376

Is it possible, in PHP, to flatten a (bi/multi)dimensional array without using recursion or references?

I'm only interested in the values so the keys can be ignored, I'm thinking in the lines of array_map() and array_values().

5
  • 18
    Why avoid recursion?
    – JorenB
    Aug 23, 2009 at 23:53
  • 6
    Dupe (mostly) stackoverflow.com/questions/526556/…
    – cletus
    Aug 23, 2009 at 23:53
  • 4
    You can't do anything with all elements of an arbitrarily deep arrays without recursion (you can disguise it as iteration, but potato, potahto.) If you just want to avoid writing the recursion handling code yourself, use dk2.php.net/manual/en/function.array-walk-recursive.php with a callback that adds the element to an available array (use global, the userdata parameter, put it all in a class and refer to $this, etc.) Aug 24, 2009 at 0:05
  • @JorenB: I would like to see a implementation could be archived.
    – Alix Axel
    Aug 24, 2009 at 1:42
  • Have a look at flatten function from Nspl. You also can specify a depth with it. Feb 24, 2016 at 20:34

31 Answers 31

366

As of PHP 5.3 the shortest solution seems to be array_walk_recursive() with the new closures syntax:

function flatten(array $array) {
    $return = array();
    array_walk_recursive($array, function($a) use (&$return) { $return[] = $a; });
    return $return;
}
10
  • 40
    if you want keys,function flatten(array $array) { $return = array(); array_walk_recursive($array, function($a,$b) use (&$return) { $return[$b] = $a; }); return $return; } Jul 5, 2011 at 16:40
  • can you rewrite this to use with php 5.2?
    – Alex
    Oct 1, 2013 at 8:17
  • 2
    @Alex unfortunately you need the use syntax to make this work with array_walk_recursive since it won't accept the optional $userdata parameter by reference Feb 4, 2014 at 9:14
  • 1
    Look like works fine for such Arrays -> ideone.com/DsmApP But not for such ones -> ideone.com/5Kltva Or is it me?
    – Ssss Ppppp
    Sep 19, 2014 at 10:23
  • 2
    @Sebastian Piskorski it's because your values are being treated like keys, so as soon as you introduce your own key=>value pair in an array, your array values in the first index position are treated like keys with no values, and because keys have to be unique, where two keys match, your values get added to the same key. A simple solution would be to sort the array first. This is behaviour inherent in PHP. Sep 19, 2015 at 13:28
338

You can use the Standard PHP Library (SPL) to "hide" the recursion.

$a = array(1,2,array(3,4, array(5,6,7), 8), 9);
$it = new RecursiveIteratorIterator(new RecursiveArrayIterator($a));
foreach($it as $v) {
  echo $v, " ";
}

prints

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 
12
  • 439
    Am I the only one that thinks 'RecursiveIteratorIterator' is a silly name?
    – nilamo
    Aug 24, 2009 at 6:51
  • 53
    It's more "logical" than "catchy". Not everything can have a fantastic name like JOGL, Knol or Azure :-)
    – VolkerK
    Aug 24, 2009 at 8:35
  • 9
    This won't work for empty arrays as children. They will be returned as a parent.
    – hakre
    Oct 22, 2011 at 15:30
  • 51
    iterator_to_array($it, false) avoids the need for the foreach.
    – Alix Axel
    Feb 20, 2013 at 14:17
  • 10
    Building on what others presented, I was able to craft this little helper: function flatten($arr){ $it = new RecursiveIteratorIterator(new RecursiveArrayIterator($arr)); return iterator_to_array($it, true); } Hope this helps others.
    – Mike S.
    Jan 10, 2014 at 20:25
276

In PHP 5.6 and above you can flatten two dimensional arrays with array_merge after unpacking the outer array with ... operator. The code is simple and clear.

array_merge(...$a);

This works with collection of associative arrays too.

$a = [[10, 20], [30, 40]];
$b = [["x" => "A", "y" => "B"], ["y" => "C", "z" => "D"]];

print_r(array_merge(...$a));
print_r(array_merge(...$b));

Array
(
    [0] => 10
    [1] => 20
    [2] => 30
    [3] => 40
)
Array
(
    [x] => A
    [y] => C
    [z] => D
)

In PHP 8.0 and below, array unpacking does not work when the outer array has non numeric keys. Support for unpacking array with string keys is available from PHP 8.1. To support 8.0 and below, you should call array_values first.

$c = ["a" => ["x" => "A", "y" => "B"], "b" => ["y" => "C", "z" => "D"]];
print_r(array_merge(...array_values($c)));

Array
(
    [x] => A
    [y] => C
    [z] => D
)

Update: Based on comment by @MohamedGharib (for PHP 7.3.x and older ref)

This will throw an error if the outer array is empty, since array_merge would be called with zero arguments. It can be be avoided by adding an empty array as the first argument.

array_merge([], ...$a);
6
  • 3
    This works ONLY when every element of the array is an array. If the array comprises mixed types, such as scalars, an error will occur.
    – Otheus
    Nov 26, 2019 at 14:05
  • 1
    @Otheus That is because the above solution does not use recursion. As you said, it requires an array of array. But on the plus side, this should be much faster that the other methods, since it does not have the additional overhead of the function calls.
    – Joyce Babu
    Nov 26, 2019 at 15:30
  • 8
    Will throw an error if the outer array is empty, could be avoidable if combined with an empty array array_merge([], ...$a); Jan 1, 2020 at 1:38
  • If using associative arrays you can check this solution stackoverflow.com/questions/40663687/…
    – alex
    Jan 17, 2020 at 15:40
  • 1
    very cool. not right for 100% of situations, but perfect when it works. $a = array_merge( array(), ...array_values( $a ) ); worked for me to flatten the results of querying is single column in wordpress with $wpdb->get_results( $sql, ARRAY_N ) Dec 23, 2020 at 20:59
102

Solution for 2 dimensional array

Please try this :

$array  = your array

$result = call_user_func_array('array_merge', $array);

echo "<pre>";
print_r($result);

EDIT : 21-Aug-13

Here is the solution which works for multi-dimensional array :

function array_flatten($array) {
    $return = array();
    foreach ($array as $key => $value) {
        if (is_array($value)){
            $return = array_merge($return, array_flatten($value));
        } else {
            $return[$key] = $value;
        }
    }

    return $return;
}

$array  = Your array

$result = array_flatten($array);

echo "<pre>";
print_r($result);

Ref: http://php.net/manual/en/function.call-user-func-array.php

7
  • Thank you, the first one worked on an array I was getting from PDO where the other solutions did not.
    – JAL
    Nov 30, 2013 at 23:04
  • 7
    This is a poor strategy. call_user_func_array('array_merge', []) (notice the empty array) returns null and triggers a php warning error. It's a slick solution if you know for a fact your array won't be empty, but that's not a common assumption many can make.
    – goat
    Jan 15, 2015 at 6:42
  • The OP specifically asked for non-recursive solutions.
    – Lux
    Jul 20, 2017 at 20:27
  • Wow, cool 2d flattern! But to prevent notice just use $result = $array ?call_user_func_array('array_merge', $array) : []; Mar 4, 2018 at 10:29
  • 1
    The 2nd snippet cannot be trusted. It potentially destroys data. The 1st snippet is ONLY suitable an array of arrays. Despite its score, this answer doesn't contain advice that is fit and reliable for general use. Jun 19, 2022 at 10:18
30

To flatten w/o recursion (as you have asked for), you can use a stack. Naturally you can put this into a function of it's own like array_flatten. The following is a version that works w/o keys:.

function array_flatten(array $array)
{
    $flat = array(); // initialize return array
    $stack = array_values($array); // initialize stack
    while($stack) // process stack until done
    {
        $value = array_shift($stack);
        if (is_array($value)) // a value to further process
        {
            array_unshift($stack, ...$value);
        }
        else // a value to take
        {
            $flat[] = $value;
        }
    }
    return $flat;
}

Elements are processed in their order. Because subelements will be moved on top of the stack, they will be processed next.

It's possible to take keys into account as well, however, you'll need a different strategy to handle the stack. That's needed because you need to deal with possible duplicate keys in the sub-arrays. A similar answer in a related question: PHP Walk through multidimensional array while preserving keys

I'm not specifically sure, but I I had tested this in the past: The RecurisiveIterator does use recursion, so it depends on what you really need. Should be possible to create a recursive iterator based on stacks as well:

foreach(new FlatRecursiveArrayIterator($array) as $key => $value)
{
    echo "** ($key) $value\n";
}

Demo

I didn't make it so far, to implement the stack based on RecursiveIterator which I think is a nice idea.

3
  • +1 for outstanding array_flatten function. I had to add if(!empty($value)){$flat[] = $value} inside the else statement to prevent empty being added to the result array. Awesome function! Mar 23, 2017 at 3:35
  • 1
    The flattening operation can be reduced from $stack = array_merge(array_values($value), $stack); to array_unshift($stack, ...$value); and the array_values() call is probably extraneous for most, but it didn't seem right to edit the answer given it predates v5.6.
    – Walf
    Jan 13, 2021 at 3:15
  • @Walf: Yes, this is the only reason. Thanks for the hint thought, I've edited it in.
    – hakre
    Jan 13, 2021 at 9:07
26

Just thought I'd point out that this is a fold, so array_reduce can be used:

array_reduce($my_array, 'array_merge', array());

EDIT: Note that this can be composed to flatten any number of levels. We can do this in several ways:

// Reduces one level
$concat   = function($x) { return array_reduce($x, 'array_merge', array()); };

// We can compose $concat with itself $n times, then apply it to $x
// This can overflow the stack for large $n
$compose  = function($f, $g) {
    return function($x) use ($f, $g) { return $f($g($x)); };
};
$identity = function($x) { return $x; };
$flattenA = function($n) use ($compose, $identity, $concat) {
    return  function($x) use ($compose, $identity, $concat, $n) {
        return ($n === 0)? $x
                         : call_user_func(array_reduce(array_fill(0, $n, $concat),
                                                       $compose,
                                                       $identity),
                                          $x);
    };
};

// We can iteratively apply $concat to $x, $n times
$uncurriedFlip     = function($f) {
    return  function($a, $b) use ($f) {
        return $f($b, $a);
    };
};
$iterate  = function($f) use ($uncurriedFlip) {
    return  function($n) use ($uncurriedFlip, $f) {
    return  function($x) use ($uncurriedFlip, $f, $n) {
        return ($n === 0)? $x
                         : array_reduce(array_fill(0, $n, $f),
                                        $uncurriedFlip('call_user_func'),
                                        $x);
    }; };
};
$flattenB = $iterate($concat);

// Example usage:
$apply    = function($f, $x) {
    return $f($x);
};
$curriedFlip = function($f) {
    return  function($a) use ($f) {
    return  function($b) use ($f, $a) {
        return $f($b, $a);
    }; };
};

var_dump(
    array_map(
        call_user_func($curriedFlip($apply),
                       array(array(array('A', 'B', 'C'),
                                   array('D')),
                             array(array(),
                                   array('E')))),
        array($flattenA(2), $flattenB(2))));

Of course, we could also use loops but the question asks for a combinator function along the lines of array_map or array_values.

5
  • Multi-dimensional != bi-dimensional.
    – Alix Axel
    Jul 17, 2013 at 17:29
  • @atamur This works on PHP 5.3+. As noted in the changelog for array_reduce, $initial could only be an integer before 5.3, then it was allowed to be "mixed" (ie. anything your reduction function supports)
    – Warbo
    Jul 19, 2013 at 13:20
  • 1
    @AlixAxel You're right that multi-dimensional != bi-dimensional, but this can be composed to flatten any number of levels. One nice consequence of composing folds is that it obeys a fixed limit; if I have an array nested to 5 levels, I can fold it into 4 levels, or fold . fold it to get 3 levels, or fold . fold . fold it to get 2 levels, etc. This also prevents bugs getting hidden; eg. if I want to flatten a 5D array but I'm given a 4D array, the error will trigger immediately.
    – Warbo
    Jul 19, 2013 at 13:35
  • I love this solution, for 2-dimensional arrays. Fits the bill perfectly.
    – Tom Auger
    Mar 12, 2016 at 0:36
  • I agree that your single level definition is the best answer, it's also wonderfully neat. However I think you incorrectly named it $concat, I think you should just call it $flatten. array_merge is the php equivalent of concat. I tried to get array_concat added as an alias for array_merge.
    – icc97
    Oct 29, 2017 at 15:27
26

Straightforward and One-liner answer.

function flatten_array(array $array)
{
    return iterator_to_array(
         new \RecursiveIteratorIterator(new \RecursiveArrayIterator($array)));
}

Usage:

$array = [
    'name' => 'Allen Linatoc',
    'profile' => [
        'age' => 21,
        'favourite_games' => [ 'Call of Duty', 'Titanfall', 'Far Cry' ]
    ]
];

print_r( flatten_array($array) );

Output (in PsySH):

Array
(
    [name] => Allen Linatoc
    [age] => 21
    [0] => Call of Duty
    [1] => Titanfall
    [2] => Far Cry
)

Now it's pretty up to you now how you'll handle the keys. Cheers


EDIT (2017-03-01)

Quoting Nigel Alderton's concern/issue:

Just to clarify, this preserves keys (even numeric ones) so values that have the same key are lost. For example $array = ['a',['b','c']] becomes Array ([0] => b, [1] => c ). The 'a' is lost because 'b' also has a key of 0

Quoting Svish's answer:

Just add false as second parameter ($use_keys) to the iterator_to_array call

4
  • Just to clarify, this preserves keys (even numeric ones) so values that have the same key are lost. For example $array = ['a',['b','c']] becomes Array ([0] => b, [1] => c ). The 'a' is lost because 'b' also has a key of 0. Jan 19, 2017 at 18:36
  • 1
    @NigelAlderton Just add false as second parameter ($use_keys) to the iterator_to_array call.
    – Svish
    Feb 26, 2017 at 19:29
  • Watch out when using iterator_to_array($it, false);! If this parameter is not set or set to TRUE, duplicate keys will be overwritten!!! If you use it with array(1,2,array(3,4, array(5,6,7), 8), 9); this would return 5 6 7 9 and not 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 as expected.
    – ponsfrilus
    Jan 15, 2021 at 18:19
  • This use of iterators has the benefit of preserving numeric 2nd level keys while flattening. Implement this approach using the sample data from "Flatten a 2d array while preserving numeric associative row keys" to see the behavior which is different from other techniques on this page. Proof: 3v4l.org/9rEm4 Jan 13, 2023 at 1:39
18

Uses recursion. Hopefully upon seeing how not-complex it is, your fear of recursion will dissipate once you see how not-complex it is.

function flatten($array) {
    if (!is_array($array)) {
        // nothing to do if it's not an array
        return array($array);
    }

    $result = array();
    foreach ($array as $value) {
        // explode the sub-array, and add the parts
        $result = array_merge($result, flatten($value));
    }

    return $result;
}


$arr = array('foo', array('nobody', 'expects', array('another', 'level'), 'the', 'Spanish', 'Inquisition'), 'bar');
echo '<ul>';
foreach (flatten($arr) as $value) {
    echo '<li>', $value, '</li>';
}
echo '<ul>';

Output:

<ul><li>foo</li><li>nobody</li><li>expects</li><li>another</li><li>level</li><li>the</li><li>Spanish</li><li>Inquisition</li><li>bar</li><ul>
3
  • 1
    I don't fear recursion, I just want to learn other ways to do the same.
    – Alix Axel
    Aug 24, 2009 at 2:02
  • 14
    +1 for this recursion: Hopefully upon seeing how not-complex it is, your fear of recursion will dissipate once you see how not-complex it is.
    – oxygen
    Feb 5, 2013 at 15:35
  • 1
    OK, this is over me. How it is possible, that reply ("I don't fear recursion") is three and a half year older (Aug 24 '09) than initial statement ("(...) your fear of recursion will dissipate (...)"), made on Feb 5 '13?
    – trejder
    Jun 20, 2013 at 10:52
13

Flattens two dimensional arrays only:

$arr = [1, 2, [3, 4]];
$arr = array_reduce($arr, function ($a, $b) {
     return array_merge($a, (array) $b);
}, []);

// Result: [1, 2, 3, 4]
9

The Laravel helper for flattening arrays is Arr::flatten()

use Illuminate\Support\Arr;
$flat = Arr::flatten([
    'a' => 'Level 1',
    'b' => [
        'Level 2 #1',
        'Level 2 #2',
    ],
]);
// $flat == ['Level 1', 'Level 2 #1', 'Level 2 #2']

The second parameter in Arr::flatten() is depth, which defaults to null. This means that the array will be flattened infinitely by default. A depth of 1 will flatten the array one level, and so on.

$depth = 1;
$flat = Arr::flatten(['a','b',['c','d',['e','f']]]], $depth);
// $flat == ['a','b','c','d',['e','f']]
0
8

From PHP v7.4, you can use the spread operator and merge the arrays. Simple and effective.

$flatArr = array_merge(...$originalArray);
2
  • 2
    Or, if the original array is associative, $flatArr = array_merge(...array_values($originalArray));
    – Alliswell
    Mar 10, 2023 at 8:40
  • @Joyce already gave the advice in this answer back in the year 2017. Feb 10 at 8:33
7

This solution is non-recursive. Note that the order of the elements will be somewhat mixed.

function flatten($array) {
    $return = array();
    while(count($array)) {
        $value = array_shift($array);
        if(is_array($value))
            foreach($value as $sub)
                $array[] = $sub;
        else
            $return[] = $value;
    }
    return $return;
}
2
  • 1
    Clever idea, but there's a bug. "$array[] = $value" doesn't add all the elements of $value to $array, it merely add $value itself. If you run this code, it will loop indefinitely.
    – Todd Owen
    Aug 24, 2009 at 0:29
  • Yes, shifting the value off the array and appending it again to the end doesn't make much sense. I guess you wanted to array_merge() instead?
    – deceze
    Aug 24, 2009 at 0:37
6

I believe this is the cleanest solution without using any mutations nor unfamiliar classes.

<?php

function flatten($array)
{
    return array_reduce($array, function($acc, $item){
        return array_merge($acc, is_array($item) ? flatten($item) : [$item]);
    }, []);
}


// usage
$array = [1, 2, [3, 4], [5, [6, 7]], 8, 9, 10];
print_r(flatten($array));
3

Try the following simple function:

function _flatten_array($arr) {
  while ($arr) {
    list($key, $value) = each($arr); 
    is_array($value) ? $arr = $value : $out[$key] = $value;
    unset($arr[$key]);
  }
  return (array)$out;
}

So from this:

array (
  'und' => 
  array (
    'profiles' => 
    array (
      0 => 
      array (
        'commerce_customer_address' => 
        array (
          'und' => 
          array (
            0 => 
            array (
              'first_name' => 'First name',
              'last_name' => 'Last name',
              'thoroughfare' => 'Address 1',
              'premise' => 'Address 2',
              'locality' => 'Town/City',
              'administrative_area' => 'County',
              'postal_code' => 'Postcode',
            ),
          ),
        ),
      ),
    ),
  ),
)

you get:

array (
  'first_name' => 'First name',
  'last_name' => 'Last name',
  'thoroughfare' => 'Address 1',
  'premise' => 'Address 2',
  'locality' => 'Town/City',
  'administrative_area' => 'County',
  'postal_code' => 'Postcode',
)
3
  • maybe you should check your function... seems like no work as expected
    – Emiliano
    Dec 11, 2019 at 13:45
  • @Emiliano Try asking a new question, maybe your input data is different, so it won't work in your particular case.
    – kenorb
    Dec 11, 2019 at 14:43
  • we have few issues each is a deprecated function, you can improve that point you weren't a new guy here, you should know it second if your code work with a specific version of php say it third if not work with all data say it
    – Emiliano
    Dec 12, 2019 at 18:33
3

You can do it with ouzo goodies:

 $result = Arrays::flatten($multidimensional);

See: Here

3

How about using a recursive generator? https://ideone.com/d0TXCg

<?php

$array = [
    'name' => 'Allen Linatoc',
    'profile' => [
        'age' => 21,
        'favourite_games' => [ 'Call of Duty', 'Titanfall', 'Far Cry' ]
    ]
];

foreach (iterate($array) as $item) {
    var_dump($item);
};

function iterate($array)
{
    foreach ($array as $item) {
        if (is_array($item)) {
            yield from iterate($item);
        } else {
            yield $item;
        }
    }
}
3

If you want to keep also your keys that is solution.

function flatten(array $array) {
    $return = array();
    array_walk_recursive($array, function($value, $key) use (&$return) { $return[$key] = $value; });
    return $return;
}

Unfortunately it outputs only final nested arrays, without middle keys. So for the following example:

$array = array(
    'sweet' => array(
        'a' => 'apple',
        'b' => 'banana'),
    'sour' => 'lemon'); 
print_r(flatten($fruits));

Output is:

Array
(
    [a] => apple
    [b] => banana
    [sour] => lemon
)
2
  • That’s exactly what I was looking for. I changed the function name to flatten() to match the second example.
    – Manngo
    Jan 27, 2021 at 5:18
  • Is it ossible to have a return like : Array ( [sweet__a] => apple [sweet__b] => banana [sour] => lemon ) Jul 30, 2021 at 10:01
2

The trick is passing the both the source and destination arrays by reference.

function flatten_array(&$arr, &$dst) {
    if(!isset($dst) || !is_array($dst)) {
        $dst = array();
    }
    if(!is_array($arr)) {
        $dst[] = $arr;
    } else {
        foreach($arr as &$subject) {
            flatten_array($subject, $dst);
        }
    }
}

$recursive = array('1', array('2','3',array('4',array('5','6')),'7',array(array(array('8'),'9'),'10')));
echo "Recursive: \r\n";
print_r($recursive);
$flat = null;
flatten_array($recursive, $flat);

echo "Flat: \r\n";
print_r($flat);

// If you change line 3 to $dst[] = &$arr; , you won't waste memory,
// since all you're doing is copying references, and imploding the array 
// into a string will be both memory efficient and fast:)

echo "String:\r\n";
echo implode(',',$flat);
2

If you really don't like a recursion ... try shifting instead :)

$a = array(1,2,array(3,4, array(5,6,7), 8), 9);
$o = [];
for ($i=0; $i<count($a); $i++) {
    if (is_array($a[$i])) {
        array_splice($a, $i+1, 0, $a[$i]);
    } else {
        $o[] = $a[$i];
    }
}

Note: In this simple version, this does not support array keys.

1
  • this is an interesting approach. in contrast with the other solutions, it edits the original array ($a). If you replace it with a continue, its somewhat faster.
    – pcarvalho
    Jan 28, 2018 at 0:21
1
/**
 * For merging values of a multidimensional array into one 
 *
 * $array = [
 *     0 => [
 *         0 => 'a1',
 *         1 => 'b1',
 *         2 => 'c1',
 *         3 => 'd1'
 *     ],
 *     1 => [
 *         0 => 'a2',
 *         1 => 'b2',
 *         2 => 'c2',
 *     ]
 * ];
 *
 * becomes : 
 *
 * $array = [
 *     0 => 'a1',
 *     1 => 'b1',
 *     2 => 'c1',
 *     3 => 'd1',
 *     4 => 'a2',
 *     5 => 'b2',
 *     6 => 'c2',
 *     
 * ]
 */
array_reduce
(
    $multiArray
    , function ($lastItem, $currentItem) {
        $lastItem = $lastItem ?: array();
        return array_merge($lastItem, array_values($currentItem));
    }
);

Gist snippet

2
  • This seems to only support bi-dimensional arrays.
    – Alix Axel
    Aug 26, 2013 at 12:18
  • You are right. There is no point to use it. I think the best solution is "too much php"'s answer.
    – Arsham
    Aug 26, 2013 at 15:46
1

Anyone looking for a really clean solution to this; here's an option:

Taking an array of arrays with various key value configurations:

$test_array = array(
    array('test' => 0, 0, 0, 0),
    array(0, 0, 'merp' => array('herp' => 'derp'), 0),
    array(0, 0, 0, 0),
    array(0, 0, 0, 0)
);
$it = new RecursiveIteratorIterator(new RecursiveArrayIterator($test_array));
var_dump( iterator_to_array($it, false) ) ; 

This will take only the values from each array and return a single flat array.

Output of values in result:

0 0 0 0 0 0 derp 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
1
  • I did not downvote, but a reason I could imagine what may be considered not helpful with the answer is that this it is similar to the accepted answer post from 2009 which at least suggests the same. Please compare your own and comment.
    – hakre
    Oct 29, 2021 at 8:07
0

For php 5.2

function flatten(array $array) {
    $result = array();

    if (is_array($array)) {
        foreach ($array as $k => $v) {
            if (is_array($v)) {
                $result = array_merge($result, flatten($v));
            } else {
                $result[] = $v;
            }
        }
    }

    return $result;
}
2
  • Please include some explanation with this code-only answer. Sep 19, 2018 at 23:19
  • Why would if (is_array($array)) { be necessary if the function signature already demands that the incoming data is array-typed??? Jul 29, 2022 at 11:15
0

This version can do deep, shallow, or a specific number of levels:

/**
 * @param  array|object $array  array of mixed values to flatten
 * @param  int|boolean  $level  0:deep, 1:shallow, 2:2 levels, 3...
 * @return array
 */
function flatten($array, $level = 0) {
    $level = (int) $level;
    $result = array();
    foreach ($array as $i => $v) {
        if (0 <= $level && is_array($v)) {
            $v = flatten($v, $level > 1 ? $level - 1 : 0 - $level);
            $result = array_merge($result, $v);
        } elseif (is_int($i)) {
            $result[] = $v;
        } else {
            $result[$i] = $v; 
        }
    }
    return $result;
}
1
  • Beyond explaining what this snippet can do, please explain to future researchers how it works. Sep 19, 2018 at 23:20
0

Because the code in here looks scary. Here is a function that will also convert a multidimensional array into html form compatible syntax, but which is easier to read.

/**
 * Flattens a multi demensional array into a one dimensional
 * to be compatible with hidden html fields.
 *
 * @param array $array
 *  Array in the form:
 *  array(
 *    'a' => array(
 *      'b' => '1'
 *    )
 *  )
 *
 * @return array
 *  Array in the form:
 *  array(
 *    'a[b]' => 1,
 *  )
 */
function flatten_array($array) {
  // Continue until $array is a one-dimensional array.
  $continue = TRUE;
  while ($continue) {
    $continue = FALSE;

    // Walk through top and second level of $array and move 
    // all values in the second level up one level.
    foreach ($array as $key => $value) {
      if (is_array($value)) {
        // Second level found, therefore continue.
        $continue = TRUE;

        // Move each value a level up.
        foreach ($value as $child_key => $child_value) {
          $array[$key . '[' . $child_key . ']'] = $child_value;
        }

        // Remove second level array from top level.
        unset($array[$key]);
      }
    }
  }

  return $array;
}
0

If you want to keep intermediate keys:

function flattenArray(array &$result, $value, string $key = "")
{
    if (!is_array($value)) {
        $result[$key] = $value;
        return $result;
    }
    foreach ($value as $subKey => $subArray) {
        $newKey = $key !== "" ? $key . "_" . $subKey : $subKey;
        flattenArray($result, $subArray, $newKey);
    }
    return $result;
}

$nestedArray = [
    "name" => "John",
    "pets" => [
        ["id" => 1, "name" => "snooop"],
        ["id" => 2, "name" => "medor"],
    ],
    "job" => ["title" => "developper"],
];

$intermediateResult = [];
$flattened = flattenArray($intermediateResult, $nestedArray);
var_dump($flattened);

This will output:

array(6) {
["name"]=>
  string(4) "John"
        ["pets_0_id"]=>
  int(1)
  ["pets_0_name"]=>
  string(6) "snooop"
        ["pets_1_id"]=>
  int(2)
  ["pets_1_name"]=>
  string(5) "medor"
        ["job_title"]=>
  string(10) "developper"
}

See https://ideone.com/KXLtzZ#stdout

0

Non recursive, non references based implementation, as asked, which may be easier to understand than a recursion based implemetation. Can manage arbitrary deep multidimensional arrays, can't flatten associative arrays. It works by flattening the array one level per cycle, until it is completly valid.

function array_flatten(): array{
    $result = func_get_args();
    // check all elements of $list are not arrays
    $_is_flat = function (array $list): bool {
        foreach ($list as $val) {
            if (is_array($val)) {
                return false;
            }
        }
        return true;
    };
    do {
        $tmp = [];
        foreach ($result as $val) {
            if (is_array($val)) {
                if (!array_is_list($val)) {
                    throw new \Exception(sprintf("array_flatten can't handle associative arrays: %s", json_encode($val)));
                }
                $tmp = array_merge($tmp, $val);
            } else {
                $tmp[] = $val;
            }
        }
        $result = $tmp;
    } while (!$_is_flat($result));
    return $result;
}

This are the cases it handles:

assertEquals(array_flatten(1, 2), $expected = [1, 2], 'array_flatten 1a');
assertEquals(array_flatten([1], [2]), $expected = [1, 2], 'array_flatten 1b');
assertEquals(array_flatten([1], [[2], 3]), $expected = [1, 2, 3], 'array_flatten 1c');
assertEquals(array_flatten(1, [2, 3], [4, 5]), $expected = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5], 'array_flatten 2');
assertEquals(array_flatten(2, 3, [4, 5], [6, 7], 8), $expected = [2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8], 'array_flatten 3');
assertEquals(array_flatten([2, 3, [4, 5], [6, 7], 8]), $expected = [2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8], 'array_flatten 4');
assertEquals(array_flatten([2, [3, [4, [5]], [6, [7]], 8]]), $expected = [2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8], 'array_flatten complex');
1
  • This is "easier to understand"? Why prohibit associative keys? Jan 14, 2023 at 1:54
-1

I needed to represent PHP multidimensional array in HTML input format.

$test = [
    'a' => [
        'b' => [
            'c' => ['a', 'b']
        ]
    ],
    'b' => 'c',
    'c' => [
        'd' => 'e'
    ]
];

$flatten = function ($input, $parent = []) use (&$flatten) {
    $return = [];

    foreach ($input as $k => $v) {
        if (is_array($v)) {
            $return = array_merge($return, $flatten($v, array_merge($parent, [$k])));
        } else {
            if ($parent) {
                $key = implode('][', $parent) . '][' . $k . ']';

                if (substr_count($key, ']') != substr_count($key, '[')) {
                    $key = preg_replace('/\]/', '', $key, 1);
                }
            } else {
                $key = $k;
            }           

            $return[$key] = $v;
        }
    }

    return $return;
};

die(var_dump( $flatten($test) ));

array(4) {
  ["a[b][c][0]"]=>
  string(1) "a"
  ["a[b][c][1]"]=>
  string(1) "b"
  ["b"]=>
  string(1) "c"
  ["c[d]"]=>
  string(1) "e"
}
6
  • @AlixAxel How is this comment relative? Wrong post.. ?
    – Gajus
    Sep 30, 2013 at 9:52
  • No. I thought it was pretty similar to what you are doing and decided to share it, I think the only difference is that my representation is valid PHP as well - of the form $var['a']['b']['c'][0] = 'a'; ....
    – Alix Axel
    Sep 30, 2013 at 12:00
  • I intentionally needed HTML output. Though thank you for sharing.
    – Gajus
    Sep 30, 2013 at 12:52
  • 2
    I feel that this is the right answer to the wrong question. When answering, please attempt to answer the question as it is asked -- otherwise pages can depart from the core issue and leave future researchers confused. Sep 19, 2018 at 23:34
-1

If you have an array of objects and want to flatten it with a node, just use this function:

function objectArray_flatten($array,$childField) {
    $result = array();
    foreach ($array as $node)
    {
        $result[] = $node;
        if(isset($node->$childField))
        {
            $result = array_merge(
                $result, 
                objectArray_flatten($node->$childField,$childField)
            );
            unset($node->$childField);
        }

    }
    return $result;
}
-1

This is my solution, using a reference:

function arrayFlatten($array_in, &$array_out){

    if(is_array($array_in)){
        foreach ($array_in as $element){
               arrayFlatten($element, $array_out);
        }
    }
    else{
        $array_out[] = $array_in; 
    }
}

$arr1 = array('1', '2', array(array(array('3'), '4', '5')), array(array('6')));

arrayFlatten($arr1, $arr2);

echo "<pre>";
print_r($arr2);
echo "</pre>";
1
  • 1
    Please include some explanation of how your snippet works and why it is a good idea. Code-only answers are low-value on StackOverflow because they do a poor job of educating/empowering the OP and future researchers. Remember, we are never ONLY speaking to the OP; old pages are used to close new pages, so pages need to be informative enough to solve issues for future askers as well. Sep 19, 2018 at 23:28
-1
<?php
//recursive solution

//test array
$nested_array = [[1,2,[3]],4,[5],[[[6,[7=>[7,8,9,10]]]]]];

/*-----------------------------------------
function call and return result to an array
------------------------------------------*/
$index_count = 1;
$flatered_array = array();
$flatered_array = flat_array($nested_array, $index_count);

/*-----------------------------------------
Print Result
-----------------------------------------*/
echo "<pre>";
print_r($flatered_array);


/*-----------------------------------------
function to flaten an array 
-----------------------------------------*/
function flat_array($nested_array, & $index_count, & $flatered_array) {

  foreach($nested_array AS $key=>$val) {
      if(is_array($val)) {
        flat_array($val, $index_count, $flatered_array);
      }
      else {
        $flatered_array[$index_count] = $val;
        ++$index_count;
      }      
  }

return $flatered_array;
}
?>

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