I've worked on array_diff_assoc_recursive() mentioned by chinello at gmail dot com and I think it might be worth mentioning here. I wrote a dozen test cases and it seems to be holding up pretty well.
<?php
// dwarven Differences:
// * Replaced isset() with array_key_exists() to account for keys with null contents
// 55 dot php at imars dot com Differences:
// Key differences:
// * Removed redundant test;
// * Returns false bool on exact match (not zero integer);
// * Use type-precise comparison "!==" instead of loose "!=";
// * Detect when $array2 contains extraneous elements;
// * Returns "before" and "after" instead of only "before" arrays on mismatch.
function array_compare($array1, $array2) {
$diff = false;
// Left-to-right
foreach ($array1 as $key => $value) {
if (!array_key_exists($key,$array2)) {
$diff[0][$key] = $value;
} elseif (is_array($value)) {
if (!is_array($array2[$key])) {
$diff[0][$key] = $value;
$diff[1][$key] = $array2[$key];
} else {
$new = array_compare($value, $array2[$key]);
if ($new !== false) {
if (isset($new[0])) $diff[0][$key] = $new[0];
if (isset($new[1])) $diff[1][$key] = $new[1];
};
};
} elseif ($array2[$key] !== $value) {
$diff[0][$key] = $value;
$diff[1][$key] = $array2[$key];
};
};
// Right-to-left
foreach ($array2 as $key => $value) {
if (!array_key_exists($key,$array1)) {
$diff[1][$key] = $value;
};
// No direct comparsion because matching keys were compared in the
// left-to-right loop earlier, recursively.
};
return $diff;
};
?>
Note that to catch small type differences, you need to use var_dump() rather than print_r(). For example:
<?php
first = Array( 'first' => 'second', 'third' => 'fourth',
'fifth' => Array( 'oui' => 'yes', 'non' => 'no' ),
'sixth' => Array( 3, 4, 2, 1 )
);
$second = Array( 'first' => 'second', 'third' => 'fourth',
'fifth' => Array( 'oui' => 'yes', 'non' => 'no' ),
'sixth' => Array( 3, 4, '2', 1 )
);
$diff = array_compare($first, $second);
if ($diff === false) echo "MATCH\n";
else var_dump($diff);
?>
The above would immediately show that element "sixth", index 2, is int(2) in $first but string(1)"2" in $second. As per the original function, order for associative arrays does not matter, and of course it does with lists.
[EDIT: Credits to php dot notes at dwarven dot co dot uk]
array_diff_assoc
(PHP 4 >= 4.3.0, PHP 5)
array_diff_assoc — Calcule la différence de deux tableaux, en prenant aussi en compte les clés
Description
Compare array1 et array2 et retourne la différence. Contrairement à la fonction array_diff(), les clés du tableau sont également utilisées dans la comparaison.
Liste de paramètres
- array1
-
Le tableau à comparer
- array2
-
Le tableau à comparer
- ...
-
Plus de tableaux à comparer
Valeurs de retour
Retourne un tableau contenant toutes les valeurs du tableau array1 qui ne sont pas présentes dans les autres tableaux.
Exemples
Exemple #1 Exemple avec array_diff_assoc()
Dans cet exemple, vous pouvez voir que la paire "a" => "vert" est présente dans les deux tableaux, et donc, n'est pas présente dans le résultat de la fonction. Au contraire, la paire 0 => "rouge" est présente dans le résultat, car le second argument "rouge" possède une clé qui est 1.
<?php
$array1 = array("a" => "vert", "b" => "marron", "c" => "bleu", "rouge");
$array2 = array("a" => "vert", "jaune", "rouge");
$result = array_diff_assoc($array1, $array2);
print_r($result);
?>
L'exemple ci-dessus va afficher :
Array
(
[b] => marron
[c] => bleu
[0] => rouge
)
Exemple #2 Exemple avec array_diff_assoc()
Deux valeurs des paires clé => valeur sont considérées comme égales uniquement si (string) $elem1 === (string) $elem2 . En d'autres termes, une vérification stricte est effectuée sur la représentation en chaînes de caractères.
<?php
$array1 = array(0, 1, 2);
$array2 = array("00", "01", "2");
$result = array_diff_assoc($array1, $array2);
print_r($result);
?>
L'exemple ci-dessus va afficher :
Array
(
[0] => 0
[1] => 1
)
Notes
Note: Notez bien que cette fonction ne travaille que sur une dimension de tableau. Bien sur, vous pouvez utiliser des sous dimensions de tableau comme ceci : array_diff_assoc($array1[0], $array2[0]);.
Voir aussi
- array_diff() - Calcule la différence entre deux tableaux
- array_intersect() - Calcule l'intersection de tableaux
- array_intersect_assoc() - Calcule l'intersection de deux tableaux avec des tests sur les index
array_diff_assoc
17-Mar-2009 03:09
25-Oct-2008 07:57
array_diff_assoc can also be used to find the duplicates in an array
<?php
$arr = array('1','2','3','4','3','2','5');
$uniques = array_unique($arr);
// array_diff will not work here, array_diff_assoc works as it takes the key // in account.
$dups = array_diff_assoc($arr, $uniques);
print_r($dups);
?>
Note: The index of the $dups is not in strict sequential order as expected by C programmer.
21-May-2007 01:01
To diff between n-dimensional array, juste use this :
<?php
function array_diff_values($tab1, $tab2)
{
$result = array();
foreach($tab1 as $values) if(! in_array($values, $tab2)) $result[] = $values;
return $result;
}
?>
11-Apr-2007 11:14
The direction of the arguments does actually make a difference:
<?php
$a = array(
'x' => 'x',
'y' => 'y',
'z' => 'z',
't' => 't',
);
$b = array(
'x' => 'x',
'y' => 'y',
'z' => 'z',
't' => 't',
'g' => 'g',
);
print_r(array_diff_assoc($a, $b));
print_r(array_diff_assoc($b, $a));
?>
echoes:
Array
(
)
Array
(
[g] => g
)
19-Mar-2007 06:33
The following will recursively do an array_diff_assoc, which will calculate differences on a multi-dimensional level. This not display any notices if a key don't exist and if error_reporting is set to E_ALL:
<?php
function array_diff_assoc_recursive($array1, $array2)
{
foreach($array1 as $key => $value)
{
if(is_array($value))
{
if(!isset($array2[$key]))
{
$difference[$key] = $value;
}
elseif(!is_array($array2[$key]))
{
$difference[$key] = $value;
}
else
{
$new_diff = array_diff_assoc_recursive($value, $array2[$key]);
if($new_diff != FALSE)
{
$difference[$key] = $new_diff;
}
}
}
elseif(!isset($array2[$key]) || $array2[$key] != $value)
{
$difference[$key] = $value;
}
}
return !isset($difference) ? 0 : $difference;
}
?>
[NOTE BY danbrown AT php DOT net: This is a combination of efforts from previous notes deleted. Contributors included (Michael Johnson), (jochem AT iamjochem DAWT com), (sc1n AT yahoo DOT com), and (anders DOT carlsson AT mds DOT mdh DOT se).]
30-May-2006 09:30
NOTE: the diff_array also removes all the duplicate values that match to the values in the second array:
<?php
$array1 = array("a","b","c","a","a");
$array2 = array("a");
$diff = array_diff($array1,$array2);
// yields: array("b","c") the duplicate "a" values are removed
?>
12-Jan-2005 05:56
Hi all,
For php versions < 4.3...
<?php
/**
* array_diff_assoc for version < 4.3
**/
if (!function_exists('array_diff_assoc'))
{
function array_diff_assoc($a1, $a2)
{
foreach($a1 as $key => $value)
{
if(isset($a2[$key]))
{
if((string) $value !== (string) $a2[$key])
{
$r[$key] = $value;
}
}else
{
$r[$key] = $value;
}
}
return $r ;
}
}
?>
09-May-2003 09:55
To unset elements in an array if you know the keys but not the values, you can do:
<?php
$a = array("foo", "bar", "baz", "quux");
$b = array(1, 3); // Elements to get rid of
foreach($b as $e)
unset($a[$e]);
?>
Of course this makes most sense if $b has many elements or is dynamically generated.
