1

I have a PHP array of associative arrays with the following format:

array(1) {
  [0]=>
   { ["name"]=> "Steve Jobs"
     ["email"]=> "[email protected]" }
} 

I'm very new to PHP, but what I want to do is search for a specific email, and if found, delete that specific array (name & email pair) from the array (without leaving an empty space in the array where the removed object used to be).

I found this code here that searches for an entry but returns an array. How would I modify this to delete the found array?

function search($array, $key, $value)
{
    $results = array();

    if (is_array($array))
    {
        if (isset($array[$key]) && $array[$key] == $value)
            $results[] = $array;

        foreach ($array as $subarray)
            $results = array_merge($results, search($subarray, $key, $value));
    }

    return $results;
}

4 Answers 4

4

Something like this?

function delete_user(&$arr, $name){
    for($i = count($arr)-1; $i >= 0; $i--){
        if($arr[$i]["name"] == $name){
            unset($arr[$i]);
        }
    }
}

the &$arr tells PHP to pass the array by reference, so it can be modified from the function, otherwise, it'll be pass-by-value.

4
  • Yes I think this might work..although wouldn't I have to use strcmp to compare strings, or would == work too?
    – Snowman
    Feb 19, 2012 at 3:34
  • You can compare strings with == in PHP Feb 19, 2012 at 3:38
  • I'm pretty sure this code won't work exactly right. If I have two results that are consecutive elements in the array, and you remove the first one, this will gloss over the second one.
    – Kevin Ji
    Feb 19, 2012 at 5:46
  • How do you mean? I just tested it and it removed both elements even when there was a duplicate twice in a row. Feb 19, 2012 at 6:26
0

You have to use unset to remove an element and use in_array or array_search method to search an element from an array.

unset($array[0]);

Sample from PHP manual (array_search)

function array_key_index(&$arr, $key) {
    $i = 0;
    foreach(array_keys($arr) as $k) {
        if($k == $key) return $i;
        $i++;
    }
}
1
  • Well they'll be more than 1 entry, say over 30 name, email pairs. I want to search for a specific one and delete it
    – Snowman
    Feb 19, 2012 at 3:12
0

I believe there's a small problem with raser's answer. I tried to comment on it, but I can't since I don't have 50 reputation.

Let me know if you agree: count($arr) returns the number of elements in the array. He's using a decremental for loop, except the array's index starts at 0 and his loop ends before it reaches 0, so the first element of the array is never searched. I believe the correct code would be something like:

function delete_user(&$arr, $name){
    for($i = count($arr) - 1; $i >= 0; $i--){
        if($arr[$i]["name"] == $name){
            unset($arr[$i]);
        }
    }
}

Thanks!

-3

just found array index, and

unset(array(key));

this will not showing that array

2
  • <?php $array = array( 'Tires'=>100, 'Oil'=>10, 'Spark Plugs'=>4 ); foreach($array as $key=>$value) { echo 'Key= '.$key.'<br>'; echo 'Value= '.$value.'<br>'; } ?> Feb 19, 2012 at 3:34
  • <?php $array = array(0 => 'blue', 1 => 'red', 2 => 'green', 3 => 'red'); $key = array_search('green', $array); // $key = 2; $key = array_search('red', $array); // $key = 1; ?> Feb 19, 2012 at 3:35

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.