Skip to content

MY-BNH/30-seconds-of-php

 
 

Repository files navigation

Logo

30 seconds of PHP

Curated collection of useful PHP snippets that you can understand in 30 seconds or less.

  • Use Ctrl + F or command + F to search for a snippet.
  • Contributions welcome, please read the contribution guide.

Related projects

Contents

📚 Array

View contents

🎛️ Function

View contents

➗ Math

View contents

📜 String

View contents

📚 Array

all

Returns true if the provided function returns true for all elements of an array, false otherwise.

Use array_filter() and count() to check if $func returns true for all the elements in $items.

function all($items, $func)
{
  return count(array_filter($items, $func)) === count($items);
}
Examples
all([2, 3, 4, 5], function ($item) {
  return $item > 1;
}); // true


⬆ Back to top

any

Returns true if the provided function returns true for at least one element of an array, false otherwise.

Use array_filter() and count() to check if $func returns true for any of the elements in $items.

function any($items, $func)
{
  return count(array_filter($items, $func)) > 0;
}
Examples
any([1, 2, 3, 4], function ($item) {
  return $item < 2;
}); // true


⬆ Back to top

deepFlatten

Deep flattens an array.

Use recursion. Use array_merge with an empty array to flatten the array. Recursively flatten each element that is an array.

function deepFlatten($items)
{
  $result = [];
  foreach ($items as $item) {
    if (!is_array($item)) {
      $result[] = $item;
    } else {
      $result = array_merge($result, deepFlatten($item));
    }
  }

  return $result;
}
Examples
deepFlatten([1, [2], [[3], 4], 5]); // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]


⬆ Back to top

drop

Returns a new array with $n elements removed from the left.

Use array_slice() to remove $n elements from the left. Omit the second argument, $n, to only remove one element.

function drop($items, $n = 1)
{
  return array_slice($items, $n);
}
Examples
drop([1, 2, 3]); // [2,3]
drop([1, 2, 3], 2); // [3]


⬆ Back to top

findLast

Returns the last element for which the provided function returns a truthy value.

Use array_filter() to remove elements for which $func returns falsy values, array_pop() to get the last one.

function findLast($items, $func)
{
  $filteredItems = array_filter($items, $func);

  return array_pop($filteredItems);
}
Examples
findLast([1, 2, 3, 4], function ($n) {
  return ($n % 2) === 1;
});
// 3


⬆ Back to top

findLastIndex

Returns the index of the last element for which the provided function returns a truthy value.

Use array_keys() and array_filter() to remove elements for which $func returns falsy values, array_pop() to get the last one.

function findLastIndex($items, $func)
{
  $keys = array_keys(array_filter($items, $func));

  return array_pop($keys);
}
Examples
findLastIndex([1, 2, 3, 4], function ($n) {
  return ($n % 2) === 1;
});
// 2


⬆ Back to top

flatten

Flattens an array up to the one level depth.

Use array_merge() and array_values() to flatten the array.

function flatten($items)
{
  $result = [];
  foreach ($items as $item) {
    if (!is_array($item)) {
      $result[] = $item;
    } else {
      $result = array_merge($result, array_values($item));
    }
  }

  return $result;
}
Examples
flatten([1, [2], 3, 4]); // [1, 2, 3, 4]


⬆ Back to top

groupBy

Groups the elements of an array based on the given function.

Use call_use_func() with $func on $items to group them based on $func.

function groupBy($items, $func)
{
  $group = [];
  foreach ($items as $item) {
    if ((!is_string($func) && is_callable($func)) || function_exists($func)) {
      $key = call_user_func($func, $item);
      $group[$key][] = $item;
    } elseif (is_object($item)) {
      $group[$item->{$func}][] = $item;
    } elseif (isset($item[$func])) {
      $group[$item[$func]][] = $item;
    }
  }

  return $group;
}
Examples
groupBy(['one', 'two', 'three'], 'strlen'); // [3 => ['one', 'two'], 5 => ['three']]


⬆ Back to top

hasDuplicates

Checks a flat list for duplicate values, returning true if duplicate values exists and false if values are all unique.

Use count() and array_unique() to check $items for duplicate values.

function hasDuplicates($items)
{
  return count($items) > count(array_unique($items));
}
Examples
hasDuplicates([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 5]); // true


⬆ Back to top

head

Returns the head of a list.

Use reset() to return the first item in the array.

function head($items)
{
  return reset($items);
}
Examples
head([1, 2, 3]); // 1


⬆ Back to top

last

Returns the last element in an array.

Use end() to return the last item in the array.

function last($items)
{
  return end($items);
}
Examples
last([1, 2, 3]); // 3


⬆ Back to top

orderBy advanced

Sorts a collection of arrays or objects by key.

Uses sort() on the provided array to sort the array vased on $order and $attr.

function orderBy($items, $attr, $order)
{
  $sortedItems = [];
  foreach ($items as $item) {
    $key = is_object($item) ? $item->{$attr} : $item[$attr];
    $sortedItems[$key] = $item;
  }
  if ($order === 'desc') {
    krsort($sortedItems);
  } else {
    ksort($sortedItems);
  }

  return array_values($sortedItems);
}
Examples
orderBy(
  [
    ['id' => 2, 'name' => 'Joy'],
    ['id' => 3, 'name' => 'Khaja'],
    ['id' => 1, 'name' => 'Raja']
  ],
  'id',
  'desc'
); // [['id' => 3, 'name' => 'Khaja'], ['id' => 2, 'name' => 'Joy'], ['id' => 1, 'name' => 'Raja']]


⬆ Back to top

pluck

Retrieves all of the values for a given key.

Use array_map() to map each object in the $items array to the provided $key.

function pluck($items, $key)
{
  return array_map( function($item) use ($key) {
    return is_object($item) ? $item->$key : $item[$key];
  }, $items);
}
Examples
pluck([
  ['product_id' => 'prod-100', 'name' => 'Desk'],
  ['product_id' => 'prod-200', 'name' => 'Chair'],
], 'name');
// ['Desk', 'Chair']


⬆ Back to top

pull

Mutates the original array to filter out the values specified.

Use array_values() and array_diff() to remove the specified values from $items.

function pull(&$items, ...$params)
{
  $items = array_values(array_diff($items, $params));
  return $items;
}
Examples
$items = ['a', 'b', 'c', 'a', 'b', 'c'];
pull($items, 'a', 'c'); // $items will be ['b', 'b']


⬆ Back to top

reject

Filters the collection using the given callback.

Use array_values(), array_diff() and array_filter() to filter $items based on $func.

function reject($items, $func)
{
  return array_values(array_diff($items, array_filter($items, $func)));
}
Examples
reject(['Apple', 'Pear', 'Kiwi', 'Banana'], function ($item) {
  return strlen($item) > 4;
}); // ['Pear', 'Kiwi']


⬆ Back to top

remove

Removes elements from an array for which the given function returns false.

Use array_filter() to find array elements that return truthy values and array_diff_keys() to remove the elements not contained in $filtered.

function remove($items, $func)
{
  $filtered = array_filter($items, $func);

  return array_diff_key($items, $filtered);
}
Examples
remove([1, 2, 3, 4], function ($n) {
  return ($n % 2) === 0;
});
// [0 => 1, 2 => 3]


⬆ Back to top

rotate

Rotates the array (in left direction) by the number of shifts.

Given the $shift index, merge the array values after $shift with the values before $shift.

function rotate($array, $shift = 1)
{
  for ($i = 0; $i < $shift; $i++) {
    array_push($array, array_shift($array));
  }

  return $array;
}
Examples
rotate([1, 3, 5, 2, 4]); // [3, 5, 2, 4, 1]
rotate([1, 3, 5, 2, 4], 2); // [5, 2, 4, 1, 3]


⬆ Back to top

tail

Returns all elements in an array except for the first one.

Use array_slice() and count() to return all the items in the array except for the first one.

function tail($items)
{
  return count($items) > 1 ? array_slice($items, 1) : $items;
}
Examples
tail([1, 2, 3]); // [2, 3]


⬆ Back to top

take

Returns an array with $n elements removed from the beginning.

Use array_slice() to remove $n items from the beginning of the array.

function take($items, $n = 1)
{
  return array_slice($items, 0, $n);
}
Examples
take([1, 2, 3], 5); // [1, 2, 3]
take([1, 2, 3, 4, 5], 2); // [1, 2]


⬆ Back to top

without

Filters out the elements of an array, that have one of the specified values.

Use array_values() and array_diff() to remove any values in $params from $items.

function without($items, ...$params)
{
  return array_values(array_diff($items, $params));
}
Examples
without([2, 1, 2, 3], 1, 2); // [3]


⬆ Back to top


🎛️ Function

compose

Return a new function that composes multiple functions into a single callable.

Use array_reduce() to perform right-to-left function composition.

function compose(...$functions)
{
  return array_reduce(
    $functions,
    function ($carry, $function) {
      return function ($x) use ($carry, $function) {
        return $function($carry($x));
      };
    },
    function ($x) {
      return $x;
    }
  );
}
Examples
$compose = compose(
  // add 2
  function ($x) {
    return $x + 2;
  },
  // multiply 4
  function ($x) {
    return $x * 4;
  }
);
$compose(3); // 20


⬆ Back to top

curry advanced

Curries a function to take arguments in multiple calls.

If the number of provided arguments ($args) is sufficient, call the passed function, $function. Otherwise, return a curried function that expects the rest of the arguments.

function curry($function)
{
  $accumulator = function ($arguments) use ($function, &$accumulator) {
    return function (...$args) use ($function, $arguments, $accumulator) {
      $arguments = array_merge($arguments, $args);
      $reflection = new ReflectionFunction($function);
      $totalArguments = $reflection->getNumberOfRequiredParameters();

      if ($totalArguments <= count($arguments)) {
        return $function(...$arguments);
      }

      return $accumulator($arguments);
    };
  };

  return $accumulator([]);
}
Examples
$curriedAdd = curry(
  function ($a, $b) {
    return $a + $b;
  }
);

$add10 = $curriedAdd(10);
var_dump($add10(15)); // 25


⬆ Back to top

memoize advanced

Returns the memoized (cached) function.

Create an empty cache by instantiating a new array. Return a function which takes a single argument to be supplied to the memoized function by first checking if the function's output for that specific input value is already cached, or store and return it if not. Allow access to the cache by setting it as a property on the returned function.

function memoize($func)
{
  return function () use ($func) {
    static $cache = [];

    $args = func_get_args();
    $key = serialize($args);
    $cached = true;

    if (!isset($cache[$key])) {
      $cache[$key] = $func(...$args);
      $cached = false;
    }

    return ['result' => $cache[$key], 'cached' => $cached];
  };
}
Examples
$memoizedAdd = memoize(
  function ($num) {
    return $num + 10;
  }
);

var_dump($memoizedAdd(5)); // ['result' => 15, 'cached' => false]
var_dump($memoizedAdd(6)); // ['result' => 16, 'cached' => false]
var_dump($memoizedAdd(5)); // ['result' => 15, 'cached' => true]


⬆ Back to top

once

Call a function only once.

Return a function, which only calls the provided function, $function, if $called is false and sets $called to true.

function once($function)
{
  return function (...$args) use ($function) {
    static $called = false;
    if ($called) {
      return;
    }
    $called = true;
    return $function(...$args);
  };
}
Examples
$add = function ($a, $b) {
  return $a + $b;
};

$once = once($add);

var_dump($once(10, 5)); // 15
var_dump($once(20, 10)); // null


⬆ Back to top


➗ Math

approximatelyEqual

Checks if two numbers are approximately equal to each other.

Use abs() to compare the absolute difference of the two values to $epsilon. Omit the third parameter, $epsilon, to use a default value of 0.001.

function approximatelyEqual($number1, $number2, $epsilon = 0.001)
{
  return abs($number1 - $number2) < $epsilon;
}
Examples
approximatelyEqual(10.0, 10.00001); // true

approximatelyEqual(10.0, 10.01); // false


⬆ Back to top

average

Returns the average of two or more numbers.

Use array_sum() for all the values in $items and return the result divided by their count().

function average(...$items)
{
  $count = count($items);
  
  return $count === 0 ? 0 : array_sum($items) / $count;
}
Examples
average(1, 2, 3); // 2


⬆ Back to top

clampNumber

Clamps $num within the inclusive range specified by the boundary values $a and $b.

If $num falls within the range, return $num. Otherwise, return the nearest number in the range, using min() and max().

function clampNumber($num, $a, $b)
{
  return max(min($num, max($a, $b)), min($a, $b));
}
Examples
clampNumber(2, 3, 5); // 3
clampNumber(1, -1, -5); // -1


⬆ Back to top

factorial

Calculates the factorial of a number.

Use recursion. If $n is less then or equal to 1, return 1. Otherwise, return the product of $n and the factorial of $n -1. Throws an exception if $n is a negative number.

function factorial($n)
{
  if ($n <= 1) {
    return 1;
  }

  return $n * factorial($n - 1);
}
Examples
factorial(6); // 720


⬆ Back to top

fibonacci

Generates an array, containing the Fibonacci sequence, up until the nth term.

Create an empty array, initializing the first two values (0 and 1). Loop from 2 through $n and add values into the array, using the sum of the last two values.

function fibonacci($n)
{
  $sequence = [0, 1];

  for ($i = 2; $i < $n; $i++) {
    $sequence[$i] = $sequence[$i-1] + $sequence[$i-2];
  }

  return $sequence;
}
Examples
fibonacci(6); // [0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5]


⬆ Back to top

gcd

Calculates the greatest common divisor between two or more numbers.

Use recursion. Use array_reduce() with the gcd function to appy to all elements in the $numbers list. Base case is when y equals 0. In this case, return x. Otherwise, return the gcd of y and the remainder of the division x/y.

function gcd(...$numbers)
{
  if (count($numbers) > 2) {
    return array_reduce($numbers, 'gcd');
  }

  $r = $numbers[0] % $numbers[1];
  return $r === 0 ? abs($numbers[1]) : gcd($numbers[1], $r);
}
Examples
gcd(8, 36); // 4
gcd(12, 8, 32); // 4


⬆ Back to top

isEven

Returns true if the given number is even, false otherwise.

Checks whether a number is odd or even using the modulo (%) operator. Returns true if the number is even, false if the number is odd.

function isEven($number)
{
  return ($number % 2) === 0;
}
Examples
isEven(4); // true


⬆ Back to top

isPrime

Checks if the provided integer is a prime number.

Check numbers from 2 to the square root of the given number. Return false if any of them divides the given number, else return true, unless the number is less than 2.

function isPrime($number)
{
  $boundary = floor(sqrt($number));
  for ($i = 2; $i <= $boundary; $i++) {
    if ($number % $i === 0) {
      return false;
    }
  }

  return $number >= 2;
}
Examples
isPrime(3); // true


⬆ Back to top

lcm

Returns the least common multiple of two or more numbers.

Use the greatest common divisor (GCD) formula and the fact that lcm(x,y) = x * y / gcd(x,y) to determine the least common multiple. The GCD formula uses recursion.

function lcm(...$numbers)
{
  $ans = $numbers[0];
  for ($i = 1, $max = count($numbers); $i < $max; $i++) {
    $ans = (($numbers[$i] * $ans) / gcd($numbers[$i], $ans));
  }

  return $ans;
}
Examples
lcm(12, 7); // 84
lcm(1, 3, 4, 5); // 60


⬆ Back to top

maxN

Returns the maximum value from the provided array.

Use array_filter() and max() to find the maximum value in an array.

function maxN($numbers)
{
  $maxValue = max($numbers);
  $maxValueArray = array_filter($numbers, function ($value) use ($maxValue) {
    return $maxValue === $value;
  });

  return count($maxValueArray);
}
Examples
maxN([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 5]); // 2
maxN([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]); // 1


⬆ Back to top

median

Returns the median of an array of numbers.

Find the middle of the array, use sort() to sort the values. Return the number at the midpoint if the array's length is odd, otherwise the average of the two middle numbers.

function median($numbers)
{
  sort($numbers);
  $totalNumbers = count($numbers);
  $mid = floor($totalNumbers / 2);

  return ($totalNumbers % 2) === 0 ? ($numbers[$mid - 1] + $numbers[$mid]) / 2 : $numbers[$mid];
}
Examples
median([1, 3, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9]); // 6
median([1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 9]); // 4.5


⬆ Back to top

minN

Returns the minimum value from the provided array.

Use array_filter() and min() to find the minimum value in an array.

function minN($numbers)
{
  $minValue = min($numbers);
  $minValueArray = array_filter($numbers, function ($value) use ($minValue) {
    return $minValue === $value;
  });

  return count($minValueArray);
}
Examples
minN([1, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 5]); // 2
minN([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]); // 1


⬆ Back to top


📜 String

countVowels

Returns number of vowels in the provided string.

Use a regular expression to count the number of vowels (a, e, i, o and ua) in a string.

function countVowels($string)
{
  preg_match_all('/[aeiou]/i', $string, $matches);

  return count($matches[0]);
}
Examples
countVowels('sampleInput'); // 4


⬆ Back to top

decapitalize

Decapitalizes the first letter of a string.

Decapitalizes the first letter of the string and then adds it with rest of the string. Omit the $upperRest parameter to keep the rest of the string intact, or set it to true to convert to uppercase.

function decapitalize($string, $upperRest = false)
{
  return lcfirst($upperRest ? strtoupper($string) : $string);
}
Examples
decapitalize('FooBar'); // 'fooBar'


⬆ Back to top

endsWith

Checks if a string is ends with a given substring.

Use strrpos() in combination with strlen to find the position of $needle in $haystack.

function endsWith($haystack, $needle)
{
  return strrpos($haystack, $needle) === (strlen($haystack) - strlen($needle));
}
Examples
endsWith('Hi, this is me', 'me'); // true


⬆ Back to top

firstStringBetween

Returns the first string there is between the strings from the parameter $start and $end.

Use trim() and strstr() to find the string contained between $start and $end.

function firstStringBetween($haystack, $start, $end)
{
  return trim(strstr(strstr($haystack, $start), $end, true), $start . $end);
}
Examples
firstStringBetween('This is a [custom] string', '[', ']'); // custom


⬆ Back to top

isAnagram

Compare two strings and returns true if both strings are anagram, false otherwise.

Use count_chars() to compare $string1 and $string2.

function isAnagram($string1, $string2)
{
  return count_chars($string1, 1) === count_chars($string2, 1);
}
Examples
isAnagram('act', 'cat'); // true


⬆ Back to top

isContains

Check if a word / substring exists in a given string input.

Using strpos() to find the position of the first occurrence of a substring in a string.

function isContains($string, $needle)
{
  return strpos($string, $needle) === false ? false : true;
}
Examples
isContains('This is an example string', 'example'); // true
isContains('This is an example string', 'hello'); // false


⬆ Back to top

isLowerCase

Returns true if the given string is lower case, false otherwise.

Convert the given string to lower case, using strtolower and compare it to the original.

function isLowerCase($string)
{
  return $string === strtolower($string);
}
Examples
isLowerCase('Morning shows the day!'); // false
isLowerCase('hello'); // true


⬆ Back to top

isUpperCase

Returns true if the given string is upper case, false otherwise.

Convert the given string to upper case, using strtoupper and compare it to the original.

function isUpperCase($string)
{
  return $string === strtoupper($string);
}
Examples
isUpperCase('MORNING SHOWS THE DAY!'); // true
isUpperCase('qUick Fox'); // false


⬆ Back to top

palindrome

Returns true if the given string is a palindrome, false otherwise.

Check if the value of strrev($string) is equal to the passed $string.

function palindrome($string)
{
  return strrev($string) === (string) $string;
}
Examples
palindrome('racecar'); // true
palindrome(2221222); // true


⬆ Back to top

shorten

Returns a shortened string.

Use mb_strlen(), mb_substr() and rtrim() to shorten a string to a give number of characters.

function shorten($input, $length = 100, $end = '...')
{
  if (mb_strlen($input) <= $length) {
    return $input;
  }

  return rtrim(mb_substr($input, 0, $length, 'UTF-8')) . $end;
}
Examples
shorten('The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog', 15); // The quick brown...


⬆ Back to top

startsWith

Check if a string starts with a given substring.

Use strpos() to find the position of $needle in $haystack.

function startsWith($haystack, $needle)
{
  return strpos($haystack, $needle) === 0;
}
Examples
startsWith('Hi, this is me', 'Hi'); // true


⬆ Back to top

Credits

About

A curated collection of useful PHP snippets that you can understand in 30 seconds or less.

Resources

License

Code of conduct

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • PHP 100.0%