What is the fastest way to add string prefixes to array keys?
Input
$array = array(
'1' => 'val1',
'2' => 'val2',
);
Needed output:
$array = array(
'prefix1' => 'val1',
'prefix2' => 'val2',
);
Could do this in one long line I presume:
$prefix = "prefix";
$array = array_combine(
array_map(
function($k) use ($prefix) {return $prefix . $k; },
array_keys($array)
),
$array
);
Or -- as Sabrina points out in their answer -- using an arrow function syntax which is available from php7.4+.
There's probably dozens of ways to do this though:
$prefix = "prefix";
foreach ($array as $k => $v)
{
$array[$prefix . $k] = $v;
unset($array[$k]);
}
Now historically for versions of PHP prior to 5.3:
$prefix = "prefix";
$array = KeyPrefixer::prefix($array, $prefix);
class KeyPrefixer
{
private $prefix;
public function __construct($prefix) {
$this->prefix = (string)$prefix;
}
public static function prefix(array $array, $prefix)
{
$prefixer = new KeyPrefixer($prefix);
return $prefixer->mapArray($array);
}
public function mapArray(array $array)
{
return array_combine(
array_map(array($this, 'mapKey', array_keys($array)),
$array
);
}
public function mapKey($key) {
return $this->prefix . (string)$key;
}
}
which was originally without the $prefix
as parameter and with a call to create_function()
, which should not be used due to high in-own-foot-shooting-potential. Only for reference:
$array = array_combine(
array_map(create_function('$k', 'return "prefix$k";'), array_keys($array)),
$array
);
Direct compare with arrow function:
$array = array_combine(
array_map(fn($k) => "prefix$k", array_keys($array)),
$array
);
I've found that PHPBench is not a very good source for non-trivial benchmarks. So unless your actually interested in running for(....);
it's not going to correctly show which syntax will be faster. I've put together a simple benchmark to show that foreach is actually the fastest when your use both the key and value during the iteration.
It's very important to actually force PHP to read the values from a loop iteration, or else it'll do its best to optimize them out. In the example below I use the doNothing
function to force PHP to calculate the key and value each time. Using doNothing will cause an overhead to be applied to each loop, but it will be the same for each loop since the number of calls will be the same.
I wasn't really that surprised that foreach
came out on top since it's the language construct for iterating a dictionary.
$array = range( 0, 1000000 );
function doNothing( $value, $key ) {;}
$t1_start = microtime(true);
foreach( $array as $key => $value ) {
doNothing( $value, $key );
}
$t1_end = microtime(true);
$t2_start = microtime(true);
$array_size = count( $array );
for( $key = 0; $key < $array_size; $key++ ) {
doNothing( $array[$key], $key );
}
$t2_end = microtime(true);
//suggestion from PHPBench as the "fastest" way to iterate an array
$t3_start = microtime(true);
$key = array_keys($array);
$size = sizeOf($key);
for( $i=0; $i < $size; $i++ ) {
doNothing( $key[$i], $array[$key[$i]] );
}
$t3_end = microtime(true);
$t4_start = microtime(true);
array_walk( $array, "doNothing" );
$t4_end = microtime(true);
print
"Test 1 ".($t1_end - $t1_start)."\n". //Test 1 0.342370986938
"Test 2 ".($t2_end - $t2_start)."\n". //Test 2 0.369848966599
"Test 3 ".($t3_end - $t3_start)."\n". //Test 3 0.78616809845
"Test 4 ".($t4_end - $t4_start)."\n"; //Test 4 0.542922019958
Edit: I'm using PHP 5.3 on 64-bit Mac OSX 10.6
function keyprefix($keyprefix, Array $array) {
foreach($array as $k=>$v){
$array[$keyprefix.$k] = $v;
unset($array[$k]);
}
return $array;
}
Using array_flip
will not preserve empty or null values.
Additional code could be added in the unlikely event that the prefixed key already exists.
If you don't want to use for loop you can do:
// function called by array_walk to change the $value in $key=>$value.
function myfunction(&$value,$key) {
$value="prefix$value";
}
$keys = array_keys($array); // extract just the keys.
array_walk($keys,"myfunction"); // modify each key by adding a prefix.
$a = array_combine($keys,array_values($array)); // combine new keys with old values.
I don't think this will be more efficient than the for
loop. I guess array_walk will internally use a loop and there is also the function call overhead here.
Another way to write @Lode's first snippet using arrow function syntax which is available from php7.4+:
function prefixArrayKeys($array, $prefix) {
return array_combine(
array_map(fn($k) => $prefix . $k, array_keys($array)),
$array
);
}
function array_key_prefix_suffix(&$array,$prefix='',$suffix=''){
$key_array = array_keys($array);
$key_string = $prefix.implode($suffix.','.$prefix,$key_array).$suffix;
$key_array = explode(',', $key_string);
$array = array_combine($key_array, $array);
}
This is implemented and working very well
Another way to do achieve is with array_flip()
<?php
$data = array_flip($data);
foreach($data as $key => &$val) { $val = "prefix" . $val; }
$data = array_flip($data);
I would create a completely new array, and create your new keys. That has to be faster than unsetting all unwanted keys;
$prefixed_array = array();
foreach ($array as $key => $value) {
$prefixed_array[ $prefix . $key] = $value;
}
And if you want to do any other "affix"'s
function array_affix_keys($affix, Array $array, $type = 'prefix', $options = array()){
$affixed_array = array();
if($type =='prefix'){
foreach ($array as $key => $value) {$affixed_array[ $affix . $key] = $value;}
return $affixed_array;
}
if($type =='suffix'){
foreach ($array as $key => $value) {$affixed_array[$key . $affix ] = $value;}
return $affixed_array;
}
if($type =='circumfix'){
if(is_array($affix) && count($affix) == 2){
foreach ($array as $key => $value) {
$affixed_array[ $affix[0] . $key . $affix[1] ] = $value;
}
}
return $affixed_array;
}
if($type == 'simulfix' && isset($options['phonemes'])){
foreach ($array as $key => $value) { $affixed_array[ str_replace($options['phonemes'], $affix, $key) ] = $value;}
return $affixed_array;
}
return $array;
}
$prefixed = array_affix_keys('prefix_', $array);
$prefixed = array_affix_keys('prefix_', $array, 'prefix');
$suffixed = array_affix_keys('_suffix', $array, 'suffix');
$circumfixed = array_affix_keys(array('prefix', 'suffix'), $array, 'circumfix');
$simulfix = array_affix_keys('replace', $array, 'simulfix', array('phonemes' => 'find'));
Here's a fast, one-liner solution (supported on PHP 4+) to add a prefix and/or suffix using implode / explode:
$array = range(0, 1000000);
$delimiter = '-';
$prefix = 'string';
$suffix = '';
$result = array_combine(explode($delimiter, $prefix . implode($suffix . $delimiter . $prefix, array_keys($array)) . $suffix), $array);
What isn't surprising is that a classic foreach()
loop is the best performer. It also happens to be the most concise script. If your code styling preference doesn't demand functional syntax, then this is probably the best approach. That said, if your input volume is significantly large, it will be a good idea to benchmark your actual data if performance is a high priority.
What is surprising (to me anyway), is that calling three specific native functions (array_combine()
, array_map()
, array_keys()
) can outperform two specific native functions (array_reduce()
, array_keys()
) and even one native function (array_walk()
)!
array_walk()
isn't horrifically slow, but array_reduce()
suffers wicked performance drag.
The following benchmarks are the average of 20 calls of the technique upon arrays with 5000 elements. (Benchmark Script)
foreach()
: (PHP8.2.5 exec time: 0.36159753799438)
$result = [];
foreach ($array as $k => $v) {
$result[$prefix . $k] = $v;
}
array_combine()
,array_map()
,array_keys()
: (PHP8.2.5 exec time: 0.52124261856079)
$result = array_combine(
array_map(
fn($k) => $prefix . $k,
array_keys($array)
),
$array
);
array_walk()
: (PHP8.2.5 exec time: 0.77606439590454)
$result = [];
array_walk(
$array,
function($v, $k, $prefix) use (&$result) {
$result[$prefix . $k] = $v;
},
$prefix
);
array_reduce()
,array_keys()
: (PHP8.2.5 exec time: 49.715828895569)
$result = array_reduce(
array_keys($array),
function($res, $k) use ($array, $prefix) {
$res[$prefix . $k] = $array[$k];
return $res;
},
[]
);
Using arrow function syntax with array_reduce()
does not appear to improve performance.
$result = array_reduce(
array_keys($array),
fn($result, $k) => $result + [$prefix . $k => $array[$k]],
[]
);
generator: (PHP8.2.5 exec time: 0.58324337005615)
function generator($array, $prefix) {
foreach ($array as $k => $v) {
yield $prefix . $k => $v;
}
}
$result = iterator_to_array(generator($array, $prefix));
I figured out one-line solution:
array_walk($array, create_function('$value, &$key', '$key = "prefix" . $key;'));