I have the following code:

function lower_than_10($i) {
    return ($i < 10);
}

that I can use to filter an array like this:

$arr = array(7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13);
$new_arr = array_filter($arr, 'lower_than_10');

How can I add arguments to lower_than_10 so that it also accepts the number to check against? Like, if I have this:

function lower_than($i, $num) {
    return ($i < $num);
}

how to call it from array_filter passing 10 to $num or whatever number?

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5 Answers

up vote 7 down vote accepted

As an alternative to @Charles's solution using closures, you can actually find an example in the comments on the documentation page. The idea is that you create an object with the desired state ($num) and the callback method (taking $i as an argument):

class LowerThanFilter {
        private $num;

        function __construct($num) {
                $this->num = $num;
        }

        function isLower($i) {
                return $i < $this->num;
        }
}

Usage (demo):

$arr = array(7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13);
$matches = array_filter($arr, array(new LowerThanFilter(12), 'isLower'));
print_r($matches);

As a sidenote, you can now replace LowerThanFilter with a more generic NumericComparisonFilter with methods like isLower, isGreater, isEqual etc. Just a thought — and a demo...

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Good workaround. For the sake of maintainable code, it might help to modify the class to support more readable method calls as well: $matches = $myobj->ArraySelect( Array('from'=>$arr, 'where'=>$foo, 'lessthan'=>12 ) ) – dreftymac Nov 10 '11 at 0:31
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In PHP 5.3 or better, you can use a closure:

function create_lower_than($number = 10) {
// The "use" here binds $number to the function at declare time.
// This means that whenever $number appears inside the anonymous
// function, it will have the value it had when the anonymous
// function was declared.
    return function($test) use($number) { return $test < $number; };
}

// We created this with a ten by default.  Let's test.
$lt_10 = create_lower_than();
var_dump($lt_10(9)); // True
var_dump($lt_10(10)); // False
var_dump($lt_10(11)); // False

// Let's try a specific value.
$lt_15 = create_lower_than(15);
var_dump($lt_15(13)); // True
var_dump($lt_15(14)); // True
var_dump($lt_15(15)); // False
var_dump($lt_15(16)); // False

// The creation of the less-than-15 hasn't disrupted our less-than-10:
var_dump($lt_10(9)); // Still true
var_dump($lt_10(10)); // Still false
var_dump($lt_10(11)); // Still false

// We can simply pass the anonymous function anywhere that a
// 'callback' PHP type is expected, such as in array_filter:
$arr = array(7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13);
$new_arr = array_filter($arr, $lt_10);
print_r($new_arr);
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thanks for the solution, it is neat, but i have php 5.2 on the server, so i'm bound to use jensgram's :) – pistacchio Mar 30 '11 at 8:27
In php < 5.3 you could use create_function(). – fireeyedboy Mar 30 '11 at 17:40
create_function() is basically eval() with another name, and is just as evil. Using it should be discouraged. The wacky class-based workaround given in the accepted answer is a better solution than using create_function() in this case. – Charles Mar 30 '11 at 17:43
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In extension to jensgram answer you can add some more magic by using the __invoke() magic method.

class LowerThanFilter {
    private $num;

    public function __construct($num) {
        $this->num = $num;
    }

    public function isLower($i) {
        return $i < $this->num;
    }

    function __invoke($i) {
        return $this->isLower($i);
    }
}

This will allow you to do

$arr = array(7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13);
$matches = array_filter($arr, new LowerThanFilter(12));
print_r($matches);
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class ArraySearcher{

const OPERATOR_EQUALS = '==';
const OPERATOR_GREATERTHAN = '>';
const OPERATOR_LOWERTHAN = '<'; 
const OPERATOR_NOT = '!=';      

private $_field;
private $_operation;
private $_val;

public function __construct($field,$operation,$num) {
    $this->_field = $field;
    $this->_operation = $operation;
    $this->_val = $num;
}


function __invoke($i) {
    switch($this->_operation){
        case '==':
            return $i[$this->_field] == $this->_val;
        break;

        case '>':
            return $i[$this->_field] > $this->_val;
        break;

        case '<':
            return $i[$this->_field] < $this->_val;
        break;

        case '!=':
            return $i[$this->_field] != $this->_val;
        break;
    }
}


}

This allows you to filter items in multidimensional arrays:

$users = array();
$users[] = array('email' => 'user1@email.com','name' => 'Robert');
$users[] = array('email' => 'user2@email.com','name' => 'Carl');
$users[] = array('email' => 'user3@email.com','name' => 'Robert');

//Print all users called 'Robert'
print_r( array_filter($users, new ArraySearcher('name',ArraySearcher::OPERATOR_EQUALS,'Robert')) );
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if you a using php 5.3 and above, you can use closure to simplify your code:

$NUM = 5;
$items = array(1, 4, 5, 8, 0, 6);
$filteredItems = array_filter($items, function($elem) use($NUM){
                     return $elem < $NUM;
                 });
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