I would use triggers if it were easier to fire them back into PHP, but obviously there are numerous reasons why that's not really practical most of the time
@SteveRobbins You just need to loop the array. Whether you do that with for, foreach, array_map(), array_walk(), whatever, it's all pretty much the same logic you need. Loop the child arrays and reduce them to just the value you want.
@SteveRobbins Errm... no. You literally cannot do that without looping. Not possible. array_map() and array_walk() are still loops, they're just C loops instead of PHP loops.
(and no, that doesn't necessarily make them faster/more efficient)
@SteveRobbins There's a pretty good chance that avoiding PHP loops will actually perform worse with such a simple operation on a large array due to the overhead of function calls. My money is on the simple $result = []; foreach ($arr as $el) $result[$el['value']] = $el['label']; being the best way to do this if you benchmark it.
@SteveRobbins Also realistically a PHP loop is your only option, I now see having just written that ^^ because you need to use explicit keys and not just a simple push/modify
@JoeWatkins I imagine that blows any efficiency gain from the pure C loop pretty quickly, I'm trying to test it but I can't get a decent benchmark because my computer is... errr... busy.
you will deffo be better to write the loop as php, it's not even worth benchmarking, it is common sense ... now if you were calling a builtin, maybe you'd have a chance of performing well with walk/map or the like, but calling a userland function a billion times is no competition ...
all the stack and unstack and unending zend_parse_parameters will absolutely, definitely kill it ...
@JoeWatkins I still don't get why using refs in foreach causes CoW. @NikiC has explained it in great detail a few times, I still just don't get why it needs to do it.
I dunno exactly how it is done for iteration, but usually foreach ($array as $key => $value) will result in $array[$key] being copied to $value for each iteration, foreach ($array as $key => &$value) will pass $array[$key] as $value directly ... shouldn't be slower ...
then what the fuck is the point is supporting the reference operator if what you get is not a reference to the member of the array you are iterating over ...
@JoeWatkins It's to do with the array pointer more than the data I think. But (from what I understand) it still does a full copy of the array. NikiC can explain way better than I can, especially since what little I know on the subject is almost all learned directly from him.
I just don't get the way the collective thinks, I'm absolutely sure that none of us would implement it like that and be happy with it ... but because there's a million opinions, what becomes acceptable is absolutely mental ...
I have a problem with a website where PHP does not save session variables for specific users with Internet Explorer. But for some other users with Internet Explorer there is no problem at all, and users with other browsers also do not have any problems.
I created the following three small scrip...
@DaveRandom yeah, it seems the fastest way to foreach is without references ... pretty bizarre, even if there is an explanation, it is not expected ... codepad.viper-7.com/slcY9z
In the real world it still isn't statistically significant because it's still only ~5ms difference for 100000 elements, but it's still counter intuitive
@HamZa I'm completely stumped on that one. I can only assume there is something we cannot see causing the problem, like (?) rewriting firing a hidden script or something
@HamZa It's possible, but it would be comically inefficient, the only way I can think of is $keys = array_keys($arr); for ($i = 0, $l = count($keys); $i < $l; $i++) { $el = $arr[$keys[$i]]; /* ... */ }
@HamZa It's not really relevant. Firstly it's C so it's compiled, and secondly the way PHP arrays work in C is so complex that the way the loops work doesn't matter. Associative arrays are (IIRC) implemented as a doubly-linked list so I imagine the links are just traversed
@kaᵠ I can't believe that's any more efficient than foreach and probably a lot less, also it's just generally horrible to work with :-P