1

I know there are a lot of answers on multi-dimensional arrays but I couldn't find what I was looking for exactly. I'm new to PHP and can't quite get my head around some of the other examples to modify them. If someone could show me the way, it would be much appreciated.

An external service is passing me the following multidimensional array.

$mArray = Array (
  [success] => 1
  [errors] => 0
  [data] => Array (
    [0] => Array (
      [email] => [email protected]
      [id] => 123456 
      [email_type] => html 
      [ip_opt] => 10.10.1.1 
      [ip_signup] => 
      [member_rating] => X 
      [info_changed] => 2011-08-17 08:56:51 
      [web_id] => 123456789
      [language] =>
      [merges] => Array (
        [EMAIL] => [email protected]
        [NAME] => Firstname 
        [LNAME] => Lastname 
        [ACCOUNT] => ACME Ltd 
        [ACCMANID] => 123456adc 
        [ACCMANTEL] => 1234 123456 
        [ACCMANMAIL] => [email protected]
        [ACCMANFN] => Humpty
        [ACCMANLN] => Dumpty 
      )
      [status] => unknown
      [timestamp] => 2011-08-17 08:56:51
      [lists] => Array ( ) 
      [geo] => Array ( ) 
      [clients] => Array ( ) 
      [static_segments] => Array ( )
    ) 
  ) 
)

The only information I'm interested in are the key/value pairs that are held in the array under the key name 'merges'. It's about the third array deep. The key name of the array will always be called merges but there's no guarantee that its location in the array won't be moved. The number of key/value pairs in the merges array is also changeable.

I think what I need is a function for array_walk_recursive($mArray, "myfunction", $search);, where $search holds the string for the Key name (merges) I'm looking for. It needs to walk the array until it finds the key, check that it holds an array and then (preserving the keys), return each key/value pair into a single array.

So, for clarity, the output of the function would return:

    $sArray = Array (
      [EMAIL] => [email protected]
      [NAME] => Firstname 
      [LNAME] => Lastname 
      [ACCOUNT] => ACME Ltd 
      [ACCMANID] => 123456adc 
      [ACCMANTEL] => 1234 123456 
      [ACCMANMAIL] => [email protected] 
      [ACCMANFN] => Humpty 
      [ACCMANLN] => Dumpty
    )

I can then move on to the next step in my project, which is to compare the keys in the single merges array to element IDs obtained from an HTML DOM Parser and replace the attribute values with those contained in the single array.

I probably need a foreach loop. I know I can use is_array to verify if $search is an array. It's joining it all together that I'm struggling with.

Thanks for your help.

6 Answers 6

1

Would this work?

function find_merges($arr)
{
  foreach($arr as $key => $value){
    if($key == "merges") return $value;
    if(is_array($value)){
      $ret = find_merges($value);
      if($ret) return $ret;
    }
  }
  return false;
}

It would do a depth-first search until you either ran out of keys or found one with the value merges. It won't check to see if merges is an array though. Try that and let me know if that works.

2
  • Nearly, but not quite - you are not ensuring that merges holds an array, and it might be an empty array, so you need to do $ret !== FALSE. See my answer...
    – DaveRandom
    Sep 14, 2011 at 9:01
  • This didn't work for me. It just returned the original array.
    – Dominic
    Sep 15, 2011 at 11:20
0

Here is a general purpose function that will work it's way through a nested array and return the value associated with the first occurance of the supplied key. It allows for integer or string keys. If no matching key is found it returns false.

// return the value a key in the supplied array  
function get_keyval($arr,$mykey)
{  
    foreach($arr as $key => $value){
        if((gettype($key) == gettype($mykey)) && ($key == $mykey)) {
            return $value;
        }
        if(is_array($value)){
            return get_keyval($value,$mykey);               
        }
    }
    return false;
}

// test it out
$myArray = get_keyval($suppliedArray, "merges");
foreach($myArray as $key => $value){
    echo "$key = $value\n";
}
3
  • Thanks, this worked great. I looked up gettype. If I understand this right, you're making sure that both $key and $mykey are the same type (string or numerical) and then that they're equal (or match) each other?
    – Dominic
    Sep 15, 2011 at 11:23
  • Thats's right. PHP can return a false positive match if you try and compare a string to a number. Sep 15, 2011 at 11:43
  • Easier would be to just use a strict comparison === to prevent PHP's type juggling. See this page that explains and demonstrates the potential trouble with making a loose comparison: stackoverflow.com/questions/44426990/… Sep 8, 2017 at 2:54
0

A recursive function can do this. Returns the array or FALSE on failure.

function search_sub_array ($array, $search = 'merges') {
  if (!is_array($array)) return FALSE; // We're not interested in non-arrays
  foreach ($array as $key => $val) { // loop through array elements
    if (is_array($val)) { // We're still not interested in non-arrays
      if ($key == $search) {
        return $val; // We found it, return it
      } else if (($result = search_sub_array($array)) !== FALSE) { // We found a sub-array, search that as well
        return $result; // We found it, return it
      }
    }
  }
  return FALSE; // We didn't find it
}

// Example usage
if (($result = search_sub_array($myArray,'merges')) !== FALSE) {
  echo "I found it! ".print_r($result,TRUE);
} else {
  echo "I didn't find it :-(";
}
0
0

So you want to access an array within an array within an array?

$mergeArray = NULL;
foreach($mArray['data'] as $mmArray)
    $mergeArray[] = $mmArray['merges'];

Something like that? If merges is always three deep down, I don't see why you need recursion. Otherwise see the other answers.

1
  • Thanks but I can't guarantee that 'merges' will always be three deep down. I think recursion remains the most flexible to any changes.
    – Dominic
    Sep 15, 2011 at 10:57
0

Here's another approach, mostly because I haven't used up my iterator quota yet today.

$search = new RegexIterator(
    new RecursiveIteratorIterator(
        new ParentIterator(new RecursiveArrayIterator($array)),
        RecursiveIteratorIterator::SELF_FIRST),
    '/^merges$/D', RegexIterator::MATCH, RegexIterator::USE_KEY
);
$search->rewind();
$merges = $search->current();
0

array_walk_recursive() is brilliant for this task! It doesn't care what level the key-value pairs are on and it only iterates the "leaf nodes" so there is not need to check if an element contains a string. Inside of the function, I am merely making a comparison on keys versus the array of needles to generate a one-dimensional result array ($sArray).

To be clear, I am making an assumption that you have predictable keys in your merges subarray.

Code: (Demo)

$needles=['EMAIL','NAME','LNAME','ACCOUNT','ACCMANID','ACCMANTEL','ACCMANMAIL','ACCMANFN','ACCMANLN'];
array_walk_recursive($mArray,function($v,$k)use(&$sArray,$needles){if(in_array($k,$needles))$sArray[$k]=$v;});
var_export($sArray);

Output:

array (
  'EMAIL' => '[email protected]',
  'NAME' => 'Firstname',
  'LNAME' => 'Lastname',
  'ACCOUNT' => 'ACME Ltd',
  'ACCMANID' => '123456adc',
  'ACCMANTEL' => '1234 123456',
  'ACCMANMAIL' => '[email protected]',
  'ACCMANFN' => 'Humpty',
  'ACCMANLN' => 'Dumpty',
)

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