Background: Trevor is working with a PHP implementation of a standard algorithm: take a main set of default name-value pairs, and update those name-value pairs, but only for those name-value pairs where a valid update value actually exists.
Problem: by default, PHP array_merge works like this ... it will overwrite a non-blank value with a blank value.
$aamain = Array('firstname'=>'peter','age'=>'32','nation'=>'');
$update = Array('firstname' => '','lastname' => 'griffin', age =>'33','nation'=>'usa');
print_r(array_merge($aamain,$update));
/*
Array
(
[firstname] => // <-- update set this to blank, NOT COOL!
[age] => 33 // <-- update set this to 33, thats cool
[lastname] => griffin // <-- update added this key-value pair, thats cool
[nation] => usa // <-- update filled in a blank, thats cool.
)
*/
Question: What's the fewest-lines-of-code way to do array_merge where blank values never overwrite already-existing values?
print_r(array_coolmerge($aamain,$update));
/*
Array
(
[firstname] => peter // <-- don't blank out a value if one already exists!
[age] => 33
[lastname] => griffin
[nation] => usa
)
*/
UPDATE: 2016-06-17T11:51:54 the question was updated with clarifying context and rename of variables.
See Question&Answers more detail:
os 与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…