I have multidimensional array like this. It is in var_dump() formatting.
array(1) {
[4]=>
array(1) {
[2]=>
array(1) {
[5]=>
array(1) {
[1]=>
array(1) {
[3]=>
array(1) {
[6]=>
array(0) {
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
aka $multiArray and i want to get all keys from it and set them to get array like this.
[0=>4, 1=>2, 2=>5, 3=>1, 4=>3, 5=>6] aka **$keysArray**.
Tried like this.
foreach( new \RecursiveIteratorIterator(
new \RecursiveArrayIterator(**$multiArray**),
\RecursiveIteratorIterator::SELF_FIRST)
as $key => $value) {
**$keysArray[]** = $key;
}
also this.
function array_keys_multi(array $array) {
$keys = [];
foreach ($array as $key => $value) {
$keys[] = $key;
if (is_array($value)) {
$keys = array_merge($keys, $this->array_keys_multi($value));
}
}
return $keys;
}
but both of them returns incorrect data. How can i get all keys?
This seems to work for me:
function array_keys_recursive(array $arr) {
foreach($arr as $key => $value) {
$return[] = $key;
if(is_array($value)) $return = array_merge($return, array_keys_recursive($value));
}
return $return;
}
Basically identical to yours, which also works, by the way.
I used a recursive function:
<?php
$multiArray =
array( 4 =>
array (
2 =>
array (
5 =>
array (
1 =>
array (
3 =>
array (
6 =>
array (
)
)
)
)
)
)
);
$keysArray = array();
$depth = 0;
function newArray($array, &$keysArray) {
foreach ($array as $key => $value) {
$depth++;
array_push($keysArray, $key);
if( is_array($value) && $depth < 10 ) { newArray($value, $keysArray ); }
}
}
newArray($multiArray, $keysArray);
print_r( $keysArray ); // Your expected result
// $keysArray = Array ( [0] => 4 [1] => 2 [2] => 5 [3] => 1 [4] => 3 [5] => 6 )
?>
I used the variable $depth to prevent going loop crazy