18

Searching PHP.net for autovivification gives no results. At the time of writing, Wikipedia claims that only Perl has it. There are no clearly definitive results when searching Google for "php autovivification".

This PHP code runs fine:

$test['a'][4][6]['b'] = "hello world";
var_dump($test);

array
  'a' => 
    array
      4 => 
        array
          'b' => 
            array
              ...

Can anyone provide a canonical answer (preferably with references) that PHP does have this feature, and any details such as the version it was introduced in, quirks, shortcuts etc?

5
  • 5
    That will work when you're assigning values. PHP will create that path for you. This works only when you're assigning values.
    – JohnP
    May 11, 2011 at 12:47
  • @JohnP same thing seems the case in the example on the wikipedia link for pearl.
    – Till
    May 11, 2011 at 12:49
  • @Till No idea what that pearl code was doing. It's all voodoo for me :)
    – JohnP
    May 11, 2011 at 13:09
  • perl, not 'pearl' :) I hope my answer helps you understand how perl does autovification on read operations.
    – spazm
    Nov 22, 2013 at 18:54
  • Simple explanation, the Perl programming language was designed systematically according to a well-planned design from the beginning. PHP was not. Hence the concept has a specific name and meaning in Perl.
    – dreftymac
    Sep 5, 2016 at 1:58

3 Answers 3

11

Yes, PHP does have autovivification (and has had it for a long time), although it isn't referenced by that terminology. PHP.net states:

An existing array can be modified by explicitly setting values in it.

This is done by assigning values to the array, specifying the key in brackets. The key can also be omitted, resulting in an empty pair of brackets ([]).

$arr[key] = value;
$arr[] = value;
// key may be an integer or string
// value may be any value of any type

If $arr doesn't exist yet, it will be created, so this is also an alternative way to create an array.

However, the documentation states that if you try to access the value of an unset array (or key), it will return an error:

Attempting to access an array key which has not been defined is the same as accessing any other undefined variable: an E_NOTICE-level error message will be issued, and the result will be NULL.

I have tracked down my old PHP3 manual, which states this:

You can also create an array by simply adding values to the array.

$a[] = "hello";
2
  • 1
    So the feature does exist but PHP.net doesn't name it, right? May 11, 2011 at 13:44
  • 2
    Yes, I have traced it back to PHP3 as well. It is simply referenced as an "alternative way to create an array".
    – Kelly
    May 11, 2011 at 13:49
3

Well not 100% if PHP supports autovivification but the syntax you posts works for the most part.

// Works as you have assigned a value of 'hello'
$a['a'][4][6]['b'] = "hello";
var_dump($a);
echo print_r($a,true);

// works as you have assigned a value of 'world'
$b[][][][] = "world";
var_dump($b);
echo print_r($b,true);

// ERROR: Cannot use [] for reading
$c[];
var_dump($c);
echo print_r($c,true);

Cannot use [] for reading: Related Link

2

in perl, items will autovivify upon inspection, assignment is not necessary. The path of items necessary to get to the innermost requested key will be created upon inspection. Note that the {d => undef} is entry is not actually created but is implied.

   use strict;
   use warnings;
   use Data::Dumper;

   my %a;       # as is empty, equivalent to \%a is {};
   print Dumper %a;
   $a{b}{c}{d}; # \%a is now { b => { c => {}}}
                # returns an undef value.
   print Dumper \%a;

output:

$VAR1 = {};
$VAR1 = {
          'b' => {
                   'c' => {}
                 }
        };

perl array example:

use strict;
use warnings;
use Data::Dumper;

my (@b,@c);          # @b=(), @c=()
print Dumper \@b;
$b[3];               # @b=() aka unchanged.
print Dumper \@b;
$b[3][2][1];         # @b=(undef,undef,undef,[undef,undef,[]])
print Dumper \@b;
print Dumper \@c;
$c[3]=1  ;           # @c=(undef,undef,undef,1)
print Dumper \@c;

Output:

Useless use of array element in void context at -e line 7.
Useless use of array element in void context at -e line 9.
$VAR1 = [];
$VAR1 = [];
$VAR1 = [
          undef,
          undef,
          undef,
          [
            undef,
            undef,
            []
          ]
        ];
$VAR1 = [];
$VAR1 = [
          undef,
          undef,
          undef,
          1
        ];
0

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