There are different ways to delete an array element, where some are more useful for some specific tasks than others.
Deleting a single array element
If you want to delete just one array element you can use unset()
or alternatively array_splice()
.
If you know the value and don’t know the key to delete the element you can use array_search()
to get the key. This only works if the element does not occur more than once, since array_search
returns the first hit only.
Note that when you use unset()
the array keys won’t change. If you want to reindex the keys you can use array_values()
after unset()
, which will convert all keys to numerically enumerated keys starting from 0.
Code:
$array = [0 => "a", 1 => "b", 2 => "c"];
unset($array[1]);
// ↑ Key which you want to delete
Output:
[
[0] => a
[2] => c
]
If you use array_splice()
the keys will automatically be reindexed, but the associative keys won’t change — as opposed to array_values()
, which will convert all keys to numerical keys.
array_splice()
needs the offset, not the key, as the second parameter.
Code:
$array = [0 => "a", 1 => "b", 2 => "c"];
array_splice($array, 1, 1);
// ↑ Offset which you want to delete
Output:
[
[0] => a
[1] => c
]
array_splice()
, same as unset()
, take the array by reference. You don’t assign the return values of those functions back to the array.
Deleting multiple array elements
If you want to delete multiple array elements and don’t want to call unset()
or array_splice()
multiple times you can use the functions array_diff()
or array_diff_key()
depending on whether you know the values or the keys of the elements which you want to delete.
If you know the values of the array elements which you want to delete, then you can use array_diff()
. As before with unset()
it won’t change the keys of the array.
Code:
$array = [0 => "a", 1 => "b", 2 => "c", 3 => "c"];
$array = array_diff($array, ["a", "c"]);
// └────────┘
// Array values which you want to delete
Output:
[
[1] => b
]
If you know the keys of the elements which you want to delete, then you want to use array_diff_key()
. You have to make sure you pass the keys as keys in the second parameter and not as values. Keys won’t reindex.
Code:
$array = [0 => "a", 1 => "b", 2 => "c"];
$array = array_diff_key($array, [0 => "xy", "2" => "xy"]);
// ↑ ↑
// Array keys which you want to delete
Output:
[
[1] => b
]
If you want to use unset()
or array_splice()
to delete multiple elements with the same value you can use array_keys()
to get all the keys for a specific value and then delete all elements.