kusanagi
kusanagi

Reputation: 14624

Insert new item in array on any position in PHP

How can I insert a new item into an array on any position, for example in the middle of array?

Upvotes: 636

Views: 584014

Answers (23)

A Boy Named Su
A Boy Named Su

Reputation: 198

There is no native PHP function (that I am aware of) that can do exactly what you requested.

I've written 2 methods that I believe are fit for purpose:

function insertBefore($input, $index, $element) {
    if (!array_key_exists($index, $input)) {
        throw new Exception("Index not found");
    }
    $tmpArray = array();
    $originalIndex = 0;
    foreach ($input as $key => $value) {
        if ($key === $index) {
            $tmpArray[] = $element;
            break;
        }
        $tmpArray[$key] = $value;
        $originalIndex++;
    }
    array_splice($input, 0, $originalIndex, $tmpArray);
    return $input;
}

function insertAfter($input, $index, $element) {
    if (!array_key_exists($index, $input)) {
        throw new Exception("Index not found");
    }
    $tmpArray = array();
    $originalIndex = 0;
    foreach ($input as $key => $value) {
        $tmpArray[$key] = $value;
        $originalIndex++;
        if ($key === $index) {
            $tmpArray[] = $element;
            break;
        }
    }
    array_splice($input, 0, $originalIndex, $tmpArray);
    return $input;
}

While faster and probably more memory efficient, this is only really suitable where it is not necessary to maintain the keys of the array.

If you do need to maintain keys, the following would be more suitable;

function insertBefore($input, $index, $newKey, $element) {
    if (!array_key_exists($index, $input)) {
        throw new Exception("Index not found");
    }
    $tmpArray = array();
    foreach ($input as $key => $value) {
        if ($key === $index) {
            $tmpArray[$newKey] = $element;
        }
        $tmpArray[$key] = $value;
    }
    return $tmpArray;
}

function insertAfter($input, $index, $newKey, $element) {
    if (!array_key_exists($index, $input)) {
        throw new Exception("Index not found");
    }
    $tmpArray = array();
    foreach ($input as $key => $value) {
        $tmpArray[$key] = $value;
        if ($key === $index) {
            $tmpArray[$newKey] = $element;
        }
    }
    return $tmpArray;
}

Upvotes: 6

wittich
wittich

Reputation: 2321

How to preserve array keys using array_splice()

The answer of @jay.lee is correct, unfortunately it doesn't preserve the keys of an array, as pointed out in the comments:

$original = array( 
    'a' => 'A', 
    'b' => 'B', 
    'c' => 'C', 
    // insert here
    'd' => 'D', 
    'e' => 'E');

$inserted = array( 'x' => 'X' ); 

array_splice( $original, 3, 0, $inserted );
print_r($original);

/* Output
Array
(
    [a] => A
    [b] => B
    [c] => C
    [0] => X  <= the lost key 
    [d] => D
    [e] => E
) */

The simplest way I found to preserve the array keys is to use the array_splice() function and adding the arrays together using + / union operators (also mentioned in the comments of another answer):

$original = array( 
    'a' => 'A', 
    'b' => 'B', 
    'c' => 'C', 
    // insert here
    'd' => 'D', 
    'e' => 'E');

$inserted = array( 'x' => 'X' ); 

// Insert before postion 'd'
$before = array_splice( $original, 0, 3 ); // $original contains the left over

// Merge together
$result = $before + $inserted + $original;
print_r($result);

/* Output
Array
(
    [a] => A
    [b] => B
    [c] => C
    [x] => X
    [d] => D
    [e] => E
) */

Note: using array union operators is only safe when dealing with non-numeric keys


Thanks for the correction @mickmackusa

Upvotes: 7

Oksana Romaniv
Oksana Romaniv

Reputation: 1650

This function by Brad Erickson worked for me for the associative array:

/*
 * Inserts a new key/value after the key in the array.
 *
 * @param $key
 *   The key to insert after.
 * @param $array
 *   An array to insert in to.
 * @param $new_key
 *   The key to insert.
 * @param $new_value
 *   An value to insert.
 *
 * @return
 *   The new array if the key exists, FALSE otherwise.
 *
 * @see array_insert_before()
 */
function array_insert_after($key, array &$array, $new_key, $new_value) {
  if (array_key_exists($key, $array)) {
    $new = array();
    foreach ($array as $k => $value) {
      $new[$k] = $value;
      if ($k === $key) {
        $new[$new_key] = $new_value;
      }
    }
    return $new;
  }
  return FALSE;
}

The function source - this blog post. There's also handy function to insert BEFORE specific key.

Upvotes: 6

jay.lee
jay.lee

Reputation: 19837

You may find this a little more intuitive. It only requires one function call to array_splice:

$original = array( 'a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e' );
$inserted = array( 'x' ); // not necessarily an array, see manual quote
 
array_splice( $original, 3, 0, $inserted ); // splice in at position 3
// $original is now a b c x d e

If replacement is just one element it is not necessary to put array() around it, unless the element is an array itself, an object or NULL.

RETURN VALUE: To be noted that the function does not return the desired substitution. The $original is passed by reference and edited in place. See the expression array &$array with & in the parameters list .

Upvotes: 1209

JDH
JDH

Reputation: 35

After working on this for a few days, here was the easiest solution I could find.

$indexnumbertoaddat // this is a variable that points to the index # where you 
want the new array to be inserted

$arrayToAdd = array(array('key' => $value, 'key' => $value)); //this is the new 
 array and it's values that you want to add. //the key here is to write it like 
 array(array('key' =>, since you're adding this array inside another array. This 
 is the point that a lot of answer left out. 

array_splice($originalArray, $indexnumbertoaddatt, 0, $arrayToAdd); //the actual 
splice function. You're doing it to $originalArray, at the index # you define, 
0 means you're just shifting all other index items down 1, and then you add the 
new array. 

Upvotes: -3

$result_array = array();
$array = array("Tim","John","Mark");
$new_element = "Bill";
$position = 1; 

for ($i=0; $i<count($array); $i++)
    {
      if ($i==$position)
       {
          $result_array[] = $new_element;
       }
       $result_array[] = $array[$i];
    }

print_r($result_array); 

// Result will Array([0] => "Tim",[1] => "Bill", [2] => "John",[1] => "Mark")

Upvotes: 2

Anthony Rutledge
Anthony Rutledge

Reputation: 7594

If you have regular arrays and nothing fancy, this will do. Remember, using array_splice() for inserting elements really means insert before the start index. Be careful when moving elements, because moving up means $targetIndex -1, where as moving down means $targetIndex + 1.

class someArrayClass
{
    private const KEEP_EXISTING_ELEMENTS = 0;

    public function insertAfter(array $array, int $startIndex, $newElements)
    {
        return $this->insertBefore($array, $startIndex + 1, $newElements);
    }

    public function insertBefore(array $array, int $startIndex, $newElements)
    {
        return array_splice($array, $startIndex, self::KEEP_EXISTING_ELEMENTS, $newElements);
    }
}

Upvotes: 0

Ann
Ann

Reputation: 319

You can try it, use this method to make it easy

/**
 * array insert element on position
 * 
 * @link https://vector.cool
 * 
 * @since 1.01.38
 *
 * @param array $original
 * @param mixed $inserted
 * @param int   $position
 * @return array
 */
function array_insert(&$original, $inserted, int $position): array
{
    array_splice($original, $position, 0, array($inserted));
    return $original;
}


$columns = [
    ['name' => '預約項目', 'column' => 'item_name'],
    ['name' => '預約時間', 'column' => 'start_time'],
    ['name' => '預約姓名', 'column' => 'full_name'],
    ['name' => '連絡電話', 'column' => 'phone'],
    ['name' => '建立時間', 'column' => 'create_time']
];
$col = ['name' => '預約帳戶', 'column' => 'user_id'];
$columns = array_insert($columns, $col, 3);
print_r($columns);

Print out:

Array
(
    [0] => Array
        (
            [name] => 預約項目
            [column] => item_name
        )
    [1] => Array
        (
            [name] => 預約時間
            [column] => start_time
        )
    [2] => Array
        (
            [name] => 預約姓名
            [column] => full_name
        )
    [3] => Array
        (
            [name] => 報名人數1
            [column] => num_of_people
        )
    [4] => Array
        (
            [name] => 連絡電話
            [column] => phone
        )
    [5] => Array
        (
            [name] => 預約帳戶
            [column] => user_id
        )
    [6] => Array
        (
            [name] => 建立時間
            [column] => create_time
        )
)

Upvotes: 2

Dan Bray
Dan Bray

Reputation: 7832

This can be done with array_splice however, array_splice fails when inserting an array or using a string key. I wrote a function to handle all cases:

function array_insert(&$arr, $index, $val)
{
    if (is_string($index))
        $index = array_search($index, array_keys($arr));
    if (is_array($val))
        array_splice($arr, $index, 0, [$index => $val]);
    else
        array_splice($arr, $index, 0, $val);
}

Upvotes: 2

xayer
xayer

Reputation: 479

function array_insert($array, $position, $insert) {
    if ($position > 0) {
        if ($position == 1) {
            array_unshift($array, array());
        } else {
            $position = $position - 1;
            array_splice($array, $position, 0, array(
                ''
            ));
        }
        $array[$position] = $insert;
    }

    return $array;
}

Call example:

$array = array_insert($array, 1, ['123', 'abc']);

Upvotes: 2

Mayra M
Mayra M

Reputation: 744

If you want to keep the keys of the initial array and also add an array that has keys, then use the function below:

function insertArrayAtPosition( $array, $insert, $position ) {
    /*
    $array : The initial array i want to modify
    $insert : the new array i want to add, eg array('key' => 'value') or array('value')
    $position : the position where the new array will be inserted into. Please mind that arrays start at 0
    */
    return array_slice($array, 0, $position, TRUE) + $insert + array_slice($array, $position, NULL, TRUE);
}

Call example:

$array = insertArrayAtPosition($array, array('key' => 'Value'), 3);

Upvotes: 13

Devil
Devil

Reputation: 344

You can use this

foreach ($array as $key => $value) 
{
    if($key==1)
    {
        $new_array[]=$other_array;
    }   
    $new_array[]=$value;    
}

Upvotes: 4

Solution by jay.lee is perfect. In case you want to add item(s) to a multidimensional array, first add a single dimensional array and then replace it afterwards.

$original = (
[0] => Array
    (
        [title] => Speed
        [width] => 14
    )

[1] => Array
    (
        [title] => Date
        [width] => 18
    )

[2] => Array
    (
        [title] => Pineapple
        [width] => 30
     )
)

Adding an item in same format to this array will add all new array indexes as items instead of just item.

$new = array(
    'title' => 'Time',
    'width' => 10
);
array_splice($original,1,0,array('random_string')); // can be more items
$original[1] = $new;  // replaced with actual item

Note: Adding items directly to a multidimensional array with array_splice will add all its indexes as items instead of just that item.

Upvotes: 3

Max
Max

Reputation: 21

Try this one:

$colors = array('red', 'blue', 'yellow');

$colors = insertElementToArray($colors, 'green', 2);


function insertElementToArray($arr = array(), $element = null, $index = 0)
{
    if ($element == null) {
        return $arr;
    }

    $arrLength = count($arr);
    $j = $arrLength - 1;

    while ($j >= $index) {
        $arr[$j+1] = $arr[$j];
        $j--;
    }

    $arr[$index] = $element;

    return $arr;
}

Upvotes: 2

Amber
Amber

Reputation: 527328

$a = array(1, 2, 3, 4);
$b = array_merge(array_slice($a, 0, 2), array(5), array_slice($a, 2));
// $b = array(1, 2, 5, 3, 4)

Upvotes: 44

Halil &#214;zg&#252;r
Halil &#214;zg&#252;r

Reputation: 15945

A function that can insert at both integer and string positions:

/**
 * @param array      $array
 * @param int|string $position
 * @param mixed      $insert
 */
function array_insert(&$array, $position, $insert)
{
    if (is_int($position)) {
        array_splice($array, $position, 0, $insert);
    } else {
        $pos   = array_search($position, array_keys($array));
        $array = array_merge(
            array_slice($array, 0, $pos),
            $insert,
            array_slice($array, $pos)
        );
    }
}

Integer usage:

$arr = ["one", "two", "three"];
array_insert(
    $arr,
    1,
    "one-half"
);
// ->
array (
  0 => 'one',
  1 => 'one-half',
  2 => 'two',
  3 => 'three',
)

String Usage:

$arr = [
    "name"  => [
        "type"      => "string",
        "maxlength" => "30",
    ],
    "email" => [
        "type"      => "email",
        "maxlength" => "150",
    ],
];

array_insert(
    $arr,
    "email",
    [
        "phone" => [
            "type"   => "string",
            "format" => "phone",
        ],
    ]
);
// ->
array (
  'name' =>
  array (
    'type' => 'string',
    'maxlength' => '30',
  ),
  'phone' =>
  array (
    'type' => 'string',
    'format' => 'phone',
  ),
  'email' =>
  array (
    'type' => 'email',
    'maxlength' => '150',
  ),
)

Upvotes: 67

d.raev
d.raev

Reputation: 9556

Based on @Halil great answer, here is simple function how to insert new element after a specific key, while preserving integer keys:

private function arrayInsertAfterKey($array, $afterKey, $key, $value){
    $pos   = array_search($afterKey, array_keys($array));

    return array_merge(
        array_slice($array, 0, $pos, $preserve_keys = true),
        array($key=>$value),
        array_slice($array, $pos, $preserve_keys = true)
    );
} 

Upvotes: 5

Mike Doh
Mike Doh

Reputation: 51

This is also a working solution:

function array_insert(&$array,$element,$position=null) {
  if (count($array) == 0) {
    $array[] = $element;
  }
  elseif (is_numeric($position) && $position < 0) {
    if((count($array)+position) < 0) {
      $array = array_insert($array,$element,0);
    }
    else {
      $array[count($array)+$position] = $element;
    }
  }
  elseif (is_numeric($position) && isset($array[$position])) {
    $part1 = array_slice($array,0,$position,true);
    $part2 = array_slice($array,$position,null,true);
    $array = array_merge($part1,array($position=>$element),$part2);
    foreach($array as $key=>$item) {
      if (is_null($item)) {
        unset($array[$key]);
      }
    }
  }
  elseif (is_null($position)) {
    $array[] = $element;
  }  
  elseif (!isset($array[$position])) {
    $array[$position] = $element;
  }
  $array = array_merge($array);
  return $array;
}

credits go to: http://binarykitten.com/php/52-php-insert-element-and-shift.html

Upvotes: 3

forsberg
forsberg

Reputation: 1923

Hint for adding an element at the beginning of an array:

$a = array('first', 'second');
$a[-1] = 'i am the new first element';

then:

foreach($a as $aelem)
    echo $a . ' ';
//returns first, second, i am...

but:

for ($i = -1; $i < count($a)-1; $i++)
     echo $a . ' ';
//returns i am as 1st element

Upvotes: 2

henry wong
henry wong

Reputation: 41

function insert(&$arr, $value, $index){       
    $lengh = count($arr);
    if($index<0||$index>$lengh)
        return;

    for($i=$lengh; $i>$index; $i--){
        $arr[$i] = $arr[$i-1];
    }

    $arr[$index] = $value;
}

Upvotes: 4

mark
mark

Reputation: 21743

Normally, with scalar values:

$elements = array('foo', ...);
array_splice($array, $position, $length, $elements);

To insert a single array element into your array don't forget to wrap the array in an array (as it was a scalar value!):

$element = array('key1'=>'value1');
$elements = array($element);
array_splice($array, $position, $length, $elements);

otherwise all the keys of the array will be added piece by piece.

Upvotes: 1

Aleksandr Makov
Aleksandr Makov

Reputation: 2938

This way you can insert arrays:

function array_insert(&$array, $value, $index)
{
    return $array = array_merge(array_splice($array, max(0, $index - 1)), array($value), $array);
}

Upvotes: 6

Bryan Plasters
Bryan Plasters

Reputation: 69

For inserting elements into an array with string keys you can do something like this:

/* insert an element after given array key
 * $src = array()  array to work with
 * $ins = array() to insert in key=>array format
 * $pos = key that $ins will be inserted after
 */ 
function array_insert_string_keys($src,$ins,$pos) {

    $counter=1;
    foreach($src as $key=>$s){
        if($key==$pos){
            break;
        }
        $counter++;
    } 

    $array_head = array_slice($src,0,$counter);
    $array_tail = array_slice($src,$counter);

    $src = array_merge($array_head, $ins);
    $src = array_merge($src, $array_tail);

    return($src); 
} 

Upvotes: 0

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