I currently have the $keys array
array(5) {
[0] =>
string(9) "SessionID"
[1] =>
string(5) "Title"
[2] =>
string(11) "Description"
[3] =>
string(5) "Level"
[4] =>
string(4) "Type"
} that I use as keys for the values of another array called $values.
I would like to make an associative array by mapping the other array to $keys.
Another way to say this is I would like to array_combine($keys, $values) whereas $keys has only 5 elements but $values has more than 3000 elements.
Edit 1: Sorry for not putting in a $values example. It would have the same order as the $keys:
+-----------+-------+-------------+---------+------+ | SESSIONID | TITLE | DESCRIPTION | LEVEL | TYPE | +-----------+-------+-------------+---------+------+ | | | | | | | 1 | A | Describe A | Level 1 | Word | | | | | | | | 2 | B | Describe B | Level 2 | Word | +-----------+-------+-------------+---------+------+
or
$values = [ 1, 'A', 'Describe A', 'Level 1', 'Word', 2, 'B', 'Describe B', 'Level 2', 'Word' ];
since I populate both arrays from a single CSV file.
Since you've left out an explanation of what $values is I've guessed a little. Here are two scenarios.
If your values are all at the same level like below, we can chunk them up:
$keys = [ "SessionID", "Title", "Description", "Level", "Type", ];
$values = [
1,
"Title A",
"Desc A",
"Monster",
"car",
2,
"Title B",
"Desc B",
"Devil",
"car",
];
Cut the data up in to arrays with length equal to the number of keys.
$chunks = array_chunk($values, count($keys));
Then map them using array_combine like you suggested.
$ass = array_map(function ($chunk) use ($keys) {
return array_combine($keys, $chunk);
}, $chunks);
If your array is an array of arrays (or rows) we can skip the chunking part and pass it to the mapping function directly:
$values = [
[ 1, "Title A", "Desc A", "Monster", "car" ],
[ 2, "Title B", "Desc B", "Devil", "car" ]
];
$ass = array_map(function ($chunk) use ($keys) {
return array_combine($keys, $chunk);
}, $values);
Since if it's worth doing, it's worth overdoing, here's a slightly more needlessly complex version of the first part of Michael's answer
<?php
$keys = array("SessionID","Title","Description","Level","Type");
$it = new NoRewindIterator(gen_data());
do {
$foo = array_combine(
$keys,
iterator_to_array(new LimitIterator($it, 0, 5))
);
var_export($foo); echo "\r\n";
}
while ( $it->valid() );
function gen_data() {
static $HOW_MANY_WOULD_YOU_LIKE = 100;
$x = array("Session #","Title #","Desc #","Lvl #","Type #");
for($i=0; $i<$HOW_MANY_WOULD_YOU_LIKE*5; $i++) {
yield $x[$i%5].((int)($i/5)+1);
}
}
see http://docs.php.net/language.generators , http://docs.php.net/class.norewinditerator and http://docs.php.net/class.limititerator
Arrays are so 2015 (darn iterator_to_array) :-D
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