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in_array

(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

in_arrayComprueba si un valor existe en un array

Descripción

in_array(mixed $needle, array $haystack, bool $strict = false): bool

Busca la aguja (needle) en el pajar (haystack) usando una comparación flexible a menos que esté establecido strict.

Parámetros

needle

El valor a buscar.

Nota:

Si needle es un string, la comparación se realiza considerando las mayúsculas/minúsculas.

haystack

El array.

strict

Si el tercer parámetro strict está establecido a true, la función in_array() también comprobará los tipos de needle en haystack.

Valores devueltos

Devuelve true si needle se encuentra en el array, false de lo contrario.

Ejemplos

Ejemplo #1 Ejemplo de in_array()

<?php
$os
= array("Mac", "NT", "Irix", "Linux");
if (
in_array("Irix", $os)) {
echo
"Existe Irix";
}
if (
in_array("mac", $os)) {
echo
"Existe mac";
}
?>

La segunda condición falla porque in_array() considera las mayúsculas-minúsculas, así que el programa anterior mostrará:

Existe Irix

Ejemplo #2 Ejemplo de in_array() en modo estricto

<?php
$a
= array('1.10', 12.4, 1.13);

if (
in_array('12.4', $a, true)) {
echo
"Se encontró '12.4' con comprobación estricta\n";
}

if (
in_array(1.13, $a, true)) {
echo
"Se encontró 1.13 con comprobación estricta\n";
}
?>

El resultado del ejemplo sería:

Se encontró 1.13 con comprobación estricta

Ejemplo #3 in_array() con un array como aguja

<?php
$a
= array(array('p', 'h'), array('p', 'r'), 'o');

if (
in_array(array('p', 'h'), $a)) {
echo
"Se encontró 'ph'\n";
}

if (
in_array(array('f', 'i'), $a)) {
echo
"Se encontró 'fi'\n";
}

if (
in_array('o', $a)) {
echo
"Se encontró 'o'\n";
}
?>

El resultado del ejemplo sería:

Se encontró 'ph'
  Se encontró 'o'

Ver también

  • array_search() - Busca un valor determinado en un array y devuelve la primera clave correspondiente en caso de éxito
  • isset() - Determina si una variable está definida y no es null
  • array_key_exists() - Verifica si el índice o clave dada existe en el array

add a note

User Contributed Notes 6 notes

up
414
beingmrkenny at gmail dot com
13 years ago
Loose checking returns some crazy, counter-intuitive results when used with certain arrays. It is completely correct behaviour, due to PHP's leniency on variable types, but in "real-life" is almost useless.

The solution is to use the strict checking option.

<?php

// Example array

$array = array(
'egg' => true,
'cheese' => false,
'hair' => 765,
'goblins' => null,
'ogres' => 'no ogres allowed in this array'
);

// Loose checking -- return values are in comments

// First three make sense, last four do not

in_array(null, $array); // true
in_array(false, $array); // true
in_array(765, $array); // true
in_array(763, $array); // true
in_array('egg', $array); // true
in_array('hhh', $array); // true
in_array(array(), $array); // true

// Strict checking

in_array(null, $array, true); // true
in_array(false, $array, true); // true
in_array(765, $array, true); // true
in_array(763, $array, true); // false
in_array('egg', $array, true); // false
in_array('hhh', $array, true); // false
in_array(array(), $array, true); // false

?>
up
3
Julian Sawicki
1 year ago
Here is a recursive in_array function:

<?php

$myNumbers
= [
[
1,2,3,4,5],
[
6,7,8,9,10],
];

$array = [
'numbers' => $myNumbers
];

// Let's try to find number 7 within $array
$hasNumber = in_array(7, $array, true); // bool(false)
$hasNumber = in_array_recursive(7, $array, true); // bool(true)

function in_array_recursive(mixed $needle, array $haystack, bool $strict): bool
{
foreach (
$haystack as $element) {
if (
$element === $needle) {
return
true;
}

$isFound = false;
if (
is_array($element)) {
$isFound = in_array_recursive($needle, $element, $strict);
}

if (
$isFound === true) {
return
true;
}
}

return
false;
}
up
11
rhill at xenu-directory dot net
15 years ago
I found out that in_array will *not* find an associative array within a haystack of associative arrays in strict mode if the keys were not generated in the *same order*:

<?php

$needle
= array(
'fruit'=>'banana', 'vegetable'=>'carrot'
);

$haystack = array(
array(
'vegetable'=>'carrot', 'fruit'=>'banana'),
array(
'fruit'=>'apple', 'vegetable'=>'celery')
);

echo
in_array($needle, $haystack, true) ? 'true' : 'false';
// Output is 'false'

echo in_array($needle, $haystack) ? 'true' : 'false';
// Output is 'true'

?>

I had wrongly assumed the order of the items in an associative array were irrelevant, regardless of whether 'strict' is TRUE or FALSE: The order is irrelevant *only* if not in strict mode.
up
3
leonhard dot radonic+phpnet at gmail dot com
2 years ago
I got an unexpected behavior working with in_array. I'm using following code:

<?php
// ...
$someId = getSomeId(); // it gets generated/fetched by another service, so I don't know what value it will have. P.S.: it's an integer

// The actual data in my edge-case scenario:
// $someId = 0;
// $anyArray = ['dataOne', 'dataTwo'];
if (in_array($someId, $anyArray)) {
// do some work
}
// ...
?>

With PHP7.4, in_array returns boolean true.
With PHP8.1, in_array returns boolean false.

It took me quite some time to find out what's going on.
up
1
eurorusty at yahoo dot ca
6 days ago
I'm not sure why PHP doesn't provide a way to specify a binary search. Here's an example of the performance gains, for this array size, about 50x improvement using interpreted PHP. If built in, it could probably achieve around 1000x improvement, again for this array size.

<?php

// Set up sorted array
$X = array(1);
for (
$j = 1; $j < 50000; ++$j)
$X[] = $X[$j - 1] + rand(1, 6);

// Using in_array
$x = -microtime(true);
$m = 0;
for (
$j = 0; $j < 10000; ++$j)
$m += in_array(rand(1, 175000), $X);
$x += microtime(true);
echo
$x.PHP_EOL;

// Using binarySearch
$x = -microtime(true);
$m = 0;
for (
$j = 0; $j < 10000; ++$j)
$m += binarySearch($X, rand(1, 175000));
$x += microtime(true);
echo
$x.PHP_EOL;

function
binarySearch($array, $value) {
$low = 0;
$high = count($array) - 1;
while (
$low <= $high) {
$pivot = floor(($low + $high) / 2);
if (
$array[$pivot] == $value)
return
true;
if (
$value < $array[$pivot])
$high = $pivot - 1;
else
$low = $pivot + 1;
}
// No match
return false;
}

/* Sample outputs, first is in_array, second is binarySearch
1.3544600009918
0.026464939117432

1.6158990859985
0.033976078033447

1.5184400081635
0.026461124420166
*/
up
-4
Armands Rieksti
1 year ago
I'd like to point out that, if you're using Enum data structures and want to compare whether an array of strings has a certain string Enum in it, you need to cast it to a string.

From what I've tested, the function works correctly:
if the array is filled with strings and you're searching for a string;
if the array is filled with Enums and you're searching for an Enum.
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