I have a multidimensional array which has keys and key has values or have another array with keys and values so I want to search by keys but in input like 230 is user input
and it will go to 3 then 4 then 1 if result is a value but not an array it must print the value like
input = 230 result should be = "3-4-1"
so I need to str_split the number and search it 1 by 1 if first number is array then look for second kinda
edit1 = I found the way to split the key
//edit1
$keys = "021";
$keysSplit =str_split($keys, strlen($keys)/strlen($keys));
echo $keys[0];
//edit 1 ends
$arr = [0 => [0=>"1-1", 1 => "1-2" , 2=>"1-3", 3=>[0=>"1-4-1", 1 => "1-4-2" , 2=>"1-4-3"]],
1 => [0=>"2-1", 1 => "2-2" , 2=>"2-3"],
2 => [0=>"3-1", 1 => "3-2" , 2=>"3-3", 3=>[0 =>"3-4-1" , 1=> "3-4-2"]],
];
$keys = "021";
function searchByKey($array , $keys){
$result = [];
$keys = "021";
$keys =str_split($keys, strlen($keys)/strlen($keys));
$key1 = $keys[0];
$key2 = $keys [1];
$key3 = $keys [2];
foreach ($array as $key1 => $value){
if (is_array($value)){
$key1 = null;
$key1 = $key2;
$key2 = $key3;
return searchByKey($value , $key1);
}
else {
$result=$value;
echo $result;
}
}
}
$arr = searchByKey($arr, $keys);
The function only works as key and value given and it will print every key and value on the key it asked first so its not the thing I wanted to do could anyone help and explain?
Answer given by #Anggara I made it in to function ;
$input = "11";
function searchByNumber($array, $input){
$result = $array;
for ($i = 0; $i < strlen($input); $i++) {
if (is_array($result)) {
$result = $result[$input[$i]];
} else {
$result = "Does not exists";
break;
}
}
echo $result;
}
$arr = searchByNumber($arr, $input);
You can access char in string like accessing an array. For example:
$input = "230";
// $input[0] is "2"
// $input[1] is "3"
// $input[2] is "0"
So my approach is to loop for each character in input key, and look for corresponding value in $arr. Each iteration will set found array element into variable $result. If the searched key does not exist (ex: "021"), print error message.
<?php
$arr = [
0 => [
0 => "1-1",
1 => "1-2",
2 => "1-3",
3 => [
0 => "1-4-1",
1 => "1-4-2",
2 => "1-4-3"
]
],
1 => [
0 => "2-1",
1 => "2-2",
2 => "2-3"
],
2 => [
0 => "3-1",
1 => "3-2",
2 => "3-3",
3 => [
0 => "3-4-1",
1 => "3-4-2"
]
],
];
$input = "230";
$result = $arr;
for ($i = 0; $i < strlen($input); $i++) {
if (is_array($result)) {
$result = $result[$input[$i]];
} else {
$result = 'Can not traverse path';
break;
}
}
echo $result;
After splitting the keys
for($i=0;$i<strlen($keys);$i++){
$arr = $arr[$keys[$i]];
}
if(is_array($arr)){
echo json_encode($arr);
}else{
echo $arr;
}
You need a loop, which will go through the keys one by one and assigning into the array.
I have a nested multidimensional array like this:
$array = [
1 => [
[
['catName' => 'Villes', 'catUrl' => 'villes', 'parent' => 151],
[
['catName' => 'Administratif', 'catUrl' => 'territoire', 'parent' => 37],
[
['catName' => 'Gegraphie', 'catUrl' => 'geographie', 'parent' => 0]
]
]
]
]
];
I would like to flatten it to a simpler structure, like this:
array (
1 =>
array (
0 =>
array (
'catName' => 'Villes',
'catUrl' => 'villes',
'parent' => 151,
),
1 =>
array (
'catName' => 'Administratif',
'catUrl' => 'territoire',
'parent' => 37,
),
2 =>
array (
'catName' => 'Gegraphie',
'catUrl' => 'geographie',
'parent' => 0,
),
),
)
I suppose it would work with some recursive function, but my skills in there are not my best. How can I accomplish this?
Here is one way to do it. This function will collapse each level:
function collapse($array) {
// End of recursion is indicated when the first element is not an array.
if (!is_array(reset($array))) {
return array($array);
}
// Otherwise, collapse it.
return array_reduce($array, function($carry, $item) {
// Recursively collapse each item and merge them together.
return array_merge($carry, collapse($item));
}, array());
}
It can be applied to your array like this:
$collapsed = array_map("collapse", $array);
It's not pretty, but it works:
$deeparray = array(); // the really nested array goes here
$flattened = array();
function flatten($item,$key)
{
global $flattened;
if ( $key == 'catName' || $key == 'catUrl' || $key == 'parent' )
{
if ( sizeof( $flattened) == 0 )
{ $flattened[] = array( $key=>$item ); }
else
{
$last = array_pop($flattened);
if ( array_key_exists($key,$last) )
{
$flattened[] = $last;
$flattened[] = array( $key=>$item );
}
else
{
$last[ $key ] = $item;
$flattened[] = $last;
}
}
}
}
array_walk_recursive($deeparray,'flatten',$flattened);
$flattened = array($flattened);
Make a recursive call on each first level element.
Within the recursive function, first isolate the non-iterable elements and push them as a single new row into the desired result array. Then execute the recursive function on each iterable element on that level.
It is important to "pass data back up" with each each recursive call so that all deep data can be collected and returned in the top-level/finished array.
The global-level foreach modifies by reference so that the assignment of $parent mutates the original input array.
Code: (Demo)
function flattenRows($array) {
$result = [];
$scalars = array_filter($array, 'is_scalar');
if ($scalars) {
$result[] = $scalars;
}
foreach (array_diff_key($array, $scalars) as $item) {
$result = array_merge($result, flattenRows($item));
}
return $result;
}
$result = [];
foreach ($array as &$parent) {
$parent = flattenRows($parent);
}
var_export($array);
You could try
foreach($toplevel as $a){
$finalarray = $a[0];
}
if the structure will always be the same as what you've shown then i think you can do this:
$newarray[1][0] = $oldarray[1][0][0];
$newarray[1][1] = $oldarray[1][0][1][0];
$newarray[1][2] = $oldarray[1][0][1][1][0];
I have the following Arrays:
$front = array("front_first","front_second");
$inside = array("inside_first", "inside_second", "inside_third");
$back = array("back_first", "back_second", "back_third","back_fourth");
what I need to do is combine it so that an output would look like this for the above situation. The output order is always to put them in order back, front, inside:
$final = array(
"back_first",
"front_first",
"inside_first",
"back_second",
"front_second",
"inside_second",
"back_third",
"front_second",
"inside_third",
"back_fourth",
"front_second",
"inside_third"
);
So basically it looks at the three arrays, and whichever array has less values it will reuse the last value multiple times until it loops through the remaining keys in the longer arrays.
Is there a way to do this?
$front = array("front_first","front_second");
$inside = array("inside_first", "inside_second", "inside_third");
$back = array("back_first", "back_second", "back_third","back_fourth");
function foo() {
$args = func_get_args();
$max = max(array_map('sizeof', $args)); // credits to hakre ;)
$result = array();
for ($i = 0; $i < $max; $i += 1) {
foreach ($args as $arg) {
$result[] = isset($arg[$i]) ? $arg[$i] : end($arg);
}
}
return $result;
}
$final = foo($back, $front, $inside);
print_r($final);
demo: http://codepad.viper-7.com/RFmGYW
Demo
http://codepad.viper-7.com/xpwGha
PHP
$front = array("front_first", "front_second");
$inside = array("inside_first", "inside_second", "inside_third");
$back = array("back_first", "back_second", "back_third", "back_fourth");
$combined = array_map("callback", $back, $front, $inside);
$lastf = "";
$lasti = "";
$lastb = "";
function callback($arrb, $arrf, $arri) {
global $lastf, $lasti, $lastb;
$lastf = isset($arrf) ? $arrf : $lastf;
$lasti = isset($arri) ? $arri : $lasti;
$lastb = isset($arrb) ? $arrb : $lastb;
return array($lastb, $lastf, $lasti);
}
$final = array();
foreach ($combined as $k => $v) {
$final = array_merge($final, $v);
}
print_r($final);
Output
Array
(
[0] => back_first
[1] => front_first
[2] => inside_first
[3] => back_second
[4] => front_second
[5] => inside_second
[6] => back_third
[7] => front_second
[8] => inside_third
[9] => back_fourth
[10] => front_second
[11] => inside_third
)
Spreading the column data from multiple arrays with array_map() is an easy/convenient way to tranpose data. It will pass a full array of elements from the input arrays and maintain value position by assigning null values where elements were missing.
Within the custom callback, declare a static cache of the previously transposed row. Iterate the new transposed row of data and replace any null values with the previous rows respective element.
After transposing the data, call array_merge(...$the_transposed_data) to flatten the results.
Code: (Demo)
$front = ["front_first", "front_second"];
$inside = ["inside_first", "inside_second", "inside_third"];
$back = ["back_first", "back_second", "back_third", "back_fourth"];
var_export(
array_merge(
...array_map(
function(...$cols) {
static $lastSet;
foreach ($cols as $i => &$v) {
$v ??= $lastSet[$i];
}
$lastSet = $cols;
return $cols;
},
$back,
$front,
$inside
)
)
);
Output:
array (
0 => 'back_first',
1 => 'front_first',
2 => 'inside_first',
3 => 'back_second',
4 => 'front_second',
5 => 'inside_second',
6 => 'back_third',
7 => 'front_second',
8 => 'inside_third',
9 => 'back_fourth',
10 => 'front_second',
11 => 'inside_third',
)
I have an associative array in the form key => value where key is a numerical value, however it is not a sequential numerical value. The key is actually an ID number and the value is a count. This is fine for most instances, however I want a function that gets the human-readable name of the array and uses that for the key, without changing the value.
I didn't see a function that does this, but I'm assuming I need to provide the old key and new key (both of which I have) and transform the array. Is there an efficient way of doing this?
$arr[$newkey] = $arr[$oldkey];
unset($arr[$oldkey]);
The way you would do this and preserve the ordering of the array is by putting the array keys into a separate array, find and replace the key in that array and then combine it back with the values.
Here is a function that does just that:
function change_key( $array, $old_key, $new_key ) {
if( ! array_key_exists( $old_key, $array ) )
return $array;
$keys = array_keys( $array );
$keys[ array_search( $old_key, $keys ) ] = $new_key;
return array_combine( $keys, $array );
}
if your array is built from a database query, you can change the key directly from the mysql statement:
instead of
"select ´id´ from ´tablename´..."
use something like:
"select ´id´ **as NEWNAME** from ´tablename´..."
The answer from KernelM is nice, but in order to avoid the issue raised by Greg in the comment (conflicting keys), using a new array would be safer
$newarr[$newkey] = $oldarr[$oldkey];
$oldarr=$newarr;
unset($newarr);
$array = [
'old1' => 1
'old2' => 2
];
$renameMap = [
'old1' => 'new1',
'old2' => 'new2'
];
$array = array_combine(array_map(function($el) use ($renameMap) {
return $renameMap[$el];
}, array_keys($array)), array_values($array));
/*
$array = [
'new1' => 1
'new2' => 2
];
*/
You could use a second associative array that maps human readable names to the id's. That would also provide a Many to 1 relationship. Then do something like this:
echo 'Widgets: ' . $data[$humanreadbleMapping['Widgets']];
If you want also the position of the new array key to be the same as the old one you can do this:
function change_array_key( $array, $old_key, $new_key) {
if(!is_array($array)){ print 'You must enter a array as a haystack!'; exit; }
if(!array_key_exists($old_key, $array)){
return $array;
}
$key_pos = array_search($old_key, array_keys($array));
$arr_before = array_slice($array, 0, $key_pos);
$arr_after = array_slice($array, $key_pos + 1);
$arr_renamed = array($new_key => $array[$old_key]);
return $arr_before + $arr_renamed + $arr_after;
}
Simple benchmark comparison of both solution.
Solution 1 Copy and remove (order lost, but way faster) https://stackoverflow.com/a/240676/1617857
<?php
$array = ['test' => 'value', ['etc...']];
$array['test2'] = $array['test'];
unset($array['test']);
Solution 2 Rename the key https://stackoverflow.com/a/21299719/1617857
<?php
$array = ['test' => 'value', ['etc...']];
$keys = array_keys( $array );
$keys[array_search('test', $keys, true)] = 'test2';
array_combine( $keys, $array );
Benchmark:
<?php
$array = ['test' => 'value', ['etc...']];
for ($i =0; $i < 100000000; $i++){
// Solution 1
}
for ($i =0; $i < 100000000; $i++){
// Solution 2
}
Results:
php solution1.php 6.33s user 0.02s system 99% cpu 6.356 total
php solution1.php 6.37s user 0.01s system 99% cpu 6.390 total
php solution2.php 12.14s user 0.01s system 99% cpu 12.164 total
php solution2.php 12.57s user 0.03s system 99% cpu 12.612 total
If your array is recursive you can use this function:
test this data:
$datos = array
(
'0' => array
(
'no' => 1,
'id_maquina' => 1,
'id_transaccion' => 1276316093,
'ultimo_cambio' => 'asdfsaf',
'fecha_ultimo_mantenimiento' => 1275804000,
'mecanico_ultimo_mantenimiento' =>'asdfas',
'fecha_ultima_reparacion' => 1275804000,
'mecanico_ultima_reparacion' => 'sadfasf',
'fecha_siguiente_mantenimiento' => 1275804000,
'fecha_ultima_falla' => 0,
'total_fallas' => 0,
),
'1' => array
(
'no' => 2,
'id_maquina' => 2,
'id_transaccion' => 1276494575,
'ultimo_cambio' => 'xx',
'fecha_ultimo_mantenimiento' => 1275372000,
'mecanico_ultimo_mantenimiento' => 'xx',
'fecha_ultima_reparacion' => 1275458400,
'mecanico_ultima_reparacion' => 'xx',
'fecha_siguiente_mantenimiento' => 1275372000,
'fecha_ultima_falla' => 0,
'total_fallas' => 0,
)
);
here is the function:
function changekeyname($array, $newkey, $oldkey)
{
foreach ($array as $key => $value)
{
if (is_array($value))
$array[$key] = changekeyname($value,$newkey,$oldkey);
else
{
$array[$newkey] = $array[$oldkey];
}
}
unset($array[$oldkey]);
return $array;
}
I like KernelM's solution, but I needed something that would handle potential key conflicts (where a new key may match an existing key). Here is what I came up with:
function swapKeys( &$arr, $origKey, $newKey, &$pendingKeys ) {
if( !isset( $arr[$newKey] ) ) {
$arr[$newKey] = $arr[$origKey];
unset( $arr[$origKey] );
if( isset( $pendingKeys[$origKey] ) ) {
// recursion to handle conflicting keys with conflicting keys
swapKeys( $arr, $pendingKeys[$origKey], $origKey, $pendingKeys );
unset( $pendingKeys[$origKey] );
}
} elseif( $newKey != $origKey ) {
$pendingKeys[$newKey] = $origKey;
}
}
You can then cycle through an array like this:
$myArray = array( '1970-01-01 00:00:01', '1970-01-01 00:01:00' );
$pendingKeys = array();
foreach( $myArray as $key => $myArrayValue ) {
// NOTE: strtotime( '1970-01-01 00:00:01' ) = 1 (a conflicting key)
$timestamp = strtotime( $myArrayValue );
swapKeys( $myArray, $key, $timestamp, $pendingKeys );
}
// RESULT: $myArray == array( 1=>'1970-01-01 00:00:01', 60=>'1970-01-01 00:01:00' )
Here is a helper function to achieve that:
/**
* Helper function to rename array keys.
*/
function _rename_arr_key($oldkey, $newkey, array &$arr) {
if (array_key_exists($oldkey, $arr)) {
$arr[$newkey] = $arr[$oldkey];
unset($arr[$oldkey]);
return TRUE;
} else {
return FALSE;
}
}
pretty based on #KernelM answer.
Usage:
_rename_arr_key('oldkey', 'newkey', $my_array);
It will return true on successful rename, otherwise false.
this code will help to change the oldkey to new one
$i = 0;
$keys_array=array("0"=>"one","1"=>"two");
$keys = array_keys($keys_array);
for($i=0;$i<count($keys);$i++) {
$keys_array[$keys_array[$i]]=$keys_array[$i];
unset($keys_array[$i]);
}
print_r($keys_array);
display like
$keys_array=array("one"=>"one","two"=>"two");
Easy stuff:
this function will accept the target $hash and $replacements is also a hash containing newkey=>oldkey associations.
This function will preserve original order, but could be problematic for very large (like above 10k records) arrays regarding performance & memory.
function keyRename(array $hash, array $replacements) {
$new=array();
foreach($hash as $k=>$v)
{
if($ok=array_search($k,$replacements))
$k=$ok;
$new[$k]=$v;
}
return $new;
}
this alternative function would do the same, with far better performance & memory usage, at the cost of losing original order (which should not be a problem since it is hashtable!)
function keyRename(array $hash, array $replacements) {
foreach($hash as $k=>$v)
if($ok=array_search($k,$replacements))
{
$hash[$ok]=$v;
unset($hash[$k]);
}
return $hash;
}
This page has been peppered with a wide interpretation of what is required because there is no minimal, verifiable example in the question body. Some answers are merely trying to solve the "title" without bothering to understand the question requirements.
The key is actually an ID number and the value is a count. This is
fine for most instances, however I want a function that gets the
human-readable name of the array and uses that for the key, without
changing the value.
PHP keys cannot be changed but they can be replaced -- this is why so many answers are advising the use of array_search() (a relatively poor performer) and unset().
Ultimately, you want to create a new array with names as keys relating to the original count. This is most efficiently done via a lookup array because searching for keys will always outperform searching for values.
Code: (Demo)
$idCounts = [
3 => 15,
7 => 12,
8 => 10,
9 => 4
];
$idNames = [
1 => 'Steve',
2 => 'Georgia',
3 => 'Elon',
4 => 'Fiona',
5 => 'Tim',
6 => 'Petra',
7 => 'Quentin',
8 => 'Raymond',
9 => 'Barb'
];
$result = [];
foreach ($idCounts as $id => $count) {
if (isset($idNames[$id])) {
$result[$idNames[$id]] = $count;
}
}
var_export($result);
Output:
array (
'Elon' => 15,
'Quentin' => 12,
'Raymond' => 10,
'Barb' => 4,
)
This technique maintains the original array order (in case the sorting matters), doesn't do any unnecessary iterating, and will be very swift because of isset().
If you want to replace several keys at once (preserving order):
/**
* Rename keys of an array
* #param array $array (asoc)
* #param array $replacement_keys (indexed)
* #return array
*/
function rename_keys($array, $replacement_keys) {
return array_combine($replacement_keys, array_values($array));
}
Usage:
$myarr = array("a" => 22, "b" => 144, "c" => 43);
$newkeys = array("x","y","z");
print_r(rename_keys($myarr, $newkeys));
//must return: array("x" => 22, "y" => 144, "z" => 43);
You can use this function based on array_walk:
function mapToIDs($array, $id_field_name = 'id')
{
$result = [];
array_walk($array,
function(&$value, $key) use (&$result, $id_field_name)
{
$result[$value[$id_field_name]] = $value;
}
);
return $result;
}
$arr = [0 => ['id' => 'one', 'fruit' => 'apple'], 1 => ['id' => 'two', 'fruit' => 'banana']];
print_r($arr);
print_r(mapToIDs($arr));
It gives:
Array(
[0] => Array(
[id] => one
[fruit] => apple
)
[1] => Array(
[id] => two
[fruit] => banana
)
)
Array(
[one] => Array(
[id] => one
[fruit] => apple
)
[two] => Array(
[id] => two
[fruit] => banana
)
)
This basic function handles swapping array keys and keeping the array in the original order...
public function keySwap(array $resource, array $keys)
{
$newResource = [];
foreach($resource as $k => $r){
if(array_key_exists($k,$keys)){
$newResource[$keys[$k]] = $r;
}else{
$newResource[$k] = $r;
}
}
return $newResource;
}
You could then loop through and swap all 'a' keys with 'z' for example...
$inputs = [
0 => ['a'=>'1','b'=>'2'],
1 => ['a'=>'3','b'=>'4']
]
$keySwap = ['a'=>'z'];
foreach($inputs as $k=>$i){
$inputs[$k] = $this->keySwap($i,$keySwap);
}
This function will rename an array key, keeping its position, by combining with index searching.
function renameArrKey($arr, $oldKey, $newKey){
if(!isset($arr[$oldKey])) return $arr; // Failsafe
$keys = array_keys($arr);
$keys[array_search($oldKey, $keys)] = $newKey;
$newArr = array_combine($keys, $arr);
return $newArr;
}
Usage:
$arr = renameArrKey($arr, 'old_key', 'new_key');
this works for renaming the first key:
$a = ['catine' => 'cat', 'canine' => 'dog'];
$tmpa['feline'] = $a['catine'];
unset($a['catine']);
$a = $tmpa + $a;
then, print_r($a) renders a repaired in-order array:
Array
(
[feline] => cat
[canine] => dog
)
this works for renaming an arbitrary key:
$a = ['canine' => 'dog', 'catine' => 'cat', 'porcine' => 'pig']
$af = array_flip($a)
$af['cat'] = 'feline';
$a = array_flip($af)
print_r($a)
Array
(
[canine] => dog
[feline] => cat
[porcine] => pig
)
a generalized function:
function renameKey($oldkey, $newkey, $array) {
$val = $array[$oldkey];
$tmp_A = array_flip($array);
$tmp_A[$val] = $newkey;
return array_flip($tmp_A);
}
There is an alternative way to change the key of an array element when working with a full array - without changing the order of the array.
It's simply to copy the array into a new array.
For instance, I was working with a mixed, multi-dimensional array that contained indexed and associative keys - and I wanted to replace the integer keys with their values, without breaking the order.
I did so by switching key/value for all numeric array entries - here: ['0'=>'foo']. Note that the order is intact.
<?php
$arr = [
'foo',
'bar'=>'alfa',
'baz'=>['a'=>'hello', 'b'=>'world'],
];
foreach($arr as $k=>$v) {
$kk = is_numeric($k) ? $v : $k;
$vv = is_numeric($k) ? null : $v;
$arr2[$kk] = $vv;
}
print_r($arr2);
Output:
Array (
[foo] =>
[bar] => alfa
[baz] => Array (
[a] => hello
[b] => world
)
)
best way is using reference, and not using unset (which make another step to clean memory)
$tab = ['two' => [] ];
solution:
$tab['newname'] = & $tab['two'];
you have one original and one reference with new name.
or if you don't want have two names in one value is good make another tab and foreach on reference
foreach($tab as $key=> & $value) {
if($key=='two') {
$newtab["newname"] = & $tab[$key];
} else {
$newtab[$key] = & $tab[$key];
}
}
Iterration is better on keys than clone all array, and cleaning old array if you have long data like 100 rows +++ etc..
One which preservers ordering that's simple to understand:
function rename_array_key(array $array, $old_key, $new_key) {
if (!array_key_exists($old_key, $array)) {
return $array;
}
$new_array = [];
foreach ($array as $key => $value) {
$new_key = $old_key === $key
? $new_key
: $key;
$new_array[$new_key] = $value;
}
return $new_array;
}
Here is an experiment (test)
Initial array (keys like 0,1,2)
$some_array[] = '6110';//
$some_array[] = '6111';//
$some_array[] = '6210';//
I must change key names to for example human_readable15, human_readable16, human_readable17
Something similar as already posted. During each loop i set necessary key name and remove corresponding key from the initial array.
For example, i inserted into mysql $some_array got lastInsertId and i need to send key-value pair back to jquery.
$first_id_of_inserted = 7;//lastInsertId
$last_loop_for_some_array = count($some_array);
for ($current_loop = 0; $current_loop < $last_loop_for_some_array ; $current_loop++) {
$some_array['human_readable'.($first_id_of_inserted + $current_loop)] = $some_array[$current_loop];//add new key for intial array
unset( $some_array[$current_loop] );//remove already renamed key from array
}
And here is the new array with renamed keys
echo '<pre>', print_r($some_array, true), '</pre>$some_array in '. basename(__FILE__, '.php'). '.php <br/>';
If instead of human_readable15, human_readable16, human_readable17 need something other. Then could create something like this
$arr_with_key_names[] = 'human_readable';
$arr_with_key_names[] = 'something_another';
$arr_with_key_names[] = 'and_something_else';
for ($current_loop = 0; $current_loop < $last_loop_for_some_array ; $current_loop++) {
$some_array[$arr_with_key_names[$current_loop]] = $some_array[$current_loop];//add new key for intial array
unset( $some_array[$current_loop] );//remove already renamed key from array
}
Hmm, I'm not test before, but I think this code working
function replace_array_key($data) {
$mapping = [
'old_key_1' => 'new_key_1',
'old_key_2' => 'new_key_2',
];
$data = json_encode($data);
foreach ($mapping as $needed => $replace) {
$data = str_replace('"'.$needed.'":', '"'.$replace.'":', $data);
}
return json_decode($data, true);
}
You can write simple function that applies the callback to the keys of the given array. Similar to array_map
<?php
function array_map_keys(callable $callback, array $array) {
return array_merge([], ...array_map(
function ($key, $value) use ($callback) { return [$callback($key) => $value]; },
array_keys($array),
$array
));
}
$array = ['a' => 1, 'b' => 'test', 'c' => ['x' => 1, 'y' => 2]];
$newArray = array_map_keys(function($key) { return 'new' . ucfirst($key); }, $array);
echo json_encode($array); // {"a":1,"b":"test","c":{"x":1,"y":2}}
echo json_encode($newArray); // {"newA":1,"newB":"test","newC":{"x":1,"y":2}}
Here is a gist https://gist.github.com/vardius/650367e15abfb58bcd72ca47eff096ca#file-array_map_keys-php.