Here's yet another way to make a list()-like construct for associative arrays. This one has the advantage that it doesn't depend on the order of the keys, it only extracts the keys that you specify, and only extracts them into the current scope instead of the global scope (which you can still do, but at least here you have the option).
<?php
$arr = array("foo" => 1, "bar" => 2, "baz" => 3);
$keys = array("baz");
// $foo = 10;
$bar = 20;
$baz = 30;
extract(array_intersect_key($arr, $keys));
var_dump($foo);
var_dump($bar);
var_dump($baz);
?>
Should print
NULL
int(20)
int(3)
If your version of PHP doesn't have array_intersect_key() yet (below 5.1 I think), it's easy to write a limited feature replacement for this purpose.
<?php
function my_array_intersect_key ($assoc, $keys)
{
$intersection = array();
foreach ($assoc as $key => $val)
if (in_array($key, $keys))
$intersection[$key] = $val;
return $intersection;
}
?>
list
(PHP 4, PHP 5)
list — Transforme une liste de variables en tableau
Description
Tout comme array(), list() n'est pas une véritable fonction, mais un élément de langage, qui permet de rassembler les variables varname , ... sous forme de tableau, pour les assigner en une seule ligne.
Liste de paramètres
- varname
-
Une variable.
Valeurs de retour
Aucune valeur n'est retournée.
Exemples
Exemple #1 Exemple avec list()
<?php
$info = array('coffee', 'brown', 'caffeine');
// Liste toutes les variables
list($drink, $color, $power) = $info;
echo "$drink is $color and $power makes it special.\n";
// Liste certaines variables
list($drink, , $power) = $info;
echo "$drink has $power.\n";
// Ou bien, n'utilisons que le troisième
list( , , $power) = $info;
echo "I need $power!\n";
// list() ne fonctionne pas avec les chaînes de caractères
list($bar) = "abcde";
var_dump($bar); // NULL
?>
Exemple #2 Exemple d'utilisation de list()
<table>
<tr>
<th>Employee name</th>
<th>Salary</th>
</tr>
<?php
$result = mysql_query("SELECT id, name, salary FROM employees", $conn);
while (list($id, $name, $salary) = mysql_fetch_row($result)) {
echo " <tr>\n" .
" <td><a href=\"info.php?id=$id\">$name</a></td>\n" .
" <td>$salary</td>\n" .
" </tr>\n";
}
?>
</table>
Exemple #3 Utilisation de list() en tenant compte de l'ordre
<?php
$info = array('coffee', 'brown', 'caffeine');
list($a[0], $a[1], $a[2]) = $info;
var_dump($a);
?>
Cet exemple donne le résultat suivant (notez l'ordre d'affichage des éléments, en comparaison avec l'ordre dans lequel ils ont été écrits dans la syntaxe de list()) :
array(3) { [2]=> string(8) "caffeine" [1]=> string(5) "brown" [0]=> string(6) "coffee" }
Notes
list() assigne les valeurs en commençant par la valeur la plus à droite. Si vous utiliser ces variables, ce ne sera pas un problème. Mais si vous utilisez des tableaux, vous serez surpris de voir que list() les affecte de droite à gauche.
Note: list() fonctionne uniquement avec des tableaux à indexation numérique, et suppose que l'indexation commence à 0.
list
09-Apr-2008 04:44
06-Feb-2008 04:12
Another way to do it associative (if your array isn't numeric), is to just use array_values like this:
<?php
$os = array();
$os["main"] = "Linux";
$os["distro"] = "Ubuntu";
$os["version"] = "7.10";
list($main, $distro, $version) = array_values($os);
?>
20-Jan-2008 02:51
With regard to the note written by ergalvan at bitam dot com:
You must take note that list() assigns variables starting from the rightmost one (as stated in the warning). That makes $record having the value "value4" and then $var1, $var2 and $var3 take their values from the "new" $record variable.
It's clear that the behavior stated in the warning wasn't followed by version 5.0.4 (and perhaps previous versions?)
----------
I'm still seeing this behavior in PHP 5.2.5. Hopefully someone can comment on why it's been changed.
04-Nov-2007 09:36
In the code by tenz699 at hotmail dot com, the list() construct is taking values from the result of the each() function, not from the associative array; the example is therefore spurious.
each() returns an array of four elements, indexed in the order 1, 'value', 0, 'key'. As noted in the documentation, the associative keys are ignored, and the numerically-indexed values are assigned in key order.
<?php
$array = array('foo'=>'bar');
$t = each($array);
print_r($t);
list($a,$b,$c,$d) = $t;
var_dump($a);
var_dump($b);
var_dump($c);
var_dump($d);
?>
Output:
Array
(
[1] => bar
[value] => bar
[0] => foo
[key] => foo
)
string(3) "foo"
string(3) "bar"
NULL
NULL
18-Sep-2007 07:50
PhP manual's NOTE says: list() only works on numerical arrays and assumes the numerical indices start at 0.
I'm finding it do works for associative arrays too,as below:
<?
$tenzin = array ("1" => "one", "2" => "two","3"=>"three");
while(list($keys,$values) = each($tenzin))
echo($keys." ".$values."<br>");
?>
gives O/P
1 one
2 two
3 three
tsarma
08-Aug-2007 09:08
It's worth noting that, as expected, list() does not have to have as many variables (and/or empty skips) as there are elements in the array. PHP will disregard all elements that there are no variables for. So:
<?php
$Array_Letters = array('A', 'B', 'C', 'D', 'E', 'F');
list($Letter_1, $Letter_2) = $Array_Letters;
echo $Letter_1 . $Letter_2;
?>
Will output: AB
Mick
08-May-2007 12:55
The list construct assigns elements from a numbered array starting from element zero. It does not assign elements from associative arrays. So
$arr = array();
$arr[1] = 'x';
list($a, $b) = $arr;
var_dump($a); //outputs NULL because there is no element [0]
var_dump($b); //outputs 'x'
and
$arr = array('red'=>'stop','green'=>'go');
list($a, $b) = $arr;
var_dump($a); //outputs NULL
var_dump($b); //outputs NULL
If there are not enough elements in the array for the variables in the list the excess variables are assigned NULL.
If there are more elements in the array than variables in the list, the extra array elements are ignored without error.
Also the warning above about order of assignment is confusing until you get used to php arrays. The order in which array elements are stored is the order in which elements are assigned to the array. So even in a numbered array if you assign $may_arr[2] before you assign $my_array[0] then element [2] will be in the array before [0]. This becomes apparent when using commands like, push, shift or foreach which work with the stored order of the elements. So the warning only applies when the variables in the list are themselves array elements which have not already been assigned to their array.
04-May-2006 08:29
With regard to the note written by dolan at teamsapient dot com:
You must take note that list() assigns variables starting from the rightmost one (as stated in the warning). That makes $record having the value "value4" and then $var1, $var2 and $var3 take their values from the "new" $record variable.
It's clear that the behavior stated in the warning wasn't followed by version 5.0.4 (and perhaps previous versions?)
06-Apr-2006 08:08
I noticed w/ version 5.1.2, the behavior of list() has changed (this occurred at some point between version 5.0.4 and 5.1.2). When re-using a variable name in list() that list() is being assigned to, instead of the values being assigned all at once, the reused variable gets overwritten before all the values are read.
Here's an example:
** disclaimer: obviously this is sloppy code, but I want to point out the behavior change (in case anyone else comes across similar code) **
<?
$data = array();
$data[] = array("value1", "value2", "value3", "value4");
$data[] = array("value1", "value2", "value3", "value4");
$data[] = array("value1", "value2", "value3", "value4");
$data[] = array("value1", "value2", "value3", "value4");
foreach($data as $record)
{
list($var1, $var2, $var3, $record) = $record;
echo "var 1: $var1, var 2: $var2, var 3: $var3, record: $record\\n";
}
?>
OUTPUT on version 5.0.4:
var 1: value1, var 2: value2, var 3: value3, record: value4
var 1: value1, var 2: value2, var 3: value3, record: value4
var 1: value1, var 2: value2, var 3: value3, record: value4
var 1: value1, var 2: value2, var 3: value3, record: value4
OUTPUT on version 5.1.2:
var 1: v, var 2: a, var 3: l, record: value4
var 1: v, var 2: a, var 3: l, record: value4
var 1: v, var 2: a, var 3: l, record: value4
var 1: v, var 2: a, var 3: l, record: value4
03-Jan-2006 05:49
Elements on the left-hand side that don't have a corresponding element on the right-hand side will be set to NULL. For example,
<?php
$y = 0;
list($x, $y) = array("x");
var_dump($x);
var_dump($y);
?>
Results in:
string(1) "x"
NULL
25-Jul-2005 04:34
list, coupled with while, makes for a handy way to populate arrays.
while (list($repcnt[], $replnk[], $date[]) = mysql_fetch_row($seek0))
{
// insert what you want to do here.
}
PHP will automatically assign numerical values for the array because of the [] signs after the variable.
From here, you can access their row values by array numbers.
eg.
for ($i=0;$i<$rowcount;$i++)
{
echo "The title number $repcnt[$i] was written on $date[$i].";
}
01-Jun-2005 08:05
One way to use the list function with non-numerical keys is to use the array_values() function
<?php
$array = array ("value1" => "one", "value2" => "two");
list ($value1, $value2) = array_values($array);
?>
16-Feb-2005 10:29
There is no way to do reference assignment using the list function, therefore list assignment is will always be a copy assignment (which is of course not always what you want).
By example, and showing the workaround (which is to just not use list):
function &pass_refs( &$a ) {
return array( &$a );
}
$a = 1;
list( $b ) = pass_refs( $a ); //*
$a = 2;
print( "$b" ); //prints 1
$ret = pass_refs( $a );
$b =& $ret[0];
$a = 3;
print( "$b" ); //prints 3
*This is where some syntax like the following would be desired:
list( &$b ) = pass_refs( $a );
or maybe:
list( $b ) =& pass_refs( $a );
21-Oct-2004 05:29
This is a function simulair to that of 'list' it lists an array with the 'key' as variable name and then those variables contain the value of the key in the array.
This is a bit easier then list in my opinion since you dont have to list up all variable names and it just names them as the key.
<?php
function lista($a) {
foreach ($a as $k => $v) {
$s = "global \$".$k;
eval($s.";");
$s = "\$".$k ." = \"". $v."\"";
eval($s.";");
}
}
?>
14-Aug-2004 10:08
The list() construct can be used within other list() constructs (so that it can be used to extract the elements of multidimensional arrays):
<?php
$matrix = array(array(1,2),
array(3,4));
list(list($tl,$tr),list($bl,$br)) = $matrix;
echo "$tl $tr $bl $br";
?>
Outputs "1 2 3 4".
29-Jan-2004 04:28
If you want to swap values between variables without using an intermediary, try using the list() and array() language constructs. For instance:
<?
// Initial values.
$biggest = 1;
$smallest = 10;
// Instead of using a temporary variable...
$temp = $biggest;
$biggest = $smallest;
$smallest = $temp;
// ...Just swap the values.
list($biggest, $smallest) = array($smallest, $biggest);
?>
This works with any number of variables; you're not limited to just two.
Cheers,
Jeronimo
29-Dec-2000 02:15
Note: If you have an array full of arrays, you can't use list() in conjunction to foreach() when traversing said array, e.g.
$someArray = array(
array(1, "one"),
array(2, "two"),
array(3, "three")
);
foreach($somearray as list($num, $text)) { ... }
This, however will work
foreach($somearray as $subarray) {
list($num, $text) = $subarray;
...
}
