(unknown) array -- Create an array Descriptionarray array ([mixed ...])
Returns an array of the parameters. The parameters can be given an index with the => operator.
Note: Array() is a language construct used to represent literal arrays, and not a regular function.
Syntax "index => values", separated by commas, define index and values. index may be of type string or numeric. When index is omitted, a integer index is automatically generated, starting at 0. If index is an integer, next generated index will be the biggest integer index + 1. Note that when two identical index are defined, the last overwrite the first.
The following example demonstrates how to create a two-dimensional array, how to specify keys for associative arrays, and how to skip-and-continue numeric indices in normal arrays. Example 1. Array() example
$fruits = array ( "fruits" => array ("a"=>"orange", "b"=>"banana", "c"=>"apple"), "numbers" => array (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6), "holes" => array ("first", 5 => "second", "third") ); |
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Example 2. Automatic index with Array()
$array = array( 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 8=>1, 4=>1, 19, 3=>13); print_r($array); |
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which will display : Note that index '3' is defined twice, and keep its final value of 13. Index 4 is defined after index 8, and next generated index (value 19) is 9, since biggest index was 8.
This example creates a 1-based array. Example 3. 1-based index with Array()
$firstquarter = array(1 => 'January', 'February', 'March'); print_r($firstquarter); |
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which will display :
See also: list(). |