32

I have a string like 1-350,9-390.99,..., and I need to turn it into an associative array like this:

 Array
    (
        [1] => 350
        [9] => 390.99
        ...........
    )

Is it possible to do this using only array functions, without a loop?

5

10 Answers 10

39

PHP 5.5+ two-line solution, using array_chunk and array_column:

$input  = '1-350,9-390.99';

$chunks = array_chunk(preg_split('/[-,]/', $input), 2);
$result = array_combine(array_column($chunks, 0), array_column($chunks, 1));

print_r($result);

Yields:

Array
(
    [1] => 350
    [9] => 390.99
)

See it online at 3v4l.org.

4
  • 1
    parse_str(str_replace(",","&",$str), $output);
    – Wasim A.
    Dec 3, 2016 at 19:47
  • How about case when input does not have value? For ex. $input = '1-,9-390.99';
    – Matiss
    Jan 24, 2017 at 13:44
  • 3
    @MatissJurgelis ... it produces what one would expect: [ 1 => '', 9 => '390.99' ]
    – bishop
    Jan 24, 2017 at 14:39
  • 1
    The capture group is not necessary. Dec 7, 2020 at 7:06
21

Here's a way to do it without a for loop, using array_walk:

$array = explode(',', $string);
$new_array = array();
array_walk($array,'walk', $new_array);

function walk($val, $key, &$new_array){
    $nums = explode('-',$val);
    $new_array[$nums[0]] = $nums[1];
}

Example on Ideone.com.

6
  • 1
    +1 Good answer! The only thing I'd shy away from is the global. You should be able to pass an external array in by reference as the 3rd parameter for array_walk.
    – hafichuk
    Jan 3, 2013 at 6:54
  • I tried passing the array with &$new_array, but it wasn't working. Why is global bad?
    – bozdoz
    Jan 3, 2013 at 6:54
  • Found it. I have to put &$new_array in the array_walk function, and not the "walk" function. Thanks @hafichuk!
    – bozdoz
    Jan 3, 2013 at 6:57
  • They aren't inherently bad. I mainly do OOP so I just shy away from them because of scope issues.
    – hafichuk
    Jan 3, 2013 at 7:02
  • parse_str(str_replace(",","&",$str), $output);
    – Wasim A.
    Dec 3, 2016 at 19:47
8

Something like this should work:

$string = '1-350,9-390.99';

$a = explode(',', $string);

foreach ($a as $result) {
    $b = explode('-', $result);
    $array[$b[0]] = $b[1];
}
1
  • Although January 3rd of 2013 around 6:05 was incredibly popular time to post "Try this" answers (an unfortunate consequence of FGITW posting), this answer is missing its educational explanation. After you answered, the OP stipulated that they are not interested in answers that leverage language constructs and would prefer to receive function-based techniques. Dec 7, 2020 at 7:05
7

This uses array_walk with a closure.

<?php
$string = "1-350,9-390.99";
$partial = explode(',', $string);
$final = array();
array_walk($partial, function($val,$key) use(&$final){
    list($key, $value) = explode('-', $val);
    $final[$key] = $value;
});
print_r($final);
?>

Interactive fiddle.

0
3
$string = '1-350,9-390.99........';
$final_result = array();
foreach (explode(',', $string) as $piece) {
    $result = array();
    $result[] = explode('-', $piece);
    $final_result[$result[0]] = $result[1];
}

print_r($final_result);
1
  • Although January 3rd of 2013 around 6:05 was incredibly popular time to post "Try this" answers (an unfortunate consequence of FGITW posting), this answer is missing its educational explanation. After you answered, the OP stipulated that they are not interested in answers that leverage language constructs and would prefer to receive function-based techniques. Dec 7, 2020 at 7:02
2
$x='1-350,9-390.99';
$arr1=explode(',',$x);
$res_arr=array();
foreach($arr1 as $val){
    $arr2=explode('-',$val);
    $res_arr[$arr2[0]]=$arr2[1];
    }

print_r($res_arr);
1
  • Although January 3rd of 2013 around 6:05 was incredibly popular time to post "Try this" answers (an unfortunate consequence of FGITW posting), this answer is missing its educational explanation. After you answered, the OP stipulated that they are not interested in answers that leverage language constructs and would prefer to receive function-based techniques. Dec 7, 2020 at 7:02
2

Technically, it is possible to do this without using loops (demo on codepad.org):

$string = '1-350,9-390.99';

// first, split the string into an array of pairs
$output = explode(',', $string);
function split_pairs ($str) {
    return explode('-', $str, 2);
}
$output = array_map(split_pairs, $output);

// then transpose it to get two arrays, one for keys and one for values
array_unshift($output, null);
$output = call_user_func_array(array_map, $output);

// and finally combine them into one
$output = array_combine($output[0], $output[1]);

var_export($output);

However, this is really not something you'd want to do in real code — not only is it ridiculously convoluted, but it's also almost certainly less efficient than the simple foreach-based solution others have already given (demo on codepad.org):

$output = array();
foreach ( explode( ',', $string ) as $pair ) {
    list( $key, $val ) = explode( '-', $pair, 2 );
    $output[$key] = $val;
} 
2
  • Functions that iterate data are still "looping". Dec 7, 2020 at 7:03
  • @mickmackusa: Sure, there's probably a loop somewhere under the hood there. For that matter, the PHP interpreter is almost certainly using a loop to execute the code anyway, so even doing echo "Hello, World!" probably involves a loop (or several!) if you look deep enough. Still, there are no explicit loops in the code above, which is really the most one can ask for. Dec 7, 2020 at 9:24
1

Try this:

$string = '1-350,9-390.99';
$array = explode(',', $string);

$output = array();
foreach($array as $arr){
    $chunk = explode('-', $arr);
    $output[$chunk[0]] = $chunk[1];
}
echo '<pre>'; print_r($output); echo '</pre>';
1
  • Although January 3rd of 2013 around 6:05 was incredibly popular time to post "Try this" answers (an unfortunate consequence of FGITW posting), this answer is missing its educational explanation. After you answered, the OP stipulated that they are not interested in answers that leverage language constructs and would prefer to receive function-based techniques. Dec 7, 2020 at 7:02
0

Is this the thing you want?

<?php 
//the string to process
$str = "1-350,9-390.99";

//explode it
$str_exploded = explode(",",$str);

$final_arr;
foreach($str_exploded as $str_elem){
    //extract
    $str_elem_final = explode("-",$str_elem);
    //the first elem is the index and the last elem is the value
    $final_arr[(int)$str_elem_final[0]] = $str_elem_final[1];

}
print_r($final_arr);

?>

http://rextester.com/VEY59445

0

Personally i use:

/**
 * @desc String to associative array
 * 
 * @param string $string
 * @param string $element_delimiter
 * @param string $value_delimiter
 * 
 * @example
  $string = "1:9|class:fa fa-globe";
  $array = string_to_array($string);
 * 
 * @return array $results
 */
function string_to_array($string, $element_delimiter = '|', $value_delimiter = ':') {
    $results = array();
    $array = explode($element_delimiter, $string);
    foreach ($array as $result) {
        $element = explode($value_delimiter, $result);
        $results[$element[0]] = $element[1];
    }
    return $results;
}

/**
 * @desc Associative array to string
 * 
 * @param type $array
 * @param type $element_delimiter
 * @param type $value_delimiter
 * 
 * @example
  $array = array('class' => 'in-line', 'rel' => 'external');
  $string = array_to_string($array);
 * 
 * @return string
 */
function array_to_string($array, $element_delimiter = '|', $value_delimiter = ':') {
    array_walk($array, create_function('&$i,$k', 'if (strlen($k) > 0){$i="' . $element_delimiter . '$k' . $value_delimiter . '$i";}'));
    return substr(implode($array, ""), 1);
}

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