5

I'm trying to build an associative array in PHP dynamically, and not quite getting my strategy right. Basically, I want to insert a value at a certain depth in the array structure, for instance:

$array['first']['second']['third'] = $val;

Now, the thing is, I'm not sure if that depth is available, and if it isn't, I want to create the keys (and arrays) for each level, and finally insert the value at the correct level.

Since I'm doing this quite a lot in my code, I grew tired of doing a whole bunch of "array_key_exists", so I wanted to do a function that builds the array for me, given a list of the level keys. Any help on a good strategy for this is appreciated. I'm sure there is a pretty simple way, I'm just not getting it...

3
  • Can you show an example of the dataset you're starting with? when you say "level keys" etc. PS, welcome to SO :-)
    – richsage
    Mar 15, 2010 at 13:28
  • how is your data formatted for insertion i.e. what structure are keys and $val stored in?
    – Andy
    Mar 15, 2010 at 13:29
  • @richsage: thanks! @richsage and @Andy: I'll try to update the post with an example structure. Basically, I'm trying to create a structure to hold a semi-complex form, with sections at the top, then fieldsets, row-id:s, row label text and row values.
    – Emil
    Mar 15, 2010 at 13:55

4 Answers 4

9

php doesn't blame you if you do it just so

$array['first']['second']['third'] = $val;
print_r($array);

if you don't want your keys to be hard coded, here's a flexible solution

/// locate or create element by $path and set its value to $value
/// $path is either an array of keys, or a delimited string
function array_set(&$a, $path, $value) {
    if(!is_array($path))
        $path = explode($path[0], substr($path, 1));
    $key = array_pop($path);
    foreach($path as $k) {
        if(!isset($a[$k]))
            $a[$k] = array();
        $a = &$a[$k];
    }
    $a[$key ? $key : count($a)] = $value;
}

// example:
$x = array();

array_set($x, "/foo/bar/baz", 123);
array_set($x, "/foo/bar/quux", 456);
array_set($x, array('foo', 'bah'), 789);
4
  • 2
    No, it doesn't, but I consider using unintialized variables (like inner arrays) bad coding style. PHP will generate a strict NOTICE, I think.
    – soulmerge
    Mar 15, 2010 at 13:34
  • @stereofrog: I consider a notice something to take care of, but granted; 'blame' is a bit strong perhaps. Mar 15, 2010 at 14:05
  • @stereofrog - thanks a million - this did the trick. I had started something similar, but couldn't get hang of the reference part. Now I can spend the rest of the afternoon trying to grok that instead of tearing out any more hair. :-)
    – Emil
    Mar 15, 2010 at 14:17
  • If you -know- that the array keys are good (just maybe not existent), and the value you are setting is good, you can suppress the notice for the line with the Error Control Operator (@). Mar 15, 2010 at 14:33
4

Create a function like:

function insert_into(&$array, array $keys, $value) {
     $last = array_pop($keys);       

     foreach($keys as $key) {
          if(!array_key_exists($key, $array) || 
              array_key_exists($key, $array) && !is_array($array[$key])) {
                  $array[$key] = array();

          }
          $array = &$array[$key];
     }
     $array[$last] = $value;
}

Usage:

$a = array();
insert_into($a, array('a', 'b', 'c'), 1);
print_r($a);

Ouput:

Array
(
    [a] => Array
        (
            [b] => Array
                (
                    [c] => 1
                )

        )

)
0

That's tricky, you'd need to work with references (or with recursion, but I chose references here):

# Provide as many arguments as you like:
# createNestedArray($array, 'key1', 'key2', etc.)
function createNestedArray(&$array) {
    $arrayCopy = &$array;
    $args = func_get_args();
    array_shift($args);
    while (($key = array_shift($args)) !== false) {
        $arrayCopy[$key] = array();
        $arrayCopy = &$arrayCopy[$key];
    }
}
0
0
<?php

function setElements(&$a, array $path = [], $values = [])
{

    if (!is_array($path)) {
        $path = explode($path[0], substr($path, 1));
    }

        $path = "[ '" . join("' ][ '", $path) . "' ]";
        $code =<<<CODE
        if(!isset(\$a{$path})){
            \$a{$path} = [];
        }
        return \$a{$path}[]  = \$values;
CODE;

        return eval($code);
}

$a = [];
setElements($a, [1,2], 'xxx');
setElements($a, [1,2,3], 233);
setElements($a, [1,2,4], 'AAA');
setElements($a, [1,2,3,4], 555);
print_r($a);

Output

Array
(
    [1] => Array
        (
            [2] => Array
                (
                    [0] => xxx
                    [3] => Array
                        (
                            [0] => 233
                            [4] => Array
                                (
                                    [0] => 555
                                )

                        )

                    [4] => Array
                        (
                            [0] => AAA
                        )

                )

        )

)

You should check it here http://sandbox.onlinephpfunctions.com/

1
  • Perhaps you could explain what this does. Pasting a code sample is good, but a few notes about what it means would be useful.
    – byxor
    Nov 22, 2016 at 11:55

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