631

Is there a function to make a copy of a PHP array to another?

I have been burned a few times trying to copy PHP arrays. I want to copy an array defined inside an object to a global outside it.

2
  • really late, but in my Environment I tested this (and it worked): function arrayCopy(array $a) { return $a; } $a1 = array(); for ($i=0; $i<3; $i++) { $a1["key-$i"] = "value #$i"; } $a1["key-sub-array"] = array(1, 2, 3, 4); $a2 = $a1; $a3 = arrayCopy($a1); for ($i=0; $i<3; $i++) { if (!is_array($a2["key-$i"])) { $a2["key-$i"] = "changed value #$i"; } } $a2["key-sub-array"] = array("changed sub-array 1", "changed sub-array 2"); var_dump($a1); var_dump($a2); var_dump($a3); The trick is, to do not pass the array as a reference into the function ;-)
    – Sven
    Nov 14, 2016 at 16:05
  • 1
    @Sven is there a reason this is a comment rather than an answer? I can't make heads or tails of it.
    – ggorlen
    Feb 24, 2022 at 5:29

19 Answers 19

1071

In PHP, all variables except objects are assigned by the mechanism called copy-on-write, while objects are assigned by reference. Which means that for the arrays with scalar values simply $b = $a already will give you a copy:

$a = array();
$b = $a;
$b['foo'] = 42;
var_dump($a);

Will yield:

array(0) {
}

Whereas with objects,

$a = new StdClass();
$b = $a;
$b->foo = 42;
var_dump($a);

Yields:

object(stdClass)#1 (1) {
  ["foo"]=>
  int(42)
}

An edge case when array elements could be objects that need to be cloned as well, is explained in another answer

You could get confused by intricacies such as ArrayObject, which is an object that acts exactly like an array. Being an object however, it has reference semantics.

Edit: @AndrewLarsson raises a point in the comments below. PHP has a special feature called "references". They are somewhat similar to pointers in languages like C/C++, but not quite the same. If your array contains references, then while the array itself is passed by copy, the references will still resolve to the original target. That's of course usually the desired behaviour, but I thought it was worth mentioning.

13
  • 141
    You didn't answer the question. You only explained the problem. Which, for the OP, is most likely what he was looking for. However, for me (and others, too), coming here almost four years later with a similar problem, I still don't have a good way to clone an array without modifying the original array (that includes internal pointers as well). I suppose it's time for me to ask my own question. Jul 18, 2013 at 0:30
  • 40
    @AndrewLarsson But PHP does that by default - That's the gist of it. References are not resolved though, so if you need that, you will have to recursively traverse the array and build a new one - Likewise, if the source array contains objects, and you want those cloned, you will have to do so manually. Keep in mind also that references in PHP are not the same as pointers in C. Without knowing anything about your case, may I suggest that it's strange to have an array of references in the first case, especially if you don't intent to treat them as references? What's the use case?
    – troelskn
    Jul 18, 2013 at 7:25
  • 2
    @troelskn I added an answer to this question with a solution to my problem: stackoverflow.com/a/17729234/1134804 Jul 18, 2013 at 16:37
  • 3
    But what about when it is not desired behavior? The question asks how to make a deep copy. It is obviously not desired. Your answer is no better than: $copy = $original;. Which doesn't work if the array elements are references.
    – doug65536
    Sep 1, 2013 at 2:48
  • 11
    As always php presents us with the least expected result, because this solution does not always work. $a=array(); $b=$a; $b["x"]=0; $c=$b; $b["x"]=1; echo gettype($b), $c["x"]; prints array0 while $a=$GLOBALS; $b=$a; $b["x"]=0; $c=$b; $b["x"]=1; echo gettype($b), $c["x"]; prints array1. Apparently some arrays are copied by reference.
    – Tino
    Feb 28, 2014 at 22:36
247

PHP will copy the array by default. References in PHP have to be explicit.

$a = array(1,2);
$b = $a; // $b will be a different array
$c = &$a; // $c will be a reference to $a
4
  • To use the reference might be important if the array is huge. I'm not sure but I assume it should lead to less memory consumption and better performance (no need to copy the whole array in memory).
    – robsch
    Nov 23, 2016 at 7:11
  • 25
    @robsch -- at the level of program logic, the array is copied. But in memory, it won't actually be copied until it's modified -- because PHP uses copy-on-write semantics for all types. stackoverflow.com/questions/11074970/… Apr 6, 2017 at 0:29
  • @MightyPork what do you mean? I've tried this $a = array(array('a', 'b'), 2, 3); $b = $a; $b[0][1] = 'c'; var_dump($a); and $a doesn't change Aug 2, 2020 at 3:30
  • @ThịnhPhạm i don't know, it was 3 years ago
    – MightyPork
    Aug 4, 2020 at 9:14
56

If you have an array that contains objects, you need to make a copy of that array without touching its internal pointer, and you need all the objects to be cloned (so that you're not modifying the originals when you make changes to the copied array), use this.

The trick to not touching the array's internal pointer is to make sure you're working with a copy of the array, and not the original array (or a reference to it), so using a function parameter will get the job done (thus, this is a function that takes in an array).

Note that you will still need to implement __clone() on your objects if you'd like their properties to also be cloned.

This function works for any type of array (including mixed type).

function array_clone($array) {
    return array_map(function($element) {
        return ((is_array($element))
            ? array_clone($element)
            : ((is_object($element))
                ? clone $element
                : $element
            )
        );
    }, $array);
}
15
  • 1
    Keep in mind that this is a bit of a special case. Also, note that this will only clone the first level references. If you have a deep array, you won't get the deeper nodes cloned, if they are references. Might not be an issue in your case, but just keep it in mind.
    – troelskn
    Jul 19, 2013 at 8:04
  • 5
    @troelskn I fixed it by adding some recursion. This function would now work on any type of array, including mixed types. It also works just as well for simple arrays, so it's not localized anymore. It's basically a universal array cloning machine. You'd still need to define of the __clone() function in your objects if they're deep, but that's beyond the "scope" of this function (sorry for the bad pun). Jul 19, 2013 at 16:46
  • 2
    I strongly believe this is the actual answer to this question, The only way I've seen to actually deep copy an array that contains objects.
    – Patrick
    Mar 13, 2015 at 17:29
  • 1
    @ya.teck Correct, that is why it is up to the developer to implement the __clone() function (because only the developer knows what needs to be cloned). If A stores B, you need to implement the __clone() function on A. And inside of A's __clone() function, you will need to make sure that you clone B. Here's an example that shows how and why: sandbox.onlinephpfunctions.com/code/… Jan 8, 2017 at 8:17
  • 1
    @John Yes, they changed the behavior of __FUNCTION__ when used in a anonymous function. I'll update my answer to just use normal recursion. Jan 31, 2019 at 22:56
31

When you do

$array_x = $array_y;

PHP copies the array, so I'm not sure how you would have gotten burned. For your case,

global $foo;
$foo = $obj->bar;

should work fine.

In order to get burned, I would think you'd either have to have been using references or expecting objects inside the arrays to be cloned.

1
  • 13
    +1 for this: "or expecting objects inside the arrays to be cloned"
    – Melsi
    Apr 20, 2013 at 11:18
27

simple and makes deep copy breaking all links

$new=unserialize(serialize($old));
3
  • 9
    Generally it works fine however in some cases it may throw an exception because not all variables are serializable (for instance closures and database connections).
    – ya.teck
    Jan 7, 2017 at 9:53
  • Another thing to note is that object references can be restored if a class implements __wakeup magic method.
    – ya.teck
    Jan 7, 2017 at 14:36
  • Thanks, finally something that really works, not the other bollock answers having a lot of upvotes, they surely didn't deal with array of objects as is specified in question where number of elements in array might change, but definitelly not the references to the objects inside them
    – FantomX1
    Apr 8, 2018 at 14:15
26

I like array_replace (or array_replace_recursive).

$cloned = array_replace([], $YOUR_ARRAY);

It works like Object.assign from JavaScript.

$original = [ 'foo' => 'bar', 'fiz' => 'baz' ];

$cloned = array_replace([], $original);
$clonedWithReassignment = array_replace([], $original, ['foo' => 'changed']);
$clonedWithNewValues = array_replace([], $original, ['add' => 'new']);

$original['new'] = 'val';

will result in

// original: 
{"foo":"bar","fiz":"baz","new":"val"}
// cloned:   
{"foo":"bar","fiz":"baz"}
// cloned with reassignment:
{"foo":"changed","fiz":"baz"}
// cloned with new values:
{"foo":"bar","fiz":"baz","add":"new"}
3
  • 2
    What about array_slice($arr, 0) or when you don't care about keys, array_values($arr)? I'm thinking they might be faster than searching in an array. Also, in javascript, it's quite popular to use Array.slice() to clone arrays.
    – Christian
    Jul 29, 2018 at 0:55
  • In JS we have Object for key-value-pairs and Array. PHP does not make this difference. For PHP arrays with numbered indexes, array_slice and all the other methods mentioned here work very well. But if you want to merge several key-value-pairs (as it is also possible with JS-Objects via Object.assign or the spread-syntax), array_replace can be more useful.
    – Putzi San
    Jul 31, 2018 at 7:34
  • @Christian thank you for the suggestion of array_values() which worked perfectly for my use-case.
    – bigsee
    Jan 31, 2019 at 9:40
23

array_merge() is a function in which you can copy one array to another in PHP.

2
13

If you have only basic types in your array you can do this:

$copy = json_decode( json_encode($array), true);

You won't need to update the references manually
I know it won't work for everyone, but it worked for me

1
  • 8
    +1 this is a really bad thing to do, but is technically correct and clever. If I saw this in code I would face palm but I can't help but like it.
    – Reactgular
    Apr 2, 2016 at 3:03
9

I know this as long time ago, but this worked for me..

$copied_array = array_slice($original_array,0,count($original_array));
1
  • 6
    You don't need count: $copied_array = array_slice($original_array, 0); is sufficient. Dec 2, 2020 at 0:52
5

Safest and cheapest way I found is:

<?php 
$b = array_values($a);

This has also the benefit to reindex the array.

This will not work as expected on associative array (hash), but neither most of previous answer.

4

Since this wasn't covered in any of the answers and is now available in PHP 5.3 (assumed Original Post was using 5.2).

In order to maintain an array structure and change its values I prefer to use array_replace or array_replace_recursive depending on my use case.

http://php.net/manual/en/function.array-replace.php

Here is an example using array_replace and array_replace_recursive demonstrating it being able to maintain the indexed order and capable of removing a reference.

http://ideone.com/SzlBUZ

The code below is written using the short array syntax available since PHP 5.4 which replaces array() with []. http://php.net/manual/en/language.types.array.php

Works on either offset indexed and name indexed arrays

$o1 = new stdClass;
$a = 'd';
//This is the base array or the initial structure
$o1->ar1 = ['a', 'b', ['ca', 'cb']];
$o1->ar1[3] = & $a; //set 3rd offset to reference $a

//direct copy (not passed by reference)
$o1->ar2 = $o1->ar1; //alternatively array_replace($o1->ar1, []);
$o1->ar1[0] = 'z'; //set offset 0 of ar1 = z do not change ar2
$o1->ar1[3] = 'e'; //$a = e (changes value of 3rd offset to e in ar1 and ar2)

//copy and remove reference to 3rd offset of ar1 and change 2nd offset to a new array
$o1->ar3 = array_replace($o1->ar1, [2 => ['aa'], 3 => 'd']);

//maintain original array of the 2nd offset in ar1 and change the value at offset 0
//also remove reference of the 2nd offset
//note: offset 3 and 2 are transposed
$o1->ar4 = array_replace_recursive($o1->ar1, [3 => 'f', 2 => ['bb']]);

var_dump($o1);

Output:

["ar1"]=>
  array(4) {
    [0]=>
    string(1) "z"
    [1]=>
    string(1) "b"
    [2]=>
    array(2) {
      [0]=>
      string(2) "ca"
      [1]=>
      string(2) "cb"
    }
    [3]=>
    &string(1) "e"
  }
  ["ar2"]=>
  array(4) {
    [0]=>
    string(1) "a"
    [1]=>
    string(1) "b"
    [2]=>
    array(2) {
      [0]=>
      string(2) "ca"
      [1]=>
      string(2) "cb"
    }
    [3]=>
    &string(1) "e"
  }
  ["ar3"]=>
  array(4) {
    [0]=>
    string(1) "z"
    [1]=>
    string(1) "b"
    [2]=>
    array(1) {
      [0]=>
      string(2) "aa"
    }
    [3]=>
    string(1) "d"
  }
  ["ar4"]=>
  array(4) {
    [0]=>
    string(1) "z"
    [1]=>
    string(1) "b"
    [2]=>
    array(2) {
      [0]=>
      string(2) "bb"
      [1]=>
      string(2) "cb"
    }
    [3]=>
    string(1) "f"
  }
3

Creates a copy of the ArrayObject

<?php
// Array of available fruits
$fruits = array("lemons" => 1, "oranges" => 4, "bananas" => 5, "apples" => 10);

$fruitsArrayObject = new ArrayObject($fruits);
$fruitsArrayObject['pears'] = 4;

// create a copy of the array
$copy = $fruitsArrayObject->getArrayCopy();
print_r($copy);

?>

from https://www.php.net/manual/en/arrayobject.getarraycopy.php

1

This is the way I am copying my arrays in Php:

function equal_array($arr){
  $ArrayObject = new ArrayObject($arr);
  return $ArrayObject->getArrayCopy();  
}

$test = array("aa","bb",3);
$test2 = equal_array($test);
print_r($test2);

This outputs:

Array
(
[0] => aa
[1] => bb
[2] => 3
)
1
  • 4
    Why not just say $test2 = $test;? What problem is ArrayObject solving here?
    – Nate
    Dec 2, 2015 at 13:00
1
<?php
function arrayCopy( array $array ) {
        $result = array();
        foreach( $array as $key => $val ) {
            if( is_array( $val ) ) {
                $result[$key] = arrayCopy( $val );
            } elseif ( is_object( $val ) ) {
                $result[$key] = clone $val;
            } else {
                $result[$key] = $val;
            }
        }
        return $result;
}
?>
1

$arr_one_copy = array_combine(array_keys($arr_one), $arr_one);

Just to post one more solution ;)

0

Define this:

$copy = create_function('$a', 'return $a;');

Copy $_ARRAY to $_ARRAY2 :

$_ARRAY2 = array_map($copy, $_ARRAY);
0
private function cloneObject($mixed)
{
    switch (true) {
        case is_object($mixed):
            return clone $mixed;
        case is_array($mixed):
            return array_map(array($this, __FUNCTION__), $mixed);
        default:
            return $mixed;
    }
}
1
  • What's the benefit of this relative to other answers?
    – ggorlen
    Feb 24, 2022 at 5:40
-1

In php array, you need to just assign them to other variable to get copy of that array. But first you need to make sure about it's type, whether it is array or arrayObject or stdObject.

For Simple php array :

$a = array(
'data' => 10
);

$b = $a;

var_dump($b);

output:

array:1 [
  "data" => 10
]
-1
foreach($a as $key => $val) $b[$key] = $val ;

Preserves both key and values. Array 'a' is an exact copy of array 'b'

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