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Which is more efficient for clearing all values in an array? The first one would require me to use that function each time in the loop of the second example.

foreach ($array as $i => $value) {
    unset($array[$i]);
}

Or this

foreach($blah_blah as $blah) {
    $foo = array();
    //do something
    $foo = null;
}

 Answers

3

Like Zack said in the comments below you are able to simply re-instantiate it using

$foo = array(); // $foo is still here

If you want something more powerful use unset since it also will clear $foo from the symbol table, if you need the array later on just instantiate it again.

unset($foo); // $foo is gone
$foo = array(); // $foo is here again
Monday, November 28, 2022
1

Actually, this can be done. Through a php extension.

File: config.m4

PHP_ARG_ENABLE(test, whether to enable test Extension support, [ --enable-test   Enable test ext support])

if test "$PHP_TEST" = "yes"; then
  AC_DEFINE(HAVE_TEST, 1, [Enable TEST Extension])
  PHP_NEW_EXTENSION(test, test.c, $ext_shared)
fi

File: php_test.h

#ifndef PHP_TEST_H
#define PHP_TEST_H 1

#define PHP_TEST_EXT_VERSION "1.0"
#define PHP_TEST_EXT_EXTNAME "test"

PHP_FUNCTION(getaddress4);
PHP_FUNCTION(getaddress);

extern zend_module_entry test_module_entry;
#define phpext_test_ptr &test_module_entry

#endif

File: test.c

#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
#include "config.h"
#endif

#include "php.h"
#include "php_test.h"

ZEND_BEGIN_ARG_INFO_EX(func_args, 1, 0, 0)
ZEND_END_ARG_INFO()

static function_entry test_functions[] = {
    PHP_FE(getaddress4, func_args)
    PHP_FE(getaddress, func_args)
    {NULL, NULL, NULL}
};

zend_module_entry test_module_entry = {
#if ZEND_MODULE_API_NO >= 20010901
    STANDARD_MODULE_HEADER,
#endif
    PHP_TEST_EXT_EXTNAME,
    test_functions,
    NULL,
    NULL,
    NULL,
    NULL,
    NULL,
#if ZEND_MODULE_API_NO >= 20010901
    PHP_TEST_EXT_VERSION,
#endif
    STANDARD_MODULE_PROPERTIES
};

#ifdef COMPILE_DL_TEST
ZEND_GET_MODULE(test)
#endif

PHP_FUNCTION(getaddress4)
{
    zval *var1;
    zval *var2;
    zval *var3;
    zval *var4;
    char r[500];
    if( zend_parse_parameters(ZEND_NUM_ARGS() TSRMLS_CC, "aaaa", &var1, &var2, &var3, &var4) == FAILURE ) {
      RETURN_NULL();
    }
    sprintf(r, "n%p - %p - %p - %pn%p - %p - %p - %p", var1, var2, var3, var4, Z_ARRVAL_P(var1), Z_ARRVAL_P(var2), Z_ARRVAL_P(var3), Z_ARRVAL_P(var4) );
    RETURN_STRING(r, 1);
}

PHP_FUNCTION(getaddress)
{
    zval *var;
    char r[100];
    if( zend_parse_parameters(ZEND_NUM_ARGS() TSRMLS_CC, "a", &var) == FAILURE ) {
      RETURN_NULL();
    }
    sprintf(r, "%p", Z_ARRVAL_P(var));
    RETURN_STRING(r, 1);
}

Then all you have to do is phpize it, config it, and make it. Add a "extension=/path/to/so/file/modules/test.so" to your php.ini file. And finally, restart the web server, just in case.

<?php
  $x = array("123"=>"123");
  $w = $x;
  $y = $x;
  $z = &$x;
  var_dump(getaddress4($w,$x,$y,$z));
  var_dump(getaddress($w));
  var_dump(getaddress($x));
  var_dump(getaddress($y));
  var_dump(getaddress($z));
?>

Returns(at least for me, your memory addresses will probably be different)

string '
0x9efeb0 - 0x9effe0 - 0x9ef8c0 - 0x9efeb0
0x9efee0 - 0x9f0010 - 0x9ed790 - 0x9efee0' (length=84)

string '0x9efee0' (length=8)

string '0x9f0010' (length=8)

string '0x9ed790' (length=8)

string '0x9efee0' (length=8)

Thanks to Artefacto for pointing this out, but my original code was passing the arrays by value, so thereby was recreating arrays including the referenced-one, and giving you bad memory values. I have since changed the code to force all params to be passed by reference. This will allow references, arrays, and object, to be passed in unmolested by the php engine. $w/$z are the same thing, but $w/$x/$y are not. The old code, actually showed the reference breakage and the fact that the memory addresses would change or match when all variables were passed in vs multiple calls to the same function. This was because PHP would reuse the same memory when doing multiple calls. Comparing the results of the original function would be useless. The new code should fix this problem.

FYI - I'm using php 5.3.2.

Sunday, September 4, 2022
 
sk0x50
 
3

You can try below code to merge array. Code generates desired output required to you. I have used sample array as given by you:

<?php
    $arr1=array(
        "384"=>array("name"=>"SomeMovieName1","age"=>"12.2 hrs","IMDBLink"=>"","IMDBRating"=>"", "coverArt"=>""),
        "452"=>array("name"=>"SomeMovieName2","age"=>"15.2 hrs","IMDBLink"=>"","IMDBRating"=>"", "coverArt"=>""),
        "954"=>array("name"=>"SomeMovieName3","age"=>"4.2 hrs","IMDBLink"=>"","IMDBRating"=>"", "coverArt"=>"")
    );
    $arr2=array(
       "384" => array("IMDBLink" => "7.2", "IMDBRating" => "http://www.imdb.com/LinkToMovie1", "coverArt" => "http://www.SomeLinkToCoverArt.com/1"),
       "452" => array("IMDBLink" => "5","IMDBRating" => "http://www.imdb.com/LinkToMovie2", "coverArt" => "http://www.SomeLinkToCoverArt.com/2"),
       "954"=>array("IMDBLink" => "8","IMDBRating" => "http://www.imdb.com/LinkToMovie3", "coverArt" => "http://www.SomeLinkToCoverArt.com/3")
    );
    $arr3 = array();
    foreach($arr1 as $key=>$val)
    {
         $arr3[] = array_merge($val, $arr2[$key]);
    }
    echo "<pre>";
    print_r($arr3);
?>
Tuesday, September 13, 2022
1

function is_array_empty($InputVariable)
{
   $Result = true;

   if (is_array($InputVariable) && count($InputVariable) > 0)
   {
      foreach ($InputVariable as $Value)
      {
         $Result = $Result && is_array_empty($Value);
      }
   }
   else
   {
      $Result = empty($InputVariable);
   }

   return $Result;
}
Monday, November 21, 2022
 
3

You could use the 'u' modifier with PCRE regex ; see Pattern Modifiers (quoting) :

u (PCRE8)

This modifier turns on additional functionality of PCRE that is incompatible with Perl. Pattern strings are treated as UTF-8. This modifier is available from PHP 4.1.0 or greater on Unix and from PHP 4.2.3 on win32. UTF-8 validity of the pattern is checked since PHP 4.3.5.

For instance, considering this code :

header('Content-type: text/html; charset=UTF-8');  // So the browser doesn't make our lives harder
$str = "abc ????, efg";

$results = array();
preg_match_all('/./', $str, $results);
var_dump($results[0]);

You'll get an unusable result:

array
  0 => string 'a' (length=1)
  1 => string 'b' (length=1)
  2 => string 'c' (length=1)
  3 => string ' ' (length=1)
  4 => string '?' (length=1)
  5 => string '?' (length=1)
  6 => string '?' (length=1)
  7 => string '?' (length=1)
  8 => string '?' (length=1)
  9 => string '?' (length=1)
  10 => string '?' (length=1)
  11 => string '?' (length=1)
  12 => string '?' (length=1)
  13 => string '?' (length=1)
  14 => string '?' (length=1)
  15 => string '?' (length=1)
  16 => string ',' (length=1)
  17 => string ' ' (length=1)
  18 => string 'e' (length=1)
  19 => string 'f' (length=1)
  20 => string 'g' (length=1)

But, with this code :

header('Content-type: text/html; charset=UTF-8');  // So the browser doesn't make our lives harder
$str = "abc ????, efg";

$results = array();
preg_match_all('/./u', $str, $results);
var_dump($results[0]);

(Notice the 'u' at the end of the regex)

You get what you want :

array
  0 => string 'a' (length=1)
  1 => string 'b' (length=1)
  2 => string 'c' (length=1)
  3 => string ' ' (length=1)
  4 => string '?' (length=3)
  5 => string '?' (length=3)
  6 => string '?' (length=3)
  7 => string '?' (length=3)
  8 => string ',' (length=1)
  9 => string ' ' (length=1)
  10 => string 'e' (length=1)
  11 => string 'f' (length=1)
  12 => string 'g' (length=1)

Hope this helps :-)

Tuesday, December 13, 2022
 
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