igorw / get-in
Functions for hash map (assoc array) traversal.
Installs: 10 959 003
Dependents: 29
Suggesters: 0
Security: 0
Stars: 383
Watchers: 9
Forks: 23
Open Issues: 4
Requires
- php: >=5.4
This package is not auto-updated.
Last update: 2024-12-17 02:43:47 UTC
README
Functions for hash map (assoc array) traversal.
When dealing with nested associative structures, traversing them can become
quite a pain. Mostly because of the amount of isset
checking that is
necessary.
For example, to access a nested key ['foo']['bar']['baz']
, you must do
something like this:
$baz = (isset($data['foo']['bar']['baz'])) ? $data['foo']['bar']['baz'] : null;
Enough already! get-in
provides a better way:
$baz = igorw\get_in($data, ['foo', 'bar', 'baz']);
Installation
Through composer:
$ composer require igorw/get-in:~1.0
Usage
get_in
Retrieve value from a nested structure using a list of keys:
$users = [ ['name' => 'Igor Wiedler'], ['name' => 'Jane Doe'], ['name' => 'Acme Inc'], ]; $name = igorw\get_in($users, [1, 'name']); //= 'Jane Doe'
Non existent keys return null:
$data = ['foo' => 'bar']; $baz = igorw\get_in($data, ['baz']); //= null
You can provide a default value that will be used instead of null:
$data = ['foo' => 'bar']; $baz = igorw\get_in($data, ['baz'], 'qux'); //= 'qux'
update_in
Apply a function to the value at a particular location in a nested structure:
$data = ['foo' => ['answer' => 42]]; $inc = function ($x) { return $x + 1; }; $new = igorw\update_in($data, ['foo', 'answer'], $inc); //= ['foo' => ['answer' => 43]]
You can variadically provide additional arguments for the function:
$data = ['foo' => 'bar']; $concat = function (/* $args... */) { return implode('', func_get_args()); }; $new = igorw\update_in($data, ['foo'], $concat, ' is the ', 'best'); //= ['foo' => 'bar is the best']
assoc_in
Set a value at a particular location:
$data = ['foo' => 'bar']; $new = igorw\assoc_in($data, ['foo'], 'baz'); //= ['foo' => 'baz']
It will also set the value if it does not exist yet:
$data = []; $new = igorw\assoc_in($data, ['foo', 'bar'], 'baz'); //= ['foo' => ['bar' => 'baz']]
Inspiration
The naming and implementation is inspired by the get-in
, update-in
and
assoc-in
functions from clojure.