115

I've encoded an Array I've made using the inbuilt json_encode(); function. I need it in the format of an Array of Arrays like so:

[["Afghanistan",32,12],["Albania",32,12]]

However, it is returning as:

{"2":["Afghanistan",32,12],"4":["Albania",32,12]}

How can I remove these row numbers without using any regex trickery?

4
  • 8
    ["2":["Afghanistan",32,12],"4":["Albania",32,12]] is not even valid JSON, so I doubt you get that. If your top level array is associative just call array_values() to get consecutive indexed elements. Jul 30, 2012 at 12:59
  • 1
    of interest to this topic too: php.net/manual/en/function.json-encode.php#105923
    – Ben
    Jul 30, 2012 at 13:07
  • @Ben link no longer seems to work
    – 8ctopus
    Oct 1, 2021 at 4:07
  • 1
    @8ctopus yeah, it's 9 years old I guess..
    – Ben
    Oct 6, 2021 at 2:57

4 Answers 4

217

If the array keys in your PHP array are not consecutive numbers, json_encode() must make the other construct an object since JavaScript arrays are always consecutively numerically indexed.

Use array_values() on the outer structure in PHP to discard the original array keys and replace them with zero-based consecutive numbering:

Example:

// Non-consecutive 3number keys are OK for PHP
// but not for a JavaScript array
$array = array(
  2 => array("Afghanistan", 32, 13),
  4 => array("Albania", 32, 12)
);

// array_values() removes the original keys and replaces
// with plain consecutive numbers
$out = array_values($array);
json_encode($out);
// [["Afghanistan", 32, 13], ["Albania", 32, 12]]
6
  • 2
    I've ended here when I found out that json_encode converted an array to object for no apparent reason when the array has only one item in it after being filtered by array_filter. I don't know if the array index has something to do with this disgusting php "bug", but array_values sorted it out for me. From now on.. there is no json_encode of an array without array_values being called.
    – Mar Bar
    Jul 13, 2016 at 18:29
  • 2
    @MarBar If the array has a non-numeric string key or a numeric key out of sequence, json_encode() will produce an {} object rather than an array [] since JavaScript/JSON has no other way to represent such a structure. But yes, you can strip the keys with array_keys() if they are not needed in the resultant json string. Jul 13, 2016 at 18:35
  • @MichaelBerkowski: i'm getting the same issue with a composite primary key from a db table, where i need to do first: mysqli_fetch_assoc and then array_values... i'm wonder if this is the most performant way to get true arrays with a lot of data ... should i rewrite my custom json_encode? what is your (appreciated) opinion about that?
    – deblocker
    Oct 19, 2017 at 20:47
  • 1
    @deblocker Hard to guess hour composite key fits in. Generally PHP's array_*() functions are all very efficient. On a small array, I generally prefer to use a few single action array_* functions if I can avoid loops. But if your mysqli_result is large you may not want to compile it all into an array at once then call array_values(). Instead you may be better to append rows to an array while fetching. All speculation though because I don't know what your code looks like. Oct 19, 2017 at 20:55
  • 1
    @Gem That depends very much on the structure of the XML you need to create because XML elements must be somehow named. There are examples in stackoverflow.com/questions/1397036/… Nov 16, 2018 at 13:42
25

json_encode() function will help you to encode array to JSON in php.

if you will use just json_encode function directly without any specific option, it will return an array. Like mention above question

$array = array(
  2 => array("Afghanistan",32,13),
  4 => array("Albania",32,12)
);
$out = array_values($array);
json_encode($out);
// [["Afghanistan",32,13],["Albania",32,12]]

Since you are trying to convert Array to JSON, Then I would suggest to use JSON_FORCE_OBJECT as additional option(parameters) in json_encode, Like below

<?php
$array=['apple','orange','banana','strawberry'];
echo json_encode($array, JSON_FORCE_OBJECT);
// {"0":"apple","1":"orange","2":"banana","3":"strawberry"} 
?>
0
4

I want to add to Michael Berkowski's answer that this can also happen if the array's order is reversed, in which case it's a bit trickier to observe the issue, because in the json object, the order will be ordered ascending.

For example:

[
    3 => 'a',
    2 => 'b',
    1 => 'c',
    0 => 'd'
]

Will return:

{
    0: 'd',
    1: 'c',
    2: 'b',
    3: 'a'
}

So the solution in this case, is to use array_reverse before encoding it to json

11
  • I think the array_values solution written by @Michael Berkowski is more universal and it works also in your case. Feb 28, 2020 at 18:51
  • @mickmackusa I disagree that it should be deleted. While it might not be useful to the OP, it can still be useful to other people with a similar problem. Jun 2, 2021 at 10:03
  • This was way too long ago. I remember that I just wanted to answer another case that might not be obvious, and if someone has a similar issue, and will scroll through, this will give them a hint. I don't think there's any harm in that. It's true, that one might blindly follow @Michael Berkowski's solution, but if you already think that's not your issue, or trying to understand why is that your issue, then this might be it...
    – Inc33
    Jun 2, 2021 at 10:03
  • Every answer must only address the question within the scope of the question. Extending the question by altering the sample data is not good -- otherwise we would see loads of pages suffer from scope creep. There are millions of pages here, find a more appropriate page to post this advice on. array_reverse() is absolutely no benefit to the OP's question. Jun 2, 2021 at 10:05
  • Age of a post is not a factor in this decision. Researchers don't care how old a page/post is. They want the best advice for the given question with no time wasted reading off-topic/irrelevant stuff. Jun 2, 2021 at 10:08
3

I had a problem with accented characters when converting a PHP array to JSON. I put UTF-8 stuff all over the place but nothing solved my problem until I added this piece of code in my PHP while loop where I was pushing the array:

$es_words[] = array(utf8_encode("$word"),"$alpha","$audio");

It was only the '$word' variable that was giving a problem. Afterwards it did a jason_encode no problem.

Hope that helps

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