110

What does the => operator mean in the following code?

foreach ($user_list as $user => $pass)

The code is a comment at PHP.net. The user does not specify the value of $user_list, $user or $pass. I normally see that => means equal or greater than.

However, I am not sure about its purpose here because it is not assigned. I read the code as

  1. process a list of users in integers
  2. such that the value of each user is equal or greater than password

The above does not make sense to me.

4
  • I updated my answer, forgot the 'array' keyword. Aug 6, 2009 at 22:41
  • Related: stackoverflow.com/questions/4758791/… Jan 21, 2011 at 23:54
  • @Masi Mistake on my side. Sorry.
    – kapa
    Jun 8, 2012 at 7:42
  • I would say => assigns a value to the array and uses a key as an index. So in your case, the array which you call $user_list uses $user as an index key. The foreach loop loops and assigns to every element in that array the value $pass.
    – Julian
    Apr 24, 2014 at 9:19

6 Answers 6

136

=> is the separator for associative arrays. In the context of that foreach loop, it assigns the key of the array to $user and the value to $pass.

Example:

$user_list = array(
    'dave' => 'apassword',
    'steve' => 'secr3t'
);

foreach ($user_list as $user => $pass) {
    echo "{$user}'s pass is: {$pass}\n";
}
// Prints: 
// "dave's pass is: apassword"
// "steve's pass is: secr3t"

Note that this can be used for numerically indexed arrays too.

Example:

$foo = array('car', 'truck', 'van', 'bike', 'rickshaw');
foreach ($foo as $i => $type) {
    echo "{$i}: {$type}\n";
}
// prints:
// 0: car
// 1: truck
// 2: van
// 3: bike
// 4: rickshaw
0
27

It means assign the key to $user and the variable to $pass

When you assign an array, you do it like this

$array = array("key" => "value");

It uses the same symbol for processing arrays in foreach statements. The '=>' links the key and the value.

According to the PHP Manual, the '=>' created key/value pairs.

Also, Equal or Greater than is the opposite way: '>='. In PHP the greater or less than sign always goes first: '>=', '<='.

And just as a side note, excluding the second value does not work like you think it would. Instead of only giving you the key, It actually only gives you a value:

$array = array("test" => "foo");

foreach($array as $key => $value)
{
    echo $key . " : " . $value; // Echoes "test : foo"
}

foreach($array as $value)
{
    echo $value; // Echoes "foo"
}
2
  • 1
    Your last example has something wrong, since I get the error message Parse error: syntax error, unexpected T_DOUBLE_ARROW in /var/www/cha.php on line 2. Aug 6, 2009 at 22:34
  • Ooops Forgot to add the Array Keyword. Try that Aug 6, 2009 at 22:40
13

Code like "a => b" means, for an associative array (some languages, like Perl, if I remember correctly, call those "hash"), that 'a' is a key, and 'b' a value.

You might want to take a look at the documentations of, at least:

Here, you are having an array, called $user_list, and you will iterate over it, getting, for each line, the key of the line in $user, and the corresponding value in $pass.

For instance, this code:

$user_list = array(
    'user1' => 'password1',
    'user2' => 'password2',
);

foreach ($user_list as $user => $pass)
{
    var_dump("user = $user and password = $pass");
}

Will get you this output:

string 'user = user1 and password = password1' (length=37)
string 'user = user2 and password = password2' (length=37)

(I'm using var_dump to generate a nice output, that facilitates debuging; to get a normal output, you'd use echo)


"Equal or greater" is the other way arround: "greater or equals", which is written, in PHP, like this; ">="
The Same thing for most languages derived from C: C++, JAVA, PHP, ...


As a piece of advice: If you are just starting with PHP, you should definitely spend some time (maybe a couple of hours, maybe even half a day or even a whole day) going through some parts of the manual :-)
It'd help you much!

8

An array in PHP is a map of keys to values:

$array = array();
$array["yellow"] = 3;
$array["green"] = 4;

If you want to do something with each key-value-pair in your array, you can use the foreach control structure:

foreach ($array as $key => $value)

The $array variable is the array you will be using. The $key and $value variables will contain a key-value-pair in every iteration of the foreach loop. In this example, they will first contain "yellow" and 3, then "green" and 4.

You can use an alternative notation if you don't care about the keys:

foreach ($array as $value)
2
5

Arrays in PHP are associative arrays (otherwise known as dictionaries or hashes) by default. If you don't explicitly assign a key to a value, the interpreter will silently do that for you. So, the expression you've got up there iterates through $user_list, making the key available as $user and the value available as $pass as local variables in the body of the foreach.

3

$user_list is an array of data which when looped through can be split into it's name and value.

In this case it's name is $user and it's value is $pass.

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