PHP: array_column - Manual

(PHP 5 >= 5.5.0, PHP 7, PHP 8)

array_columnDevuelve los valores de una columna de un array de entrada

Descripción

Parámetros

array

Un array multidimensional o un array de objetos a partir del cual se extrae una columna de valor. Si se proporciona un array de objetos, entonces las propiedades públicas pueden ser directamente extraídas. Para que las propiedades protegidas o privadas sean extraídas, la clase debe implementar las dos métodos mágicos __get() y __isset().

column_key

La columna de valores a devolver. Este valor puede ser la clave entera de la columna que se desea recuperar, o bien el nombre de la clave para un array asociativo o el nombre de la propiedad. También puede valer null para devolver el array completo o los objetos (esto puede ser útil en conjunción con el argumento index_key para reindexar el array).

index_key

La columna a utilizar como índice/clave para el array devuelto. Este valor puede ser la clave entera de la columna, o el nombre de la clave. El valor es cast como de costumbre para las claves del array (sin embargo, anterior a PHP 8.0.0, los objetos que soportan una conversión en string también eran permitidos).

Valores devueltos

Devuelve un array de valores que representan una sola columna desde el array de entrada.

Historial de cambios

Versión Descripción
8.0.0 Los objetos en las columnas indicadas por el argumento index_key ya no se convertirán en string y lanzarán ahora una TypeError en su lugar.

Ejemplos

Ejemplo #1 Recupera la columna de los nombres

<?php// Array que representa un conjunto de registros de una base de datos
$records = [
[
'id' => 2135,
'first_name' => 'John',
'last_name' => 'Doe',
],
[
'id' => 3245,
'first_name' => 'Sally',
'last_name' => 'Smith',
],
[
'id' => 5342,
'first_name' => 'Jane',
'last_name' => 'Jones',
],
[
'id' => 5623,
'first_name' => 'Peter',
'last_name' => 'Doe',
]
];
$first_names = array_column($records, 'first_name');
print_r($first_names);?>

El ejemplo anterior mostrará:

Array
(
    [0] => John
    [1] => Sally
    [2] => Jane
    [3] => Peter
)

Ejemplo #2 Recupera la columna de los apellidos, indexada por la columna "id"

<?php// Utilizando el array del ejemplo #1
$records = [
[
'id' => 2135,
'first_name' => 'John',
'last_name' => 'Doe',
],
[
'id' => 3245,
'first_name' => 'Sally',
'last_name' => 'Smith',
],
[
'id' => 5342,
'first_name' => 'Jane',
'last_name' => 'Jones',
],
[
'id' => 5623,
'first_name' => 'Peter',
'last_name' => 'Doe',
]
];
$last_names = array_column($records, 'last_name', 'id');
print_r($last_names);?>

El ejemplo anterior mostrará:

Array
(
    [2135] => Doe
    [3245] => Smith
    [5342] => Jones
    [5623] => Doe
)

Ejemplo #3 Recupera la columna de los nombres de usuario desde la propiedad pública "username" de un objeto

<?phpclass User
{
public
$username;

public function

__construct(string $username)
{
$this->username = $username;
}
}
$users = [
new
User('user 1'),
new
User('user 2'),
new
User('user 3'),
];
print_r(array_column($users, 'username'));?>

El ejemplo anterior mostrará:

Array
(
    [0] => user 1
    [1] => user 2
    [2] => user 3
)

Ejemplo #4 Recupera la columna de nombres desde la propiedad privada "name" de un objeto utilizando los métodos mágicos __isset() y __get()

<?phpclass Person
{
private
$name;

public function

__construct(string $name)
{
$this->name = $name;
}

public function

__get($prop)
{
return
$this->$prop;
}

public function

__isset($prop) : bool
{
return isset(
$this->$prop);
}
}
$people = [
new
Person('Fred'),
new
Person('Jane'),
new
Person('John'),
];
print_r(array_column($people, 'name'));
?>

El ejemplo anterior mostrará:

Array
(
    [0] => Fred
    [1] => Jane
    [2] => John
)

Si __isset() no está definido, entonces se devolverá un array vacío.

Found A Problem?

mohanrajnr at gmail dot com

10 years ago

if array_column does not exist the below solution will work.

if(!function_exists("array_column"))
{

    function array_column($array,$column_name)
    {

        return array_map(function($element) use($column_name){return $element[$column_name];}, $array);

    }

}

oleg dot bolden at gmail dot com

3 years ago

Index_key is safely applicable only in cases when corresponding values of this index are unique through over the array. Otherwise only the latest element of the array with the same index_key value will be picked up.

<?php
$records = array(
    array(
        'id' => 2135,
        'first_name' => 'John',
        'last_name' => 'Doe',
        'company_id' => 1,
    ),
    array(
        'id' => 3245,
        'first_name' => 'Sally',
        'last_name' => 'Smith',
        'company_id' => 1,
    ),
    array(
        'id' => 5342,
        'first_name' => 'Jane',
        'last_name' => 'Jones',
        'company_id' => 1,
    ),
    array(
        'id' => 5623,
        'first_name' => 'Peter',
        'last_name' => 'Doe',
        'company_id' => 2,
    )
);
 
$first_names = array_column($records, 'first_name', 'company_id');
print_r($first_names);
?>

The above example will output:

<?php
Array
(
    [1] => Jane
    [2] => Peter
)
?>

To group values by the same `index_key` in arrays one can use simple replacement for the `array_column` like below example function:

<?php
function arrayed_column(array $array, int|string $column_key, int|string $index_key) {
        $output = [];
        foreach ($array as $item) {
            $output[$item['index_key']][] = $item['column_key'];
        }

        return $output;
}

$first_names = arrayed_column($records, 'first_name', 'company_id');
print_r($first_names);
?>

The output:

<?php
Array
(
    [1] => Array
        (
            [0] => John 
            [1] => Sally 
            [2] => Jane
        )
    [2] => Array
        (
            [0] =>Peter
        )
)
?>

WARrior

12 years ago

You can also use array_map fucntion if you haven't array_column().

example:

$a = array(
    array(
        'id' => 2135,
        'first_name' => 'John',
        'last_name' => 'Doe',
    ),
    array(
        'id' => 3245,
        'first_name' => 'Sally',
        'last_name' => 'Smith',
    )
);

array_column($a, 'last_name');

becomes

array_map(function($element){return $element['last_name'];}, $a);

balbuf

7 years ago

This function does not preserve the original keys of the array (when not providing an index_key).

You can work around that like so:

<?php
// instead of
array_column($array, 'column');

// to preserve keys
array_combine(array_keys($array), array_column($array, 'column'));
?>

Sbastien

3 years ago

The counterpart of array_column(), namely create an array from columns, can be done with array_map() :

<?php

// Columns
$lastnames = ['Skywalker', 'Organa', 'Kenobi'];
$firstnames = ['Luke', 'Leia', 'Obiwan'];

// Columns to array
$characters = array_map(
    fn ($l, $f) => ['lastname' => $l, 'firstname' => $f], 
    $lastnames, $firstnames
);

print_r($characters);

/*
    [
         0 => ['lastname' => 'Skywalker', 'firstname' => 'Luke']
         1 => ['lastname' => 'Organa', 'firstname' => 'Leia']
         2 => ['lastname' => 'Kenobi', 'firstname' => 'Obiwan']
    ]
*/

yangmeishu at live dot com

5 years ago

Please note that if you use array_column to reset the index, when the index value is null, there will be different results in different PHP versions, examples
<?php
 
$array = [
    [
        'name' =>'Bob',
        'house' =>'big',
    ],
    [
        'name' =>'Alice',
        'house' =>'small',
    ],
    [
        'name' =>'Jack',
        'house' => null,
    ],
];
var_dump(array_column($array,null,'house'));

On 5.6.30, 7.0.0, 7.2.0 (not limited to) get the following results
array(3) {
  ["big"]=>
  array(2) {
    ["name"]=>
    string(3) "Bob"
    ["house"]=>
    string(3) "big"
  }
  ["small"]=>
  array(2) {
    ["name"]=>
    string(5) "Alice"
    ["house"]=>
    string(5) "small"
  }
  [0]=>
  array(2) {
    ["name"]=>
    string(4) "Jack"
    ["house"]=>
    NULL
  }
}

The new index, null will be converted to int, and can be incremented according to the previous index, that is, if Alice "house" is also null, then Alice's new index is "0", Jack's new index is "1"

On 7.1.21, 7.2.18, 7.4.8 (not limited to) will get the following results
array(3) {
  ["Big"]=>
  array(2) {
    ["name"]=>
    string(3) "Bob"
    ["house"]=>
    string(3) "Big"
  }
  ["small"]=>
  array(2) {
    ["name"]=>
    string(5) "Alice"
    ["house"]=>
    string(5) "small"
  }
  [""]=>
  array(2) {
    ["name"]=>
    string(4) "Jack"
    ["house"]=>
    NULL
  }
}

The new index null will be converted to an empty string

till at etill dot net

10 years ago

Some remarks not included in the official documentation.

1) array_column does not support 1D arrays, in which case an empty array is returned.

2) The $column_key is zero-based.

3) If $column_key extends the valid index range an empty array is returned.

opencart dot ocfilter at gmail dot com

2 years ago

Array multiple columns:

<?php
function array_columns() {
  $args = func_get_args();

  $array = array_shift($args);

  if (!$args) {
    return $array;
  }

  $keys = array_flip($args);

  return array_map(function($element) use($keys) {
    return array_intersect_key($element, $keys);
  }, $array);
}
?>
EXAMPLE:
<?php
$products = [
  [    
    'id' => 2,
    'name' => 'Phone',
    'price' => 210.3
  ],
  [    
    'id' => 3,
    'name' => 'Laptop',
    'price' => 430.12
  ]
];

print_r(array_columns($products, 'name', 'price'));
?>

Output:

Array
(
    [0] => Array
        (
            [name] => Phone
            [price] => 210.3
        )

    [1] => Array
        (
            [name] => Laptop
            [price] => 430.12
        )

)

nino at recgr dot com

9 years ago

array_column implementation that works on multidimensional arrays (not just 2-dimensional):

<?php
function array_column_recursive(array $haystack, $needle) {
    $found = [];
    array_walk_recursive($haystack, function($value, $key) use (&$found, $needle) {
        if ($key == $needle)
            $found[] = $value;
    });
    return $found;
}

Taken from https://github.com/NinoSkopac/array_column_recursive

ff2 AT hotmail DOT co DOT uk

7 years ago

Because the function was not available in my version of PHP, I wrote my own version and extended it a little based on my needs.

When you give an $indexkey value of -1 it preserves the associated array key values.

EXAMPLE:

$sample = array(
    'test1' => array(
        'val1' = 10,
        'val2' = 100
    ),
    'test2' => array(
        'val1' = 20,
        'val2' = 200
    ),
    'test3' => array(
        'val1' = 30,
        'val2' = 300
    )
);

print_r(array_column_ext($sample,'val1'));

OUTPUT:

Array
(
    [0] => 10
    [1] => 20
    [2] => 30
)

print_r(array_column_ext($sample,'val1',-1));

OUTPUT:

Array
(
    ['test1'] => 10
    ['test2'] => 20
    ['test3'] => 30
)

print_r(array_column_ext($sample,'val1','val2'));

OUTPUT:

Array
(
    [100] => 10
    [200] => 20
    [300] => 30
)

<?php
function array_column_ext($array, $columnkey, $indexkey = null) {
    $result = array();
    foreach ($array as $subarray => $value) {
        if (array_key_exists($columnkey,$value)) { $val = $array[$subarray][$columnkey]; }
        else if ($columnkey === null) { $val = $value; }
        else { continue; }
            
        if ($indexkey === null) { $result[] = $val; }
        elseif ($indexkey == -1 || array_key_exists($indexkey,$value)) {
            $result[($indexkey == -1)?$subarray:$array[$subarray][$indexkey]] = $val;
        }
    }
    return $result;
}
?>

miguelfzarth at gmail dot com

9 years ago

<?php
# for PHP < 5.5 
# AND it works with arrayObject AND array of objects

if (!function_exists('array_column')) {
    function array_column($array, $columnKey, $indexKey = null)
    {
        $result = array();
        foreach ($array as $subArray) {
            if (is_null($indexKey) && array_key_exists($columnKey, $subArray)) {
                $result[] = is_object($subArray)?$subArray->$columnKey: $subArray[$columnKey];
            } elseif (array_key_exists($indexKey, $subArray)) {
                if (is_null($columnKey)) {
                    $index = is_object($subArray)?$subArray->$indexKey: $subArray[$indexKey];
                    $result[$index] = $subArray;
                } elseif (array_key_exists($columnKey, $subArray)) {
                    $index = is_object($subArray)?$subArray->$indexKey: $subArray[$indexKey];
                    $result[$index] = is_object($subArray)?$subArray->$columnKey: $subArray[$columnKey];
                }
            }
        }
        return $result;
    }
}
?>

Carlos Granados

9 years ago

Here's a neat little snippet for filtering a set of records based on a the value of a column:

<?php

function dictionaryFilterList(array $source, array $data, string $column) : array
{
    $new     = array_column($data, $column);
    $keep     = array_diff($new, $source);

    return array_intersect_key($data, $keep);
 }

// Usage:

$users = [
    ['first_name' => 'Jed', 'last_name' => 'Lopez'],
    ['first_name' => 'Carlos', 'last_name' => 'Granados'],
    ['first_name' => 'Dirty', 'last_name' => 'Diana'],
    ['first_name' => 'John', 'last_name' => 'Williams'],
    ['first_name' => 'Betty', 'last_name' => 'Boop'],
    ['first_name' => 'Dan', 'last_name' => 'Daniels'],
    ['first_name' => 'Britt', 'last_name' => 'Anderson'],
    ['first_name' => 'Will', 'last_name' => 'Smith'],
    ['first_name' => 'Magic', 'last_name' => 'Johnson'],
];

var_dump(dictionaryFilterList(['Dirty', 'Dan'], $users, 'first_name'));

// Outputs:
[
    ['first_name' => 'Jed', 'last_name' => 'Lopez'],
    ['first_name' => 'Carlos', 'last_name' => 'Granados'],
    ['first_name' => 'John', 'last_name' => 'Williams'],
    ['first_name' => 'Betty', 'last_name' => 'Boop'],
    ['first_name' => 'Britt', 'last_name' => 'Anderson'],
    ['first_name' => 'Will', 'last_name' => 'Smith'],
    ['first_name' => 'Magic', 'last_name' => 'Johnson']
]

?>

Anonymous

10 years ago

I added a little more functionality to the more popular answers here to support the $index_key parameter for PHP < 5.5

<?php
// for php < 5.5
if (!function_exists('array_column')) {
    function array_column($input, $column_key, $index_key = null) {
        $arr = array_map(function($d) use ($column_key, $index_key) {
            if (!isset($d[$column_key])) {
                return null;
            }
            if ($index_key !== null) {
                return array($d[$index_key] => $d[$column_key]);
            }
            return $d[$column_key];
        }, $input);

        if ($index_key !== null) {
            $tmp = array();
            foreach ($arr as $ar) {
                $tmp[key($ar)] = current($ar);
            }
            $arr = $tmp;
        }
        return $arr;
    }
}
?>

benjam

10 years ago

Note that this function will return the last entry when possible keys are duplicated.

<?php

$array = array(
    array(
        '1-1',
        'one',
        'one',
    ),
    array(
        '1-2',
        'two',
        'one',
    ),
);

var_dump(array_column($array, $value = 0, $index = 1));
var_dump(array_column($array, $value = 0, $index = 2));

// returns:
/*

array (size=2)
  'one' => string '1-1' (length=3)
  'two' => string '1-2' (length=3)

array (size=1)
  'one' => string '1-2' (length=3)

*/
?>

Hiranmoy Chatterjee

4 years ago

The following function may be useful to create columns from all values of indexed arrays:

<?php
function array_column_all(array $arrays): array
{
    $output = [];
    $columnCount = count($arrays[0]);
    for ($i = 0; $i < $columnCount; $i++)
    {
        $output [] = array_column($arrays, $i);
    }
    return $output;
}
?>

Use:
-----
<?php
array_column_all(
    [
        ['A1', 'A2', 'A3'],
        ['B1', 'B2', 'B3'],
        ['C1', 'C2', 'C3'],
    ]
);
?>

This will output:
-------------------
Array
(
    [0] => Array
        (
            [0] => A1
            [1] => B1
            [2] => C1
        )

    [1] => Array
        (
            [0] => A2
            [1] => B2
            [2] => C2
        )

    [2] => Array
        (
            [0] => A3
            [1] => B3
            [2] => C3
        )

)

1184427175 at qq dot com

8 years ago

//php < 5.5
if(function_exists('array_column'))
{
    function array_column($arr_data, $col)
    {
        $result = array_map(function($arr){return $arr[$col]}, $arr_data);
        return $result;
    }
}

antonfedonjuk at gmail dot com

10 years ago

My version is closer to the original than http://github.com/ramsey/array_column
<?php
/**
 * Provides functionality for array_column() to projects using PHP earlier than
 * version 5.5.
 * @copyright (c) 2015 WinterSilence (http://github.com/WinterSilence)
 * @license MIT
 */
if (!function_exists('array_column')) {
    /**
     * Returns an array of values representing a single column from the input
     * array.
     * @param array $array A multi-dimensional array from which to pull a
     *     column of values.
     * @param mixed $columnKey The column of values to return. This value may
     *     be the integer key of the column you wish to retrieve, or it may be
     *     the string key name for an associative array. It may also be NULL to
     *     return complete arrays (useful together with index_key to reindex
     *     the array).
     * @param mixed $indexKey The column to use as the index/keys for the
     *     returned array. This value may be the integer key of the column, or
     *     it may be the string key name.
     * @return array
     */
    function array_column(array $array, $columnKey, $indexKey = null)
    {
        $result = array();
        foreach ($array as $subArray) {
            if (!is_array($subArray)) {
                continue;
            } elseif (is_null($indexKey) && array_key_exists($columnKey, $subArray)) {
                $result[] = $subArray[$columnKey];
            } elseif (array_key_exists($indexKey, $subArray)) {
                if (is_null($columnKey)) {
                    $result[$subArray[$indexKey]] = $subArray;
                } elseif (array_key_exists($columnKey, $subArray)) {
                    $result[$subArray[$indexKey]] = $subArray[$columnKey];
                }
            }
        }
        return $result;
    }
}
?>

Rumour

2 years ago

If you want to preserve the array keys AND you want it to work on both object properties and array elements AND you want it to work if some of the arrays/objects in the array do not have the given key/property defined, basically the most ROBUST version you can get, yet quick enough:

<?php
function array_column_keys(array|ArrayAccess $arr, string $col) {
    // like array_columns but keeps the keys
    //to make it work for objects and arrays
    
    return array_map(fn($e) => (is_countable($e) ? ($e[$col]??null) : null) ?: (is_object($e) ? $e->$col : null), $arr);
}

?>

If a key/property is undefined, the value in the result array will be NULL. You can use array_filter() to filter those out if needed.

<?php

class a {
   public string $a = 'property a';
   public string $b = 'property b';
}

$a1 = new a;
$a2 = new a;
$a2->a = 'plop';

$b = ['one'=> ['a'=>'plop'], 
      3    => $a1, 
      4    => $a2, 
      5    =>[],
      'kud'=>new a];

return array_column_keys($b, 'a');

?>

Returns:

Array
(
    [one] => plop
    [3] => property a
    [4] => something else
    [5] => 
    [kud] => property a
)

aschmidt at anamera dot net

5 months ago

Unfortunately, the most "basic" index functionality has been overlooked: indexing the resulting array using the original index -- in other words, simply maintaining the original index and associating that with a chosen column from the array.

Consequently, one has to suffer additional overhead by resorting to some workaround, e.g.:

array_combine( array_keys( $array ), array_column( $array, 'some column' ) );

Hayley Watson

1 year ago

If an entry in the source array does not have a column_key element then array_column will silently skip that entry and return an array shorter than the source.

If entries can't be uniquely identified by an index_key then there's no way of telling which ones were skipped, as without an index_key array_column returns a plain list.

<?php
$array = [
    ['a' => '0th', 'b' => 'zero'],
    ['a' => '1st', 'b' => 'one'],
    ['a' => '2nd' /* oops */],
    ['a' => '3rd', 'b'=>'three']];
var_export(array_column($array, 'b'));
var_export(array_column($array, 'b', 'a'));
?>

oliver dot eglseder at co-stack dot com

9 months ago

array_column is the only function out of array_values, array_merge, array_slice and array_column that does de-reference values. Also, it works recursive!

<?php
$values = [];
$values['a'] = [];
$values['a']['b'] = 'foo';

$references = [];
$references['a'] = &$values['a'];

$copyColumn = array_combine(array_keys($references), array_column($references, null));

$values['a']['b'] = 'baz';

echo $copyColumn['a']['b'] . PHP_EOL; // foo
echo $references['a']['b'] . PHP_EOL; // baz
?>

If you want to preserve the keys you can use

<?php
$dereferenced = array_combine(array_keys($references), array_column($references, null))
?>

kevin dot sours at internetbrands dot com

11 months ago

I didn't see this explicitly mentioned in the documentation but if an array value is not an array (or an object with the correct functions for access) or the column_key doesn't exist then that value will simply not have a corresponding value in the output

so array_column([[4,5,6], [7,8,9], 10], 0) will return [4,7].  It also means that the suggestion of 

array_combine(array_keys($array), array_column($array, 'column'));

to preserve keys isn't safe unless you verify that nothing will be excluded by the array_column call.

hypxm at qq dot com

11 years ago

a simple solution:

function arrayColumn(array $array, $column_key, $index_key=null){
        if(function_exists('array_column ')){
            return array_column($array, $column_key, $index_key);
        }
        $result = [];
        foreach($array as $arr){
            if(!is_array($arr)) continue;

            if(is_null($column_key)){
                $value = $arr;
            }else{
                $value = $arr[$column_key];
            }

            if(!is_null($index_key)){
                $key = $arr[$index_key];
                $result[$key] = $value;
            }else{
                $result[] = $value;
            }

        }

        return $result;
    }

katrinaelaine6 at gmail dot com

9 years ago

array_column() will return duplicate values. 

Instead of having to use array_unique(), use the $index_key as a hack.

**Caution: This may get messy when setting the $column_key and/or $index_key as integers.**

<?php

$records = [
        [ 'id' => 2135, 'first_name' => 'John' ],
    [ 'id' => 3245, 'first_name' => 'Sally' ],
    [ 'id' => 5342, 'first_name' => 'Jane' ],
    [ 'id' => 5623, 'first_name' => 'Peter' ],
        [ 'id' => 6982, 'first_name' => 'Sally' ]
];

print_r(array_unique(array_column($records, 'first_name')));

// Force uniqueness by making the key the value.
print_r(array_column($records, 'first_name', 'first_name'));
print_r(array_column($records, 'id', 'first_name'));

// Returns
/*

Array
(
    [0] => John
    [1] => Sally
    [2] => Jane
    [3] => Peter
)

Array
(
    [John] => John
    [Sally] => Sally
    [Jane] => Jane
    [Peter] => Peter
)

Array
(
    [John] => 2135
    [Sally] => 6982
    [Jane] => 5342
    [Peter] => 5623
)

*/

?>

kaspar dot wilbuer at web dot de

10 years ago

If you need to extract more than one column from an array, you can use array_intersect_key on each element, like so:

function array_column_multi(array $input, array $column_keys) {
    $result = array();
    $column_keys = array_flip($column_keys);
    foreach($input as $key => $el) {
        $result[$key] = array_intersect_key($el, $column_keys);
    }
    return $result;
}

Nolan chou

10 years ago

if (!function_exists('array_column'))
{
    function array_column($input, $column_key=null, $index_key=null)
    {
        $result = array();
        $i = 0;
        foreach ($input as $v)
        {
            $k = $index_key === null || !isset($v[$index_key]) ? $i++ : $v[$index_key];
            $result[$k] = $column_key === null ? $v : (isset($v[$column_key]) ? $v[$column_key] : null);
        }
        return $result;
    }
}

marianbucur17 at yahoo dot com

10 years ago

If array_column is not available you can use the following function, which also has the $index_key parameter:

if (!function_exists('array_column')) {
    function array_column($array, $column_key, $index_key = null) 
    {
        return array_reduce($array, function ($result, $item) use ($column_key, $index_key) 
        {
            if (null === $index_key) {
                $result[] = $item[$column_key];
            } else {
                $result[$item[$index_key]] = $item[$column_key];
            }

            return $result;
        }, []);
    }
}

info at mobger dot de

3 years ago

If you want to rearrage an array with two layers (perhaps from database-requests), then use 'array_walk' instead:

<?php

    $yamlList = [
        ['title' => 'hallo ich', 'identifier' => 'ich', 'Klaus'=> 'doof',],
        ['title' => 'hallo du', 'identifier' => 'du', 'Klaus'=> 'doof',],
        ['title' => 'hallo er', 'identifier' => 'er', 'Klaus'=> 'doof',],
    ];
    echo ('Input'."\n".print_r($yamlList,true)."\n");
    array_walk($yamlList, function (&$value, $key) {
        $value = [
            $value['title'],
            $value['identifier'],
        ];
    });
    echo ("\n".'Output'."\n".print_r($yamlList,true)."\n");
?>

The Result
===========
...
Output
Array
(
    [0] => Array
        (
            [0] => hallo ich
            [1] => ich
        )

    [1] => Array
        (
            [0] => hallo du
            [1] => du
        )

    [2] => Array
        (
            [0] => hallo er
            [1] => er
        )

)