keys exist in both arrays
    – FuzzyTree
    Jun 26, 2014 at 3:49
1

You can try this using a slice and a union operator:

// get last element (preserving keys)
$last = array_slice($array, -1, 1, true);

// put it back with union operator
$array = $last + $array;

Update: as mentioned below, this answer takes the last key and puts it at the front. If you want to arbitrarily move any element to the front:

$array = array($your_desired_key => $array[$your_desired_key]) + $array;

Union operators take from the right and add to the left (so the original value gets overwritten).

4
  • This assumes the element to swap is always the last element in the array. Jun 26, 2014 at 3:42
  • @MarkM I hadn't realised that it needed to be arbitrary. Community wiki this?
    – scrowler
    Jun 26, 2014 at 3:46
  • Arbitrary is what's is throwing everything off, OP should be more specific, is he looking for element with key having largest value? Jun 26, 2014 at 3:47
  • It might not need to be arbitrary - I interpreted the question that way, but if not, and OP wants the last element, then this is a fine answer. Jun 26, 2014 at 3:49
-2

If #15 is always last you can do

$last = array_pop($array); //remove from end
array_unshift($last); //push on front

To reorder the keys for sorting simply add

$array = array_values($array); //reindex array

@Edit - if we don't assume its always last then I would go with ( if we always know wwhat the key is, then most likely we will know its position or it's not a numerically indexed array but an associative one with numeric keys, as op did state "arbitrarily" so one has to assume the structure of the array is known before hand. )

I also dont see the need to reindex them as the op stated that it was to avoid sorting. So why would you then sort?

$item = $array[15];
unset($array[15]); //....etc.
2

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