2020 Benchmark in PHP 7.4
For these who are not satisfied with current answers, I did a little benchmark script, anyone can run from CLI.
We are going to compare two solutions:
unset() with array_values() VS array_splice().
<?php
echo 'php v' . phpversion() . "\n";
$itemsOne = [];
$itemsTwo = [];
// populate items array with 100k random strings
for ($i = 0; $i < 100000; $i++) {
$itemsOne[] = $itemsTwo[] = sha1(uniqid(true));
}
$start = microtime(true);
for ($i = 0; $i < 10000; $i++) {
unset($itemsOne[$i]);
$itemsOne = array_values($itemsOne);
}
$end = microtime(true);
echo 'unset & array_values: ' . ($end - $start) . 's' . "\n";
$start = microtime(true);
for ($i = 0; $i < 10000; $i++) {
array_splice($itemsTwo, $i, 1);
}
$end = microtime(true);
echo 'array_splice: ' . ($end - $start) . 's' . "\n";
As you can see the idea is simple:
- Create two arrays both with the same 100k items (randomly generated strings)
- Remove 10k first items from first array using unset() and array_values() to reindex
- Remove 10k first items from second array using array_splice()
- Measure time for both methods
Output of the script above on my Dell Latitude i7-6600U 2.60GHz x 4 and 15.5GiB RAM:
php v7.4.8
unset & array_values: 29.089932918549s
array_splice: 17.94264793396s
Verdict: array_splice is almost twice more performant than unset and array_values.
So: array_splice is the winner!