On Fri, Jul 13, 2018 at 4:48 PM Levi Morrison <le...@php.net> wrote:
>
> On Mon, Jul 9, 2018 at 5:17 AM Woortmann, Enno <enno.woortm...@web.de> wrote:
> >
> > Hi,
> >
> > as the discussion got no new contributions I'd like to start the voting
> > for the RFC fo add new functions for the handling of outer array elements.
> >
> > https://wiki.php.net/rfc/array_key_first_last
> >
> > To have a better separation I split up the vote for the functions. The
> > first vote covers the functions to handle keys: array_key_first() and
> > array_key_last(). The second vote covers the corresponding functions to
> > handle the values: array_value_first() and array_value_last().
> >
> > As this RFC adds functions but doesn't change the language syntax a 50%
> > + 1 majority is required for both votes. The votes are open until
> > 2018-07-16.
> >
> > The discussion for this RFC is located at
> >
> > https://externals.io/message/102245
> >
> > Regards,
> >
> > Enno
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > --
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>
> This entire time I felt like this should be possible in pure PHP.
> Surely, somewhere, we have this capability already? I searched quite a
> few functions but didn't find anything.
>
> However, the feeling was right. Just moments ago Paul Crovella from
> Stack Overflow mentioned to me that `array_slice` uses the terminology
> `offset` to refer to the order of the entry rather than its key, so I
> went looking. As far as I can tell from the [array_slice
> implementation][1] it will not trigger copies and will be efficient if
> using -1 to retrieve the last index. We can provide the parameter
> `preserve_keys` an argument of true to get both the key and the value.
> These functions *are* efficiently implementable in user-land!
>
> Below is a proof-of-concept for the `array_offset` function [mentioned
> by Nicolas Grekas][2] (which by the way, neither the RFC author nor
> anyone else responded to this suggestion) that is simply a convenience
> wrapper over `array_slice`:
>
>     function array_offset(array $input, int $offset): ?array {
>         $slice = array_slice($input, $offset, 1, true);
>         return count($slice) ? $slice : null;
>     }
>
>     $assoc = ['one' => 1, 'two' => 2, 'three' => 3];
>     $packd = range(1, 4);
>
>     var_dump(array_offset($assoc, -1));
>     var_dump(array_offset($packd, -1));
>
>     var_dump(array_offset($assoc, 0));
>     var_dump(array_offset($packd, 0));
>
> Of course, the `array_slice` function can be used to build all of the
> functions described in the RFC, as well.
>
> My new opinion is that no new functions are required and that
> improving the `array_slice` documentation is all that is necessary. It
> currently does not show any examples of it working on associated
> arrays, which is probably why none of us (many of us experts) realized
> this through this discussion. This is especially true as "offset" in
> some other situations really means "key", as in
> `ArrayAccess::offsetGet`.
>
>   [1]: 
> https://github.com/php/php-src/blob/b9963969fd088dca6852483fdb1c6b7e1080764d/ext/standard/array.c#L3477-L3577
>   [2]: https://externals.io/message/102245#102322

Small correction: Nicolas used the name `array_index`, not `array_offset`.

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