PHP: array_chunk - Manual

(PHP 4 >= 4.2.0, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

array_chunkDivide un array en arrays de menor tamaño

Descripción

Parámetros

array

El array a tratar

length

El tamaño de cada array

preserve_keys

Cuando se define como true, las claves serán preservadas. Por omisión, vale false lo que reindexará el array resultante numéricamente

Valores devueltos

Devuelve un array multidimensional indexado numéricamente, comenzando en cero, cuyas dimensiones contienen length elementos.

Errores/Excepciones

Si length es menor que 1, se lanza una ValueError.

Historial de cambios

Versión Descripción
8.0.0 Si length es menor que 1, se lanza una ValueError; anteriormente, se generaba un error de nivel E_WARNING y la función devolvía null.

Ejemplos

Ejemplo #1 Ejemplo con array_chunk()

<?php
$input_array
= array('a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e');
print_r(array_chunk($input_array, 2));
print_r(array_chunk($input_array, 2, true));
?>

El ejemplo anterior mostrará:

Array
(
    [0] => Array
        (
            [0] => a
            [1] => b
        )

    [1] => Array
        (
            [0] => c
            [1] => d
        )

    [2] => Array
        (
            [0] => e
        )

)
Array
(
    [0] => Array
        (
            [0] => a
            [1] => b
        )

    [1] => Array
        (
            [2] => c
            [3] => d
        )

    [2] => Array
        (
            [4] => e
        )

)

Found A Problem?

azspot at gmail dot com

18 years ago

Tried to use an example below (#56022) for array_chunk_fixed that would "partition" or divide an array into a desired number of split lists -- a useful procedure for "chunking" up objects or text items into columns, or partitioning any type of data resource. However, there seems to be a flaw with array_chunk_fixed — for instance, try it with a nine item list and with four partitions. It results in 3 entries with 3 items, then a blank array.

So, here is the output of my own dabbling on the matter:

<?php

function partition( $list, $p ) {
    $listlen = count( $list );
    $partlen = floor( $listlen / $p );
    $partrem = $listlen % $p;
    $partition = array();
    $mark = 0;
    for ($px = 0; $px < $p; $px++) {
        $incr = ($px < $partrem) ? $partlen + 1 : $partlen;
        $partition[$px] = array_slice( $list, $mark, $incr );
        $mark += $incr;
    }
    return $partition;
}

$citylist = array( "Black Canyon City", "Chandler", "Flagstaff", "Gilbert", "Glendale", "Globe", "Mesa", "Miami",
                   "Phoenix", "Peoria", "Prescott", "Scottsdale", "Sun City", "Surprise", "Tempe", "Tucson", "Wickenburg" );
print_r( partition( $citylist, 3 ) );

?>

Array
(
    [0] => Array
        (
            [0] => Black Canyon City
            [1] => Chandler
            [2] => Flagstaff
            [3] => Gilbert
            [4] => Glendale
            [5] => Globe
        )

    [1] => Array
        (
            [0] => Mesa
            [1] => Miami
            [2] => Phoenix
            [3] => Peoria
            [4] => Prescott
            [5] => Scottsdale
        )

    [2] => Array
        (
            [0] => Sun City
            [1] => Surprise
            [2] => Tempe
            [3] => Tucson
            [4] => Wickenburg
        )

)

Andrew Martin

7 years ago

To reverse an array_chunk, use array_merge, passing the chunks as a variadic:

<?php
$array = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9];

$chunks = array_chunk($array, 3);
// $chunks = [[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6], [7, 8, 9]]

$de_chunked = array_merge(…$chunks);
// $de_chunked = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
?>

nate at ruggfamily dot com

15 years ago

If you just want to grab one chunk from an array, you should use array_slice().

Anonymous

5 years ago

Most easy way split array to parts

<?php

$arr = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10];

print_r(array_chunk($arr, ceil(count($arr) / 2)));
// return: [[1, 2, 3, 4, 5], [6, 7, 8, 9, 10]]

print_r(array_chunk($arr, ceil(count($arr) / 3)));
// return: [[1, 2, 3, 4], [5, 6, 7, 8], [9, 10]]

?>

Anonymous

20 years ago

Here my array_chunk_values( ) with values distributed by lines (columns are balanced as much as possible) :

<?php
    function array_chunk_vertical($data, $columns) {
        $n = count($data) ;
        $per_column = floor($n / $columns) ;
        $rest = $n % $columns ;

        // The map
        $per_columns = array( ) ;
        for ( $i = 0 ; $i < $columns ; $i++ ) {
            $per_columns[$i] = $per_column + ($i < $rest ? 1 : 0) ;
        }

        $tabular = array( ) ;
        foreach ( $per_columns as $rows ) {
            for ( $i = 0 ; $i < $rows ; $i++ ) {
                $tabular[$i][ ] = array_shift($data) ;
            }
        }

        return $tabular ;
    }

    header('Content-Type: text/plain') ;

    $data = array_chunk_vertical(range(1, 31), 7) ;
    foreach ( $data as $row ) {
        foreach ( $row as $value ) {
            printf('[%2s]', $value) ;
        }
        echo "\r\n" ;
    }

    /*
        Output :

        [ 1][ 6][11][16][20][24][28]
        [ 2][ 7][12][17][21][25][29]
        [ 3][ 8][13][18][22][26][30]
        [ 4][ 9][14][19][23][27][31]
        [ 5][10][15]
    */
?>

OIS

17 years ago

Response to azspot at gmail dot com function partition.

$columns = 3;
$citylist = array('Black Canyon City', 'Chandler', 'Flagstaff', 'Gilbert', 'Glendale', 'Globe', 'Mesa', 'Miami', 'Phoenix', 'Peoria', 'Prescott', 'Scottsdale', 'Sun City', 'Surprise', 'Tempe', 'Tucson', 'Wickenburg');
print_r(array_chunk($citylist, ceil(count($citylist) / $columns)));

Output:
Array
(
    [0] => Array
        (
            [0] => Black Canyon City
            [1] => Chandler
            [2] => Flagstaff
            [3] => Gilbert
            [4] => Glendale
            [5] => Globe
        )

    [1] => Array
        (
            [0] => Mesa
            [1] => Miami
            [2] => Phoenix
            [3] => Peoria
            [4] => Prescott
            [5] => Scottsdale
        )

    [2] => Array
        (
            [0] => Sun City
            [1] => Surprise
            [2] => Tempe
            [3] => Tucson
            [4] => Wickenburg
        )

)

suisuiruyi at aliyun dot com

9 years ago

chunk array vertically

$arr    = range(1, 19);
function array_chunk_vertical($arr, $percolnum){
    $n = count($arr);
    $mod    = $n % $percolnum;
    $cols   = floor($n / $percolnum);
    $mod ? $cols++ : null ;
    $re     = array();
    for($col = 0; $col < $cols; $col++){
        for($row = 0; $row < $percolnum; $row++){
            if($arr){
                $re[$row][]   = array_shift($arr);
            }
        }
    }
    return $re;
}
$result = array_chunk_vertical($arr, 6);
foreach($result  as $row){
    foreach($row as $val){
        echo '['.$val.']';
    }
    echo '<br/>';
}
/*
[1][7][13][19]
[2][8][14]
[3][9][15]
[4][10][16]
[5][11][17]
[6][12][18]
 */

dustin at fivetechnology dot com

10 years ago

Had need to chunk an object which implemented ArrayAccess Iterator Countable.  array_chunk wouldn't do it.  Should work for any list of things

<?php
   $listOfThings = array(1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13);
   print_r(chunk_iterable($listOfThings, 4);

  function chunk_iterable($listOfThings, $size) {
      $chunk = 0;
      $chunks = array_fill(0, ceil(count($listOfThings) / $size) - 1, array());
      $index = 0;
      foreach($listOfThings as $thing) {
        if ($index && $index % $size == 0) $chunk++;
        $chunks[$chunk][] = $thing;
        $index++;
      }
      return $chunks;
  }
?>

siddharthundare at gmail dot com

10 years ago

<table>
<tr>
<?php

$array_chunkdata = array(1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25);
$chunk  = array_chunk($array_chunkdata,5);
$rev_counter = 2;

function for_chunk($chunk_data){

    echo "<td><table>";

      foreach($chunk_data as $key => $chunk_value)
      {
        echo "<tr><td>";
        echo $chunk_value;
        echo "</td></tr>";
      }
      echo "</table></td>";   

}

foreach($chunk as $key => $chunk_data)
{
    if($rev_counter%2==0)
    {   
      for_chunk($chunk_data);
    }
    else
    {
      $chunk_data =  array_reverse($chunk_data);
      
      for_chunk($chunk_data);
     
    } 
  $rev_counter++;
}
?> 
</tr>
</table>
/*
Output:
1
2
3
4
5
    
10
9
8
7
6
    
11
12
13
14
15
    
20
19
18
17
16
    
21
22
23
24
25
*/

phpm at nreynolds dot me dot uk

21 years ago

array_chunk() is helpful when constructing tables with a known number of columns but an unknown number of values, such as a calendar month. Example:

<?php

$values = range(1, 31);
$rows = array_chunk($values, 7);

print "<table>\n";
foreach ($rows as $row) {
    print "<tr>\n";
    foreach ($row as $value) {
        print "<td>" . $value . "</td>\n";
    }
    print "</tr>\n";
}
print "</table>\n";

?>

Outputs:

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 
8 9 10 11 12 13 14 
15 16 17 18 19 20 21 
22 23 24 25 26 27 28 
29 30 31 

The other direction is possible too, with the aid of a function included at the bottom of this note. Changing this line:
  $rows = array_chunk($values, 7);

To this:
  $rows = array_chunk_vertical($values, 7);

Produces a vertical calendar with seven columns:

1 6  11 16 21 26 31 
2 7  12 17 22 27 
3 8  13 18 23 28 
4 9  14 19 24 29 
5 10 15 20 25 30 

You can also specify that $size refers to the number of rows, not columns:
  $rows = array_chunk_vertical($values, 7, false, false);

Producing this:

1 8  15 22 29 
2 9  16 23 30 
3 10 17 24 31 
4 11 18 25 
5 12 19 26 
6 13 20 27 
7 14 21 28 

The function:

<?php

function array_chunk_vertical($input, $size, $preserve_keys = false, $size_is_horizontal = true)
{
    $chunks = array();
    
    if ($size_is_horizontal) {
        $chunk_count = ceil(count($input) / $size);
    } else {
        $chunk_count = $size;
    }
    
    for ($chunk_index = 0; $chunk_index < $chunk_count; $chunk_index++) {
        $chunks[] = array();
    }

    $chunk_index = 0;
    foreach ($input as $key => $value)
    {
        if ($preserve_keys) {
            $chunks[$chunk_index][$key] = $value;
        } else {
            $chunks[$chunk_index][] = $value;
        }
        
        if (++$chunk_index == $chunk_count) {
            $chunk_index = 0;
        }
    }
    
    return $chunks;
}

?>

mick at vandermostvanspijk dot nl

21 years ago

[Editors note: This function was based on a previous function by gphemsley at nospam users dot sourceforge.net]

For those of you that need array_chunk() for PHP < 4.2.0, this function should do the trick:

<?php
if (!function_exists('array_chunk')) {
    function array_chunk( $input, $size, $preserve_keys = false) {
        @reset( $input );
        
        $i = $j = 0;

        while( @list( $key, $value ) = @each( $input ) ) {
            if( !( isset( $chunks[$i] ) ) ) {
               $chunks[$i] = array();
            }

            if( count( $chunks[$i] ) < $size ) {
                if( $preserve_keys ) {
                    $chunks[$i][$key] = $value;
                    $j++;
                } else {
                    $chunks[$i][] = $value;
                }
            } else {
                $i++;

                if( $preserve_keys ) {
                    $chunks[$i][$key] = $value;
                    $j++;
                } else {
                    $j = 0;
                    $chunks[$i][$j] = $value;
                }
            }
        }

        return $chunks;
    }
}
?>

dead dot screamer at seznam dot cz

17 years ago

This function can be used to reverse effect of <?php array_Chunk()?>.
<?php
function array_Unchunk($array)
{
    return call_User_Func_Array('array_Merge',$array);
}

header('Content-Type: text/plain');
$array=array(
    array(
            'Black Canyon City',
            'Chandler',
            'Flagstaff',
            'Gilbert',
            'Glendale',
            'Globe',
    ),
    array(
            'Mesa',
            'Miami',
            'Phoenix',
            'Peoria',
            'Prescott',
            'Scottsdale',
    ),
    array(
            'Sun City',
            'Surprise',
            'Tempe',
            'Tucson',
            'Wickenburg',
    ),
);
var_Dump(array_Unchunk($array));
?>

Output:
array(17) {
  [0]=>
  string(17) "Black Canyon City"
  [1]=>
  string(8) "Chandler"
  [2]=>
  string(9) "Flagstaff"
  [3]=>
  string(7) "Gilbert"
  [4]=>
  string(8) "Glendale"
  [5]=>
  string(5) "Globe"
  [6]=>
  string(4) "Mesa"
  [7]=>
  string(5) "Miami"
  [8]=>
  string(7) "Phoenix"
  [9]=>
  string(6) "Peoria"
  [10]=>
  string(8) "Prescott"
  [11]=>
  string(10) "Scottsdale"
  [12]=>
  string(8) "Sun City"
  [13]=>
  string(8) "Surprise"
  [14]=>
  string(5) "Tempe"
  [15]=>
  string(6) "Tucson"
  [16]=>
  string(10) "Wickenburg"
}

stratboy

12 years ago

Hi, I've made  a function to split an array into chunks based on columns wanted. For example:

<?php $a = array(1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8); ?>

goal (say, for 3 columns):

<?php
array(
   array(1,2,3),
   array(4,5,6),
   array(7,8)
);
?>

<?php
function get_array_columns($array, $columns){
        
        $columns_map = array();
        for($i=0; $i<$columns; $i++){ $columns_map[] = 0; }//init columns
        
        //create map
        $count = count($array);
        $position = 0;
        while($count > 0){
            $columns_map[$position]++;
            $position = ($position < $columns-1) ? ++$position : 0;
            $count--;
        }

        //chunk the array based on map
        $chunked = array();
        foreach($columns_map as $map){
            $chunked[] = array_splice($array,0,$map);
        }
        
        return $chunked;
    }//end get_array_columns
?>

leon at valkenb dot org

4 years ago

With no luck finding a function; here is the one I wrote:
It will evenly distribute items into a fixed amount of groups but also keeps items that were sorted close together to be in the same output groups.
<?php
function distributed_array_chunk(array $items, int $groups, bool $preserveKeys = false) {

    $grouped = [];
    $groupsPerItem = $groups /  count($items);
    $progress = 0.00;

    foreach ($items as $key => $value) {

        $index = floor($progress += $groupsPerItem);

        if ($preserveKeys) {
            $grouped[$index][$key] = $value;
        }
        else{
            $grouped[$index][] = $value;
        }    
    }

    return $grouped;
}
?>

magick dit crow ot gmail dit com

20 years ago

This function takes each few elements of an array and averages them together. It then places the averages in a new array. It is used to smooth out data. For example lets say you have a years worth of hit data to a site and you want to graph it by the week. Then use a bucket of 7 and graph the functions output.

function array_bucket($array, $bucket_size)  // bucket filter
{
    if (!is_array($array)) return false; // no empty arrays
    $buckets=array_chunk($array,$bucket_size);  // chop up array into bucket size units
    foreach ($buckets as $bucket) $new_array[key($buckets])=array_sum($bucket)/count($bucket);
    return $new_array;  // return new smooth array
}

normiridium at gmail dot com

9 years ago

A breakdown by groups with excess:

function array_chunk_greedy($arr, $count){
    $arr = array_chunk($arr, $count);
    if(($k = count($arr)-1) > 0){    
        if(count($arr[$k]) < $count){
            $arr[$k-1] = array_merge($arr[$k-1], $arr[$k]);
            unset($arr[$k]);
        }            
    }
    return $arr;    
}

$arr = range(1, 13);
$arr = array_chunk_greedy($arr, 4);

print_r($arr);

[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13] —> [1,2,3,4] [5,6,7,8] [9,10,11,12,13]

More examples:

[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12] —> [1,2,3,4] [5,6,7,8] [9,10,11,12]
[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13] —> [1,2,3,4] [5,6,7,8] [9,10,11,12,13]
[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14] —> [1,2,3,4] [5,6,7,8] [9,10,11,12,13,14]
[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15] —> [1,2,3,4] [5,6,7,8] [9,10,11,12,13,14,15]
[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16] —> [1,2,3,4] [5,6,7,8] [9,10,11,12] [13,14,15,16]

Example report:

$arr = range(1, 45);
$arr = array_chunk_lazy($arr, 10);

$arr = array_map(function($sub_value) {
            return implode('<br>', $sub_value);
        }, $arr);

$title = '<h2>title</h2>';
$arr = $title.implode($title, $arr).$title;

echo $arr;

webmaster at cafe-clope dot net

20 years ago

based on the same syntax, useful about making columns :

<?php
function array_chunk_fixed($input, $num, $preserve_keys = FALSE) {
    $count = count($input) ;
    if($count)
        $input = array_chunk($input, ceil($count/$num), $preserve_keys) ;
    $input = array_pad($input, $num, array()) ;
    return $input ;
}

$array = array(1, 2, 3, 4, 5) ;
print_r(array_chunk($array, 2)) ;
print_r(array_chunk_fixed($array, 2)) ;
?>

---- array_chunk : fixed number of sub-items ----
Array(
    [0] => Array(
            [0] => 1
            [1] => 2
        )
    [1] => Array(
            [0] => 3
            [1] => 4
        )

    [2] => Array(
            [0] => 5
        )
)

---- array_chunk : fixed number of columns ----
Array(
    [0] => Array(
            [0] => 1
            [1] => 2
            [2] => 3
        )
    [1] => Array(
            [0] => 4
            [1] => 5
        )
)

magick dit crow ot gmail dit com

20 years ago

Mistake key did not do what I thought. A patch.

function array_bucket($array,$bucket_size)// bucket filter
{
    if (!is_array($array)) return false;
    $buckets=array_chunk($array,$bucket_size);// chop up array into bucket size units
    $I=0;
    foreach ($buckets as $bucket)
    {
        $new_array[$I++]=array_sum($bucket)/count($bucket);
    }
    return $new_array;// return new array
}