157

I have an array called $ran = array(1,2,3,4);

I need to get a random value out of this array and store it in a variable, how can I do this?

0

21 Answers 21

280

You can also do just:

$k = array_rand($array);
$v = $array[$k];

This is the way to do it when you have an associative array.

3
39

PHP provides a function just for that: array_rand()
http://php.net/manual/en/function.array-rand.php

$ran = array(1,2,3,4);
$randomElement = $ran[array_rand($ran, 1)];
1
  • 8
    The default value of second argument of array_rand function is 1 so don't need to write it. Nov 22, 2017 at 22:50
27
$value = $array[array_rand($array)];
24

You can use mt_rand()

$random = $ran[mt_rand(0, count($ran) - 1)];

This comes in handy as a function as well if you need the value

function random_value($array, $default=null)
{
    $k = mt_rand(0, count($array) - 1);
    return isset($array[$k])? $array[$k]: $default;
}
7
  • 4
    Should be mt_rand(0, 3) as there are only 4 items. More correctly though: $array[mt_rand(0, count($array)]
    – reko_t
    Oct 29, 2009 at 12:43
  • 2
    Err, I think you meant mt_rand(0, count($ran) - 1)
    – Josh Davis
    Oct 29, 2009 at 12:50
  • according to php comments array_rand is not as random as it should be, so mt_rand is preferred Oct 23, 2014 at 9:00
  • 1
    What's the point in the whole isset part? This would fail for associative arrays anyway. Jan 18, 2015 at 12:32
  • i don't know why, but when using mt_rand instead of rand in this case seems to prefer some items more than the others
    – user151496
    Jun 9, 2016 at 14:02
19

You could use the array_rand function to select a random key from your array like below.

$array = array("one", "two", "three", "four", "five", "six");
echo $array[array_rand($array, 1)];

or you could use the rand and count functions to select a random index.

$array = array("one", "two", "three", "four", "five", "six");
echo $array[rand(0, count($array) - 1)];
13

Derived from Laravel Collection::random():

function array_random($array, $amount = 1)
{
    $keys = array_rand($array, $amount);

    if ($amount == 1) {
        return $array[$keys];
    }

    $results = [];
    foreach ($keys as $key) {
        $results[] = $array[$key];
    }

    return $results;
}

Usage:

$items = ['foo', 'bar', 'baz', 'lorem'=>'ipsum'];

array_random($items); // 'bar'
array_random($items, 2); // ['foo', 'ipsum']

A few notes:

  • $amount has to be less than or equal to count($array).
  • array_rand() doesn't shuffle keys (since PHP 5.2.10, see 48224), so your picked items will always be in original order. Use shuffle() afterwards if needed.


Documentation: array_rand(), shuffle()


edit: The Laravel function has noticeably grown since then, see Laravel 5.4's Arr::random(). Here is something more elaborate, derived from the grown-up Laravel function:

function array_random($array, $number = null)
{
    $requested = ($number === null) ? 1 : $number;
    $count = count($array);

    if ($requested > $count) {
        throw new \RangeException(
            "You requested {$requested} items, but there are only {$count} items available."
        );
    }

    if ($number === null) {
        return $array[array_rand($array)];
    }

    if ((int) $number === 0) {
        return [];
    }

    $keys = (array) array_rand($array, $number);

    $results = [];
    foreach ($keys as $key) {
        $results[] = $array[$key];
    }

    return $results;
}

A few highlights:

  • Throw exception if there are not enough items available
  • array_random($array, 1) returns an array of one item (#19826)
  • Support value "0" for the number of items (#20439)
13

Another approach through flipping array to get direct value.

Snippet

$array = [ 'Name1' => 'John', 'Name2' => 'Jane', 'Name3' => 'Jonny' ];
$val = array_rand(array_flip($array));

array_rand return key not value. So, we're flipping value as key.

Note: PHP key alway be an unique key, so when array is flipped, duplicate value as a key will be overwritten.

4
  • Why not just do $array[array_rand($array)];?
    – rinogo
    Mar 12, 2019 at 19:20
  • @rinogo It's works too, This already answered above. This is little bit different from your answer, array_flip remove duplicate as key then give result... Mean no duplicate! Mar 13, 2019 at 3:48
  • To escape duplicate keys you can use this syntax (In the second row): $array = [ 'Name1' => 'John', 'Name2' => 'Jane', 'Name3' => 'Jane' ]; $val = array_rand(array_flip(array_unique($array))); Sep 19, 2021 at 7:45
  • I like this approach as it allows for a simple single line code with an array declared directly on-the-fly inside it, eg array_rand(array_flip(array('ad-1.jpg','ad-2.gif','ad-3.png')))
    – rAthus
    Nov 17, 2023 at 10:40
10

The array_rand function seems to have an uneven distribution on large arrays, not every array item is equally likely to get picked. Using shuffle on the array and then taking the first element doesn't have this problem:

$myArray = array(1, 2, 3, 4, 5);

// Random shuffle
shuffle($myArray);

// First element is random now
$randomValue = $myArray[0];
2
  • That's a lot of extra computational "work" just to get a single random element, though. The other answers that use mt_rand() are probably better suited to the task.
    – rinogo
    May 2, 2019 at 20:45
  • Depends on what your needs are, I suppose. In my case, distribution was very important and the computational overhead was not.
    – Asciiom
    May 3, 2019 at 8:03
6
$rand = rand(1,4);

or, for arrays specifically:

$array = array('a value', 'another value', 'just some value', 'not some value');
$rand = $array[ rand(0, count($array)-1) ];
2
  • 2
    You would never get the first item in this list and you would go outside the array with 4 Oct 29, 2009 at 12:44
  • The first $rand is about values. The original array has values ranging from 1 to 4. The second $rand is about array keys, 0 to 3.
    – Josh Davis
    Oct 29, 2009 at 12:52
6

On-liner:

echo $array[array_rand($array,1)]
3
  • 1
    While this code may answer the question, providing additional context regarding why and/or how this code answers the question improves its long-term value. Jun 3, 2020 at 15:10
  • Isn't this the same as stackoverflow.com/a/19236022/1213708 answered 7 years earlier?
    – Nigel Ren
    May 1, 2022 at 19:41
  • It was edited in 17, but yeah looks like the same approach
    – Sid
    May 2, 2022 at 6:09
4

In my case, I have to get 2 values what are objects. I share this simple solution.

$ran = array("a","b","c","d");
$ranval = array_map(function($i) use($ran){return $ran[$i];},array_rand($ran,2));
3

One line: $ran[rand(0, count($ran) - 1)]

3

This will work nicely with in-line arrays. Plus, I think things are tidier and more reusable when wrapped up in a function.

function array_rand_value($a) {
    return $a[array_rand($a)];
}

Usage:

array_rand_value(array("a", "b", "c", "d"));

On PHP < 7.1.0, array_rand() uses rand(), so you wouldn't want to this function for anything related to security or cryptography. On PHP 7.1.0+, use this function without concern since rand() has been aliased to mt_rand().

3

I needed one line version for short array:

($array = [1, 2, 3, 4])[mt_rand(0, count($array) - 1)]

or if array is fixed:

[1, 2, 3, 4][mt_rand(0, 3]
2

Does your selection have any security implications? If so, use random_int() and array_keys(). (random_bytes() is PHP 7 only, but there is a polyfill for PHP 5).

function random_index(array $source)
{
    $max = count($source) - 1;
    $r = random_int(0, $max);
    $k = array_keys($source);
    return $k[$r];
}

Usage:

$array = [
    'apple' =>   1234,
    'boy'   =>   2345,
    'cat'   =>   3456,
    'dog'   =>   4567,
    'echo'  =>   5678,
    'fortune' => 6789
];
$i = random_index($array);
var_dump([$i, $array[$i]]);

Demo: https://3v4l.org/1joB1

2

Use rand() to get random number to echo random key. In ex: 0 - 3

$ran = array(1,2,3,4);
echo $ran[rand(0,3)];
0

I'm basing my answer off of @ÓlafurWaage's function. I tried to use it but was running into reference issues when I had tried to modify the return object. I updated his function to pass and return by reference. The new function is:

function &random_value(&$array, $default=null)
{
    $k = mt_rand(0, count($array) - 1);
    if (isset($array[$k])) {
        return $array[$k];
    } else {
        return $default;
    }
}

For more context, see my question over at Passing/Returning references to object + changing object is not working

0

Get random values from an array.

function random($array)
{
    /// Determine array is associative or not
    $keys = array_keys($array);
    $givenArrIsAssoc = array_keys($keys) !== $keys;

    /// if array is not associative then return random element
    if(!$givenArrIsAssoc){
        return $array[array_rand($array)];
    }

    /// If array is associative then 
    $keys = array_rand($array, $number);
    $results = [];
    foreach ((array) $keys as $key) {
        $results[] = $array[$key];
    }
    return $results;
}
0

mt_srand usage example

if one needs to pick a random row from a text but same all the time based on something

$rows = array_map('trim', explode("\n", $text));
mt_srand($item_id);
$row = $rows[rand(0, count($rows ) - 1)];
-1

A simple way to getting Randdom value form Array.

$color_array =["red","green","blue","light_orange"];
$color_array[rand(0,3)

now every time you will get different colors from Array.

-5

You get a random number out of an array as follows:

$randomValue = $rand[array_rand($rand,1)];
1
  • 4
    array_rand() returns a random key, not a random value.
    – reko_t
    Oct 29, 2009 at 12:45

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