Surprisingly array_keys_exist
doesn't exist?! In the interim that leaves some space to figure out a single line expression for this common task. I'm thinking of a shell script or another small program.
Note: each of the following solutions use concise […]
array declaration syntax available in php 5.4+
if (0 === count(array_diff(['story', 'message', '…'], array_keys($source)))) {
// all keys found
} else {
// not all
}
(hat tip to Kim Stacks)
This approach is the most brief I've found. array_diff()
returns an array of items present in argument 1 not present in argument2. Therefore an empty array indicates all keys were found. In php 5.5 you could simplify 0 === count(…)
to be simply empty(…)
.
if (0 === count(array_reduce(array_keys($source),
function($in, $key){ unset($in[array_search($key, $in)]); return $in; },
['story', 'message', '…'])))
{
// all keys found
} else {
// not all
}
Harder to read, easy to change. array_reduce()
uses a callback to iterate over an array to arrive at a value. By feeding the keys we're interested in the $initial
value of $in
and then removing keys found in source we can expect to end with 0 elements if all keys were found.
The construction is easy to modify since the keys we're interested in fit nicely on the bottom line.
if (2 === count(array_filter(array_keys($source), function($key) {
return in_array($key, ['story', 'message']); }
)))
{
// all keys found
} else {
// not all
}
Simpler to write than the array_reduce
solution but slightly tricker to edit. array_filter
is also an iterative callback that allows you to create a filtered array by returning true (copy item to new array) or false (don't copy) in the callback. The gotchya is that you must change 2
to the number of items you expect.
This can be made more durable but verge's on preposterous readability:
$find = ['story', 'message'];
if (count($find) === count(array_filter(array_keys($source), function($key) use ($find) { return in_array($key, $find); })))
{
// all keys found
} else {
// not all
}
array_intersect_key()
compare an array of the keys you want to verify with the array you are checking. If the length of the output is the same as the array of keys to check, they're all present.["story & message" => "value"]
or is it more like["story & message"]