How get you get element key
and value
of an at the n
position array at a particular position without loop.
Imagine
$postion = 3; // get array at 3rd position
$array = array(
"A" => "Four",
"B" => "twp",
"C" => "three",
"D" => "Four",
"E" => "Five",
"F" => "Four");
$keys = array_keys($array);
$value = array_values($array);
echo implode(array_slice($keys, $postion, 1)), PHP_EOL; // Key at 3rd posstion
echo implode(array_slice($value, $postion, 1)), PHP_EOL; // Value at n position
Output
D
Four
Issues With the method is
Why not use loop
Why not use a Database
Why not use SplFixedArray
This would have been solution but i the follow weer because am not using positive keys ( I really this is nor fair on php part)
Fatal error: Uncaught exception 'InvalidArgumentException'
with message 'array must contain only positive integer keys'
What do you mean by large data set :
1e6
or 1e7
with 512M memory limit
Am sure something like fseek
for array would do the trick .. but not sure if that exists
Assuming PHP 5.4, with array dereferencing:
echo $array[array_keys($array)[$position]];
In earlier versions you need to break it into two lines:
$keys = array_keys($array);
echo $array[$keys[$position]];
It would also be worth using the two-line approach in 5.4+ if you have to access multiple elements, to allow you to only call the relatively expensive array_keys()
function once. Also the dereferencing approach assumes that the specific position within the array exists, which it may not. Breaking it into multiple operations would allow you to handle that error case.
Although of course you don't ever need access to the key, you can simply do:
echo array_values($array)[$position];
// or
$values = array_values($array);
echo $values[$position];
Edit
The ArrayIterator
class can also do this for you:
$iterator = new ArrayIterator($array);
$iterator->seek($position);
echo $iterator->key(), " = ", $iterator->current(); // D = Four
This is probably the least expensive way to do this assuming it doesn't create a copy of the array in memory when you do it (still researching this element), and likely the best method for multiple accesses of arbitrary keys.
array_keys
in his case is too expensive - when an array contains millions of items, for example. Then again, I don't quite get the use case of all this: you rarely have to work with zounds of items in the code instead of DB. - raina77owArrayIterator
, but I'm not sure whether that would just create a copy underneath anyway, in which case you've lost any improvement that would afford. - DaveRandomArrayObject
does not have seek .... nice one - Baba
What you want is not possible. PHP's arrays have efficient access by key, but don't have efficient access by offset. The order is only available as a linked list, so the best efficiency you can hope for is an O(n) loop, which just goes through the array and looks for the offset:
$i = 0;
foreach ($array as $value) {
if ($i++ === $offset) {
// found value
}
}
If you want this operation to be fast, then you'll have to use a proper, numerically and sequentially indexed array.
next()
? - raina77owforeach
would make a copy of the array ??? - Babaforeach
related commits in the core ;-) - DaveRandom
in fact you don't need the $values array:
$keys = array_keys($array);
$value_3=$array[$keys[3]];
I dont understand your question well but if you need a key and element from position
$position = 3; // get array at 3rd position
$array = array(
"A" => "Four",
"B" => "twp",
"C" => "three",
"D" => "Four",
"E" => "Five",
"F" => "Four");
$keys = array_keys($array);
$values = array_values($array);
if($values[$position] == "Four" && $keys[$position] == "D") {
echo "All it's Right!\n";
}
you dont need implode for that task
array_slice
instead of just$keys[$position]
? - jeroen$keys
has numeric keys, you just set that in the lines before that:$keys = array_keys($array);
. - jeroen