Counts all elements in an array when used with an array. When used with an object that implements the
Countable
interface, it returns the return value of the method
Countable::count()
.
Parameters
value
An array or
Countable
object.
mode
If the optional
mode
parameter is set to
COUNT_RECURSIVE
(or 1),
count()
will recursively count the array. This is particularly useful for counting all the elements of a multidimensional array.
Caution
count()
can detect recursion to avoid an infinite loop, but will emit an
E_WARNING
every time it does (in case the array contains itself more than once) and return a count higher than may be expected.
Return Values
Returns the number of elements in
value
. Prior to PHP 8.0.0, if the parameter was neither an
array
nor an
object
that implements the
Countable
interface,
1
would be returned, unless
value
was
null
, in which case
0
would be returned.
Changelog
Version
Description
8.0.0
count()
will now throw
TypeError
on invalid countable types passed to the
value
parameter.
7.2.0
count()
will now yield a warning on invalid countable types passed to the
value
parameter.
int(3)
Warning: count(): Parameter must be an array or an object that implements Countable in … on line 12
int(0)
Warning: count(): Parameter must be an array or an object that implements Countable in … on line 14
int(1)
Output of the above example in PHP 8:
int(3)
Fatal error: Uncaught TypeError: count(): Argument #1 ($var) must be of type Countable .. on line 12
Example #3 Recursive
count()
example
<?php$food=array('fruits'=>array('orange','banana','apple'),'veggie'=>array('carrot','collard','pea'));// recursive countvar_dump(count($food,COUNT_RECURSIVE));// normal countvar_dump(count($food));?>
isset() - Determine if a variable is declared and is different than null
empty() - Determine whether a variable is empty
strlen() - Get string length
is_countable() - Verify that the contents of a variable is a countable value
Arrays
PHP / current — DevDocs
current
(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
current
—
Return the current element in an array
Description
current(array|object$array):mixed
Every array has an internal pointer to its "current" element, which is initialized to the first element inserted into the array.
Parameters
array
The array.
Return Values
The
current()
function simply returns the value of the array element that's currently being pointed to by the internal pointer. It does not move the pointer in any way. If the internal pointer points beyond the end of the elements list or the array is empty,
current()
returns
false
.
Warning
This function may return Boolean
false
, but may also return a non-Boolean value which evaluates to
false
. Please read the section on Booleans for more information. Use the === operator for testing the return value of this function.
Changelog
Version
Description
8.1.0
Calling this function on
object
s is deprecated. Either use
get_mangled_object_vars()
on the
object
first, or use
ArrayIterator
.
Note
:
The results of calling
current()
on an empty array and on an array, whose internal pointer points beyond the end of the elements, are indistinguishable from a
bool
false
element. To properly traverse an array which may contain
false
elements, see the foreach control structure.
To still use
current()
and properly check if the value is really an element of the array, the
key()
of the
current()
element should be checked to be strictly different from
null
.
See Also
end() - Set the internal pointer of an array to its last element
key() - Fetch a key from an array
each() - Return the current key and value pair from an array and advance the array cursor
prev() - Rewind the internal array pointer
reset() - Set the internal pointer of an array to its first element
each
—
Return the current key and value pair from an array and advance the array cursor
Warning
This function has been
DEPRECATED
as of PHP 7.2.0, and
REMOVED
as of PHP 8.0.0. Relying on this function is highly discouraged.
Description
each(array|object&$array):array
Return the current key and value pair from an array and advance the array cursor.
After
each()
has executed, the array cursor will be left on the next element of the array, or past the last element if it hits the end of the array. You have to use
reset()
if you want to traverse the array again using each.
Parameters
array
The input array.
Return Values
Returns the current key and value pair from the array
array
. This pair is returned in a four-element array, with the keys
0
,
1
,
key
, and
value
. Elements
0
and
key
contain the key name of the array element, and
1
and
value
contain the data.
If the internal pointer for the array points past the end of the array contents,
each()
returns
false
.
Because assigning an array to another variable resets the original array's pointer, our example above would cause an endless loop had we assigned
$fruit
to another variable inside the loop.
Warning
each()
will also accept objects, but may return unexpected results. It's therefore not recommended to iterate though object properties with
each()
.
See Also
key() - Fetch a key from an array
list() - Assign variables as if they were an array
current() - Return the current element in an array
reset() - Set the internal pointer of an array to its first element
end
—
Set the internal pointer of an array to its last element
Description
end(array|object&$array):mixed
end()
advances
array
's internal pointer to the last element, and returns its value.
Parameters
array
The array. This array is passed by reference because it is modified by the function. This means you must pass it a real variable and not a function returning an array because only actual variables may be passed by reference.
Return Values
Returns the value of the last element or
false
for empty array.
Changelog
Version
Description
8.1.0
Calling this function on
object
s is deprecated. Either use
get_mangled_object_vars()
on the
object
first, or use
ArrayIterator
.