$apple="";
$banana="";
$apple="Red";
$banana="Blue";
$random(rand($apple, $banana);
echo $random;
How can I select a random string (fast) via PHP?
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The PHP rand() function takes two numbers as input to form the range to pick a random number from. You cannot feed it strings.
See the PHP manual page for rand().
You can use array_rand():
$strings = array(
'Red',
'Blue',
);
$key = array_rand($strings);
echo $strings[$key];
Another option is to use shuffle().
$strings = array(
'Red',
'Blue',
);
shuffle($strings);
echo reset($strings);
Use an array :
$input = array("Red", "Blue", "Green");
echo $input[array_rand($input)];
Ran into this old question that tops google's results. You can have more than two options and still get it all on one line.
echo ['green', 'blue', 'red'][rand(0,2)];
array_rand() is probably the best way:
$varNames = array('apple','banana');
$var = array_rand($varNames);
echo ${$varNames[$var]};
The function rand() has two parameters: a lower-limit for a random number and an upper limit. You can not use variables like that because it is not the way the function works.
Take a look at the documentation:
http://php.net/rand
A simple way to achieve what you want is this:
$array = array();
$array[0] = 'banana';
$array[1] = 'orange';
$randomSelected = $array[rand(0,(count($array)-1))];
As far as I've read, this solution is faster than array_rand(). I can see if I can find the source of that.
array_rand() as this is much harder to read and work out what is going on. Simplicity of maintenance trumps these kinds of micro-optimisations every time.
– Treffynnon
Jan 5 '12 at 12:12
array_rand()? CPU proc time is much cheaper than programmers reading odd implementations of standard patterns even if your method is marginally faster.
– Treffynnon
Jan 5 '12 at 12:18
$apple="red";– Manse Jan 5 '12 at 12:07