If I run $collection->filter(myFilter)
, Laravel does this annoying thing of adding keys to each model in the collection like so:
{
"4": {
"myObject": "data"
},
"7": {
"myObject": "data"
}
}
How can I get rid of the "4" and "7" so it's an array of my objects?
My code that runs is:
$obj = Cars::with('brand')->orderBy('id')->get();
return $obj->filter(function($value, $key)
{
return $value->display == true;
});
1. collect(array $array) or 2. new \Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Collection(array $array). First returned collection from type Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Collection.
Collections are basically an extension to the php native array. It's meant to work with arrays. The arrays can certainly contain objects, such as eloquent results, but at the core it's an array.
Object to array PHP is also done with the JSON decode and encode method. In this method, the json_encode() function returns a JSON encoded string for a given value. The json_decode() function accepts the JSON encoded string and converts it into a PHP array.
The issue is that the filter()
method does not rekey the underlying collection array. So, the Collection is still representing an array, it is just that your array looks like this:
[
4 => Object4,
7 => Object7,
]
While this is a perfectly valid array in PHP, this is not a proper array in JSON. Since this cannot be represented as an array in JSON, it is converted to an object in JSON.
In order to get this properly represented as an array in JSON, you just need to rekey the Collection array. The proper method for this is the values()
method. All it does is call array_values
on the underlying array. This will turn the above array in this:
[
0 => Object4,
1 => Object7,
]
Now, this is a proper numerically indexed array that JSON can understand and will treat as an array instead of an object.
While flatten
may work for this particular case (your Collection is a collection of Eloquent Models), it is not actually the correct method, and may lead to unintended consequences. Additionally, it will perform a lot of extra logic that is not needed. Your best bet is to use the proper method for what you are trying to achieve, and that is the values()
method.
$obj = Cars::with('brand')->orderBy('id')->get();
return $obj->filter(function($value, $key)
{
return $value->display == true;
})
->values();
Calling flatten()
on your collection should remove the keys and merge all their values up into a single collection.
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With