4.12.1 Problem
4.12.2 Solution
if (in_array($array, $value)) {
// an element has $value as its value in array $array
}
4.12.3 Discussion
Use in_array( ) to check if an element of an array
holds a value:
$book_collection = array('Emma', 'Pride and Prejudice', 'Northhanger Abbey');
$book = 'Sense and Sensibility';
if (in_array($book_collection, $book)) {
echo 'Own it.';
} else {
echo 'Need it.';
}
The default behavior of in_array( ) is to compare items using the
== operator. To use the strict equality check, ===, pass
true as the third parameter to in_array( ):
$array = array(1, '2', 'three'); in_array(0, $array); // true! in_array(0, $array, true); // false in_array(1, $array); // true in_array(1, $array, true); // true in_array(2, $array); // true in_array(2, $array, true); // false
The first check, in_array(0, $array), evaluates to
true because to compare the number 0 against the string
three, PHP casts three to an integer. Since three
isn't a numeric string, as is 2, it becomes 0. Therefore,
in_array( ) thinks there's a match.
Consequently, when comparing numbers against data that may
contain strings, it's safest to use a strict comparison.
If you find yourself calling in_array( ) multiple
times on the same array, it may be better to use an associative array, with the original array elements as the
keys in the new associative array. Looking up entries using in_array( )
takes linear time; with an associative array, it takes constant time.
If you can't create the associative
array directly but need to convert from a traditional one with integer keys, use
array_flip( ) to swap the keys and values of an array:
$book_collection = array('Emma',
'Pride and Prejudice',
'Northhanger Abbey');
// convert from numeric array to associative array
$book_collection = array_flip($book_collection);
$book = 'Sense and Sensibility';
if (isset($book_collection[$book])) {
echo 'Own it.';
} else {
echo 'Need it.';
}
Note that doing this condenses multiple keys with the same
value into one element in the flipped array.