Reputation: 1467
I need to remove duplicate values from an array.
$original_array
Array
(
[0] => 1 500 2 4 100 51 52
[1] => 515 5 500
[2] => 31 351 5 51 61 71 81 91
[3] => 1 57 101
[4] => 191 25 101 102
)
I thought I’d then be able to explode them by space to create a multidimensional array, and then use array_unique()
but that’s not working.
# Create new array
$new_array = array();
# Loop through original_array
foreach($original_array as $original_array_value)
{
$new_array[] = explode(' ', $original_array_value);
}
print_r($new_array);
Output:
Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[0] => 1
[1] => 500
[2] => 2
[3] => 4
[4] => 100
[5] => 51
[6] => 52
)
[1] => Array
(
[0] => 515
[1] => 5
[2] => 500
)
[2] => Array
(
[0] => 31
[1] => 351
[2] => 5
[3] => 51
[4] => 61
[5] => 71
[6] => 81
[7] => 91
)
[3] => Array
(
[0] => 1
[1] => 57
[2] => 101
)
[4] => Array
(
[0] => 191
[1] => 25
[2] => 101
[3] => 102
)
)
The final array result doesn't really matter to me as long as there are no duplicate values.
Upvotes: 2
Views: 89
Reputation: 173562
Instead of using array_unique()
you can build a unique array straight away:
$arr = array(
0 => '1 500 2 4 100 51 52',
1 => '515 5 500',
2 => '31 351 5 51 61 71 81 91',
3 => '1 57 101',
4 => '191 25 101 102',
);
$result = array();
foreach ($arr as $item) {
$result += array_flip(explode(' ', $item));
}
The +
operator adds new values to the array if their corresponding keys don't already exist. In the end, you can find the answer by observing the array keys:
print_r(array_keys($result));
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1899
How about:
$arr = array(
0 => '1 500 2 4 100 51 52',
1 => '515 5 500',
2 => '31 351 5 51 61 71 81 91',
3 => '1 57 101',
4 => '191 25 101 102',
);
$imp = trim(implode(' ',$arr));
$exp = array_unique(explode(' ', $imp));
var_dump($exp);
OUTPUT
Array
(
[0] => 1
[1] => 500
[2] => 2
[3] => 4
[4] => 100
[5] => 51
[6] => 52
[7] => 515
[8] => 5
[10] => 31
[11] => 351
[14] => 61
[15] => 71
[16] => 81
[17] => 91
[19] => 57
[20] => 101
[21] => 191
[22] => 25
[24] => 102
)
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 44833
You're halfway there. Add this to the end of your code:
$final_array = array();
foreach($new_array as $index => $subarray) {
$final_array = array_merge($final_array, $subarray);
}
$final_array = array_unique($final_array);
Then the code looks like this:
$original_array = array(
'1 500 2 4 100 51 52',
'515 5 500',
'31 351 5 51 61 71 81 91',
'1 57 101',
'191 25 101 102'
);
# Create new array.
$new_array=array();
# Loop through original_array.
foreach($original_array as $original_array_value)
{
$new_array[]=explode(' ', $original_array_value);
}
$final_array = array();
foreach($new_array as $index => $subarray) {
$final_array = array_merge($final_array, $subarray);
}
$final_array = array_unique($final_array);
echo "<pre>";
print_r($final_array);
echo "</pre>";
Even better: combine steps, like so:
$original_array = array(
'1 500 2 4 100 51 52',
'515 5 500',
'31 351 5 51 61 71 81 91',
'1 57 101',
'191 25 101 102'
);
# Create new array.
$final_array =array();
# Loop through original_array and do the merge at the same time.
foreach($original_array as $original_array_value)
{
$final_array = array_merge($final_array, explode(' ', $original_array_value) );
}
$final_array = array_unique($final_array);
echo "<pre>";
print_r($final_array);
echo "</pre>";
Upvotes: 2