The ArrayObject class

(PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

简介

This class allows objects to work as arrays.

类摘要

ArrayObject implements IteratorAggregate , ArrayAccess , Serializable , Countable {
/* 常量 */
const int STD_PROP_LIST = 1 ;
const int ARRAY_AS_PROPS = 2 ;
/* 方法 */
public __construct ( array|object $array = [] , int $flags = 0 , string $iteratorClass = ArrayIterator::class )
public append ( mixed $value ) : void
public asort ( int $flags = SORT_REGULAR ) : bool
public count ( ) : int
public exchangeArray ( array|object $array ) : array
public getArrayCopy ( ) : array
public getFlags ( ) : int
public getIterator ( ) : Iterator
public getIteratorClass ( ) : string
public ksort ( int $flags = SORT_REGULAR ) : bool
public natcasesort ( ) : bool
public natsort ( ) : bool
public offsetExists ( mixed $key ) : bool
public offsetGet ( mixed $key ) : mixed
public offsetSet ( mixed $index , mixed $newval ) : void
public offsetUnset ( mixed $key ) : void
public serialize ( ) : string
public setFlags ( int $flags ) : void
public setIteratorClass ( string $iteratorClass ) : void
public uasort ( callable $callback ) : bool
public uksort ( callable $callback ) : bool
public unserialize ( string $data ) : void
}

预定义常量

ArrayObject Flags

ArrayObject::STD_PROP_LIST

Properties of the object have their normal functionality when accessed as list (var_dump, foreach, etc.).

ArrayObject::ARRAY_AS_PROPS

Entries can be accessed as properties (read and write).

Table of Contents

User Contributed Notes

lsrzj at yahoo dot com 26-Apr-2021 12:31
Differences between STD_PROP_LIST and ARRAY_AS_PROPS

<?php
$a
= new ArrayObject([], ArrayObject::STD_PROP_LIST);
$a['arr'] = 'Array data';
$a->prop = 'Prop data';

$b = new ArrayObject([], ArrayObject::ARRAY_AS_PROPS);
$b['arr'] = 'Array data';
$b->prop = 'Prop data';

print_r($a);
/* Output

ArrayObject Object
(
    [prop] => Prop data
    [storage:ArrayObject:private] => Array
        (
            [arr] => Array data
        )

)*/

print_r($b);
/* Output

ArrayObject Object
(
    [storage:ArrayObject:private] => Array
        (
            [arr] => Array data
            [prop] => Prop data
        )

)*/

?>
hello at rayfung dot hk 22-Feb-2021 01:38
If you want to use built-in array function with ArrayObject, store the iterator instance and return the value as reference in offsetGet.

<?php
class Collection extends \ArrayObject {
    public function
__construct(array $data = [])
    {
        if (!\
is_array($data) && !\array_key_exists('ArrayAccess', class_implements($data))) {
           
$data = [$data];
        }

       
$this->iterator = $this->getIterator();
       
parent::__construct($data);
    }

    public function &
offsetGet($index)
    {
       
$value = &$this->iterator[$index] ?? null;

        return
$value;
    }
}
?>
ke dot chankrisna168 at gmail dot com 05-May-2020 02:59
function map_of_array(array $element, $callable)
{
    foreach ($element as $key => $value) {
        $callable($key, $value);
    }
}

Usage:

$key_values = ["name" => "krisna", "level" => 10];

map_of_array($key_values, function ($key, $value) {
      echo "\n", $key, "=", $value;
});

Result:

name=krisna
level=10
fatindeed at hotmail dot com 31-Jan-2019 07:28
class RecursiveArrayObject extends \ArrayObject
{
    public function __construct($input = array())
    {
        $data = array();
        foreach ($input as $key => $value) {
            if (is_array($value)) {
                $value = new self($value);
            }
            $data[$key] = $value;
        }
        parent::__construct($data, \ArrayObject::ARRAY_AS_PROPS);
    }
}

$company = new RecursiveArrayObject(array(
    'ceo' => array(
        'id' => 1,
        'name' => 'tony',
        'age' => 36
    ),
    'coo' => array(
        'id' => 2,
        'name' => 'matt',
        'age' => 35
    ),
    'cto' => array(
        'id' => 3,
        'name' => 'james',
        'age' => 35
    )
));

var_dump($company->cto->name); // string(5) "james"
var_dump($company['coo']['name']); // string(4) "matt"
Vuong Nguyen 08-May-2018 03:52
You can easily realise that ArrayObject can use various functions as they are in ArrayIterator to iterate an object-as-a-array. However, you need to "activate" these function (rewind, valid, next and so on...) by using getIterator() first. Actually this function inherits from Iterator Aggregate interface.

Take a look at the following basic example. The results are the same:

<?php

$array
= [1, 2, 3, 4];
$a = new ArrayObject($array);
$b = new ArrayIterator($array);

$iterator = $a->getIterator();

for(
$iterator->rewind(); $iterator->valid(); $iterator->next()){
    echo
$iterator->current()*2;
   
}

for(
$b->rewind(); $b->valid(); $b->next()){
    echo
$b->current()*2;
   
}

//Resulst are the same 2468 AND 2468
rudie 26-Feb-2018 02:08
If you want numerical ArrayObject objects to play nice with json_encode(), implement JsonSerializable:

class JsonSerializableArrayObject extends ArrayObject implements JsonSerializable {
    function jsonSerialize() {
        return $this->getArrayCopy();
    }
}

For assoc ArrayObject objects this isn't neccesary, but for numerical arrays it is, otherwise they will be formatted like

{"0":"jaap","1":"karel"}

instead of

["jaap","karel"]
Mahmoud Elnezamy 19-Feb-2016 01:36
<?php
class Prototype extends ArrayObject
{
    private
$___class = null;
   
    public function
__get($key)
    {
        return
$this[$key];
    }

    public function
__set($key, $value)
    {
       
$this[$key] =  $value;
    }
   
    public function
__call($key, $args)
    {
        if(
is_object($this->___class) && is_callable([$this->___class, $key])){
            return
call_user_func_array([$this->___class, $key],$args);
        }
        return
is_callable($c = $this->__get($key)) ? call_user_func_array($c, $args) : null;
    }

    public function
importObj($class$array = []){
       
$this->___class = $class;
        if(
count($array) > 0){
           
$this->import($array);
        }
        return
$this;
    }

    public function
import($input)
    {
       
$this->exchangeArray($input);
        return
$this;
    }

    public function
export()
    {
        return
$this->objectToArray($this->getArrayCopy());
    }

    public function
objectToArray ($object) {
       
$o = [];
        foreach (
$object as $key => $value) {
          
$o[$key] = is_object($value) ? (array) $value: $value;
        }
        return
$o;
    }

}

class
user{
    public
$name = 'Mahmoud Elnezamy';
    public function
getName(){
        return
'You Name is ' . $this->name;
    }
}

//usage you can import object with some array

$add = ['age' => '27', 'country' => 'Egypt'];
$user = new user;
$Prototype = new Prototype;
$Prototype->importObj($user, $add);
//print_r($Prototype);

echo $Prototype->getName().' ';
echo
$Prototype->age.' ';
echo
$Prototype->country;
Gilles A 17-Nov-2014 01:51
// Example STD_PROP_LIST and ARRAY_AS_PROP combined
<?php
$ao
= new ArrayObject();
$ao ->setFlags(ArrayObject::STD_PROP_LIST|ArrayObject::ARRAY_AS_PROPS);

$ao->prop = 'prop data';
$ao['arr'] = 'array data';

print_r($ao);

?>

// Result

ArrayObject Object
(
    [storage:ArrayObject:private] =&gt; Array
        (
            [prop] => prop data
            [arr] => array data
        )

)
rwn dot gallego at gmail dot com 11-Aug-2013 09:30
There is a better explanation about the ArrayObject flags (STD_PROP_LIST and ARRAY_AS_PROPS) right here:

http://stackoverflow.com/a/16619183/1019305

Thanks to JayTaph
mehea 06-Nov-2012 10:28
Long story short b/c arrays by default are passed by value, if you pass an array to a function, the function works on a copy of the array while the original array remains unaltered by the function.

You may cause a change to the array to be reflected in the original array by having the function return the altered array and assign it to the variable for the original array, as follows:

<?php
function my_array_modify($data) {
   
$data['b'] = 2;
    return
$data;    
}

$regularArray = array();

$regularArray['a'] = 1;
 
$regularArray = my_array_modify($regularArray);

var_dump($regularArray['b']); // 2
?>

Or, you may explicitly pass the array by reference in which case there is no need for the function to return the array since the change will have effected the original array, as follows:

<?php
function my_arrayref_modify(&$data) {
   
$data['bb'] = 22;
}
my_arrayref_modify($regularArray);
var_dump($regularArray['bb']); // 22
?>
php5 dot man at lightning dot hu 05-Jan-2012 08:24
As you know ArrayObject is not an array so you can't use the built in array functions. Here's a trick around that:

Extend the ArrayObject class with your own and implement this magic method:

<?php
   
public function __call($func, $argv)
    {
        if (!
is_callable($func) || substr($func, 0, 6) !== 'array_')
        {
            throw new
BadMethodCallException(__CLASS__.'->'.$func);
        }
        return
call_user_func_array($func, array_merge(array($this->getArrayCopy()), $argv));
    }
?>

Now you can do this with any array_* function:
<?php
$yourObject
->array_keys();
?>
- Don't forget to ommit the first parameter - it's automatic!

Note: You might want to write your own functions if you're working with large sets of data.
MarkAndrewSlade at gmail dot com 21-Aug-2011 06:05
I found the description of STD_PROP_LIST a bit vague, so I put together a simple demonstration to show its behavior:

<?php                                                    
                                                         
$a
= new ArrayObject(array(), ArrayObject::STD_PROP_LIST);
   
$a['arr'] = 'array data';                            
   
$a->prop = 'prop data';                              
$b = new ArrayObject();                                  
   
$b['arr'] = 'array data';                            
   
$b->prop = 'prop data';                              
                                                         
// ArrayObject Object                                    
// (                                                     
//      [prop] => prop data                              
// )                                                     
print_r($a);                                             
                                                         
// ArrayObject Object                                    
// (                                                     
//      [arr] => array data                              
// )                                                     
print_r($b);                                             
                                                         
?>
marijn at sensimedia dot nl 21-Jul-2011 12:34
A gotcha that is indeed mentioned in the manual, but isn't readily obvious and just cost me half an hour:

Objects implementing the Serializable interface do NOT get __sleep and __wakeup called; instead, they use serialize and unserialize methods, respectively (why, I don't know, but whatever - I'm sure there's a reason).

Hence, I was trying to serialize a database resultset in an object extending ArrayObject, and needed to fix some stuff regarding database resources on serialize. Took me a while to figure out __sleep wasn't getting called because ArrayObjects implements Serialize...

Presumably the ArrayObject internally implements the serialize/unserialize methods (in a trivial manner), hence the error wasn't apparent immediately (i.e., no fatal error was thrown) and I'd been trying to track why my objects didn't get serialized (they were of course) instead of renaming and fixing the methods.
sfinktah at php dot spamtrak dot org 17-Apr-2011 12:27
If you plan to derive your own class from ArrayObject, and  wish to maintain complete ArrayObject functionality (such as being able to cast to an array), it is necessary to use ArrayObject's own private property "storage".

Since that is impossible to do directly, you must use ArrayObject's offset{Set,Get,Exists,Unset} methods to manipulate it indirectly.

As a side benefit, this means you inherit all the iteration and other functions in complete working order.

This may sound obvious to someone who has never implemented their own ArrayObject class...  but it is far from so.

<?php

class MyArrayObject extends ArrayObject {
        static
$debugLevel = 2;

        static public function
sdprintf() {
                if (static::
$debugLevel > 1) {
                       
call_user_func_array("printf", func_get_args());
                }
        }

        public function
offsetGet($name) {
               
self::sdprintf("%s(%s)\n", __FUNCTION__, implode(",", func_get_args()));
                return
call_user_func_array(array(parent, __FUNCTION__), func_get_args());
        }
        public function
offsetSet($name, $value) {
               
self::sdprintf("%s(%s)\n", __FUNCTION__, implode(",", func_get_args()));
                return
call_user_func_array(array(parent, __FUNCTION__), func_get_args());
        }
        public function
offsetExists($name) {
               
self::sdprintf("%s(%s)\n", __FUNCTION__, implode(",", func_get_args()));
                return
call_user_func_array(array(parent, __FUNCTION__), func_get_args());
        }
        public function
offsetUnset($name) {
               
self::sdprintf("%s(%s)\n", __FUNCTION__, implode(",", func_get_args()));
                return
call_user_func_array(array(parent, __FUNCTION__), func_get_args());
        }
}

$mao = new MyArrayObject();
$mao["name"] = "bob";
$mao["friend"] = "jane";
print_r((array)$mao);

/* Output:
 
offsetSet(name,bob)
offsetSet(friend,jane)
Array
(
    [name] => bob
    [friend] => jane
)       */
?>

If you wish to use the "Array as Properties" flag, you simply need to include this in your constructor:

<?php parent::setFlags(parent::ARRAY_AS_PROPS); ?>

This will allow you to do things such as the below example, without overriding __get or __set .

<?php
$mao
->name = "Phil";
echo
$mao["name"];   /* Outputs "Phil" */
?>
rob at tdd dot org dot uk 03-Mar-2011 04:38
I don't believe the same performance is true since PHP 5.3. Using the same fill, read_key and foreach approach on both native arrays and ArrayObjects with 10000 keys I get the following

PHP 5.2

array() fill         0.013101
array() read         0.008685
array() foreach      0.004319
ArrayObject fill     0.014136
ArrayObject read     0.010003
ArrayObject foreach  3.454612

PHP 5.3

array() fill         0.010395
array() read         0.005933
array() foreach      0.001903
ArrayObject fill     0.010598
ArrayObject read     0.006387
ArrayObject foreach  0.003451

This was the code I used for both, an array or ArrayObject is passed into each of the functions. Again PEAR::Benchmark was used to get the results.

<?php
require_once 'Benchmark/Timer.php';

define('KEYS', 10000);

function
fill(&$arr) {
    for (
$i = 1; $i <= KEYS; $i++) {
       
$arr['key-' . $i] = $i;
    }
}

function
read_key(&$arr) {
    for (
$i = 1; $i <= KEYS; $i++) {
       
$v = $arr['key-' . $i];
    }
}

function
fe(&$arr) {
    foreach (
$arr as $key => $value) {
       
$v = $value;
    }
}
?>
danbettles at yahoo dot co dot uk 23-Aug-2009 08:56
To implement array-style appending (e.g. "$object[] = 'foo';") in your own class implementing the ArrayAccess _interface_, all you need do is check if the key passed to your implementation of offsetSet() is NULL.  Something like the following.

<?php

class MyArrayObject implements ArrayAccess {

   
/**
     * @var array
     */
   
private $aValue;

   
// ...

    /**
     * @see ArrayAccess::offsetSet()
     */
   
public function offsetSet ($p_key, $p_value) {
        if (
is_null($p_key)) {
           
$this->aValue[] = $p_value;
        }
        else {
           
$this->aValue[$p_key] = $p_value;
        }
    }

   
// ...
}
?>
skrebbel at gmail dot com 18-Apr-2009 03:25
According to my benchmarks, doing foreach() on an ArrayObject is significantly slower than doing so on a vanilla array(). However, inserting keys and retrieving them is almost the same speed.

So, if performance is important, consider not using ArrayObject or descendant classes when you're iterating over its values a lot.

These are my timing results, using PEAR::Benchmark:

ArrayObject fill            0.01441502571106   
ArrayObject read_key        0.018320083618164   
ArrayObject read_foreach    2.1559031009674   

array() fill                0.012364864349365   
array() read_key            0.013092041015625   
array() read_foreach        0.011217832565308   

In all cases, 'fill()' inserts 10000 numbers at string keys, 'read_key()' reads all of those values by referencing the keys, and 'read_foreach()' does the same by walking through the array(object) with foreach().

As you can see, filling or reading from an ArrayObject by key is only 10% to 15% slower, but doing a foreach() is 200 times as costly. I am not sure what the cause of this may be.
deminy at deminy dot net 02-Jan-2009 01:31
Generally variable $this can't be used as an array within an object context. For example, following code piece would cause a fatal error:

<?php
class TestThis {
    public function
__set($name, $val) {
       
$this[$name] = $val;
    }

    public function
__get($name) {
        return
$this[$name];
    }
}

$obj = new TestThis();
$obj->a = 'aaa';
echo
$obj->a . "\n";
?>

But things are different when $this is used in an ArrayObject object. e.g., following code piece are valid:

<?php
class TestArrayObject extends ArrayObject {   
    public function
__set($name, $val) {
       
$this[$name] = $val;
    }

    public function
__get($name) {
        return
$this[$name];
    }
}

$obj = new TestArrayObject();
$obj->a = 'aaa';
echo
$obj->a . "\n";
?>
Venelin Vulkov 05-Nov-2008 01:09
Simple example of usage :

<?php

$array
= array('Buck','Jerry','Tomas');

$arrayObject = new ArrayObject($array);
// Add new element
$arrayObject->append('Tweety');

// We are getting the iterator of the object
$iterator = $arrayObject->getIterator();

// Simple while loop
while ($iterator->valid()) {
    echo
$iterator->current() . "\n";
   
$iterator->next();
}

/* Outputs */
Buck
Jerry
Tomas
Tweety

?>

Note that not all the public methods of this class are documented here .
( Which includes a lot sorting methods ) .

Regards
dave at csixty4 dot com 05-Sep-2008 08:28
If you want to use array functions on an ArrayObject, why not use iterator_to_array() to get a standard PHP array?  Do your operations on that array, then instantiate a new ArrayObject, passing it the array.

This might be a little slow on large ArrayObjects, but you'd have access to all of the array functions.
Anonymous 09-Aug-2008 06:17
Too bad the Array functions [1] are not available on this object... otherwise I would be using it all the time.

[1] http://nl.php.net/manual/en/ref.array.php
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