Is it possible to prepend an associative array with literal key=>value pairs? I know that array_unshift() works with numerical keys, but I'm hoping for something that will work with literal keys.
As an example I'd like to do the following:
$array1 = array('fruit3'=>'apple', 'fruit4'=>'orange');
$array2 = array('fruit1'=>'cherry', 'fruit2'=>'blueberry');
// prepend magic
$resulting_array = ('fruit1'=>'cherry',
'fruit2'=>'blueberry',
'fruit3'=>'apple',
'fruit4'=>'orange');
Can't you just do:
$resulting_array = $array2 + $array1;
?
The answer is no. You cannot prepend an associative array with a key-value pair.
However you can create a new array that contains the new key-value pair at the beginning of the array with the union operator +
. The outcome is an entirely new array though and creating the new array has O(n) complexity.
The syntax is below.
$new_array = array('new_key' => 'value') + $original_array;
Note: Do not use array_merge(). array_merge() overwrites keys and does not preserve numeric keys.
In your situation, you want to use array_merge():
array_merge(array('fruit1'=>'cherry', 'fruit2'=>'blueberry'), array('fruit3'=>'apple', 'fruit4'=>'orange'));
To prepend a single value, for an associative array, instead of array_unshift(), again use array_merge():
array_merge(array($key => $value), $myarray);
@Cletus is spot on. Just to add, if the ordering of the elements in the input arrays are ambiguous, and you need the final array to be sorted, you might want to ksort:
$resulting_array = $array1 + $array2;
ksort($resulting_array);
Using the same method as @mvpetrovich, you can use the shorthand version of an array to shorten the syntax.
$_array = array_merge(["key1" => "key_value"], $_old_array);
References:
PHP: array_merge()
PHP: Arrays - Manual
As of PHP 5.4 you can also use the short array syntax, which replaces array() with [].