To diff between n-dimensional array, juste use this :
function array_diff_values($tab1, $tab2)
{
$result = array();
foreach($tab1 as $values) if(! in_array($values, $tab2)) $result[] = $values;
return $result;
}
array_diff_assoc
(PHP 4 >= 4.3.0, PHP 5)
array_diff_assoc — Berechnet den Unterschied zwischen Arrays mit zusätzlicher Indexprüfung
Beschreibung
array_diff_assoc() gibt ein array zurück, das alle Werte aus array1 enthält, die in keinem der anderen Argumente vorhanden ist. Beachten Sie, dass die Schlüssel anders als von array_diff() in den Vergleich einbezogen werden.
Beispiel #1 array_diff_assoc()-Beispiel
<?php
$array1 = array("a" => "gruen", "b" => "braun", "c" => "blau", "rot");
$array2 = array("a" => "gruen", "gelb", "rot");
$result = array_diff_assoc($array1, $array2);
print_r($result);
?>
Das oben gezeigte Beispiel erzeugt folgende Ausgabe:
Array ( [b] => braun [c] => blau [0] => rot )
In unserem obigen Beispiel sieht man, dass das "a" => "gruen"-Paar in beiden Arrays enthalten ist und daher nicht in der Ausgabe der Funktion auftaucht. Andererseits ist das Paar 0 => "rot" in der Ausgabe, weil "red" im zweiten Argument einen Schlüsselwert von 1 enthält.
Zwei Werte von Schlüssel => Wert-Paaren werden nur dann als gleich betrachtet, wenn (string) $elem1 === (string) $elem2 gilt. Anders ausgedrückt findet eine strikte Prüfung statt, in der die String-Repräsentationen gleich sein müssen.
Hinweis: Bitte beachten Sie, dass diese Funktion nur eine Dimension eines n-dimensionalen Arrays prüft. Natürlich kann man tiefere Dimensionen überprüfen, indem man zum Beispiel array_diff_assoc($array1[0], $array2[0]); verwendet.
Siehe auch array_diff(), array_intersect() und array_intersect_assoc().
array_diff_assoc
21-May-2007 03:01
11-Apr-2007 01:14
The direction of the arguments does actually make a difference:
<?
$a = array(
'x' => 'x',
'y' => 'y',
'z' => 'z',
't' => 't',
);
$b = array(
'x' => 'x',
'y' => 'y',
'z' => 'z',
't' => 't',
'g' => 'g',
);
print_r(array_diff_assoc($a, $b));
print_r(array_diff_assoc($b, $a));
?>
echoes:
Array
(
)
Array
(
[g] => g
)
19-Mar-2007 07:33
A small modification for array_diff_assoc_recursive from 'sc1n at yahoo dot com' , to not display any notices if a key don't exist and if error_reporting is set to E_ALL:
<?php
function array_diff_assoc_recursive($array1, $array2)
{
foreach($array1 as $key => $value)
{
if(is_array($value))
{
if(!isset($array2[$key]))
{
$difference[$key] = $value;
}
elseif(!is_array($array2[$key]))
{
$difference[$key] = $value;
}
else
{
$new_diff = array_diff_assoc_recursive($value, $array2[$key]);
if($new_diff != FALSE)
{
$difference[$key] = $new_diff;
}
}
}
elseif(!isset($array2[$key]) || $array2[$key] != $value)
{
$difference[$key] = $value;
}
}
return !isset($difference) ? 0 : $difference;
}
?>
30-May-2006 11:30
NOTE: the diff_array also removes all the duplicate values that match to the values in the second array:
<?
$array1 = array("a","b","c","a","a");
$array2 = array("a");
$diff = array_diff($array1,$array2);
// yields: array("b","c") the duplicate "a" values are removed
?>
12-Jan-2005 06:56
Hi all,
For php versions < 4.3...
<?php
/**
* array_diff_assoc for version < 4.3
**/
if (!function_exists('array_diff_assoc'))
{
function array_diff_assoc($a1, $a2)
{
foreach($a1 as $key => $value)
{
if(isset($a2[$key]))
{
if((string) $value !== (string) $a2[$key])
{
$r[$key] = $value;
}
}else
{
$r[$key] = $value;
}
}
return $r ;
}
}
Hope there's no bug,
cheers
?>
09-Jun-2004 03:34
This functionality is now implemented in the PEAR package PHP_Compat.
More information about using this function without upgrading your version of PHP can be found on the below link:
http://pear.php.net/package/PHP_Compat
26-Oct-2003 08:20
[jochem at iamjochem dawt com]
Here is a slightly enhanced version of Micheal Johnsons function.
This version accepts arguments in the same way as
array_diff_assoc (i.e. you can pass as many arrays as you want - any
arguments that are not arrays are ignored). If the first argument is not an array you automatically get empty array back:
The point of the function is to return all values in the first array
whose keys (only keys are checked!) are not present in any subsequently passed arrays.
[original post]
array_diff_assoc() requires that both the key and the value pairs match. To match based on keys only, try this function.
<?php
function array_diff_keys()
{
$args = func_get_args();
$res = $args[0];
if(!is_array($res)) {
return array();
}
for($i=1;$i<count($args);$i++) {
if(!is_array($args[$i])) {
continue;
}
foreach ($args[$i] as $key => $data) {
unset($res[$key]);
}
}
return $res;
}
// Example
$a = array('a' => '1', 'b' => '2', 'c' => '3');
$b = array('a' => '2', 'b' => '2', 'e' => '4');
// Yields array('a' => '1', 'c' => '3')
// Note that the 'a' index is not removed (as one might expect)
$c = array_diff_assoc($a, $b);
// Yields array('c' => '3')
$d = array_diff_keys($a, $b);
?>
11-Jul-2003 09:10
[anders dot carlsson at mds dot mdh dot se]
The user contributed array_diff_assoc_recursive function is good except for the original array_diff_assoc always (?) returns an array.
Therefore I propose that $difference is initially set to an empty array (and the array is always returned), and the comparison against FALSE is replaced by count($new_diff). At least that's the modifications I made to run it they way my code expects.
[original post]
The following will recursively do an array_diff_assoc, which will calculate differences on a multi-dimensional level. (Forgive me if the braces do not line up, the note script did not like my tabs, and gave me trouble on some spaces.)
<?php
function array_diff_assoc_recursive($array1, $array2)
{
foreach($array1 as $key => $value)
{
if(is_array($value))
{
if(!is_array($array2[$key]))
{
$difference[$key] = $value;
}
else
{
$new_diff = array_diff_assoc_recursive($value, $array2[$key]);
if($new_diff != FALSE)
{
$difference[$key] = $new_diff;
}
}
}
elseif(!isset($array2[$key]) || $array2[$key] != $value)
{
$difference[$key] = $value;
}
}
return !isset($difference) ? 0 : $difference;
}
?>
09-May-2003 11:55
To unset elements in an array if you know the keys but not the values, you can do:
<?php
$a = array("foo", "bar", "baz", "quux");
$b = array(1, 3); // Elements to get rid of
foreach($b as $e)
unset($a[$e]);
?>
Of course this makes most sense if $b has many elements or is dynamically generated.
