(PHP 4, PHP 5)
array_slice — Extract a slice of the array
$array
, int $offset
[, int $length
= NULL
[, bool $preserve_keys
= false
]] )
array_slice() returns the sequence of elements
from the array array
as specified by the
offset
and length
parameters.
array
The input array.
offset
If offset
is non-negative, the sequence will
start at that offset in the array
. If
offset
is negative, the sequence will
start that far from the end of the array
.
length
If length
is given and is positive, then
the sequence will have up to that many elements in it. If the array
is shorter than the length
, then only the
available array elements will be present. If
length
is given and is negative then the
sequence will stop that many elements from the end of the
array. If it is omitted, then the sequence will have everything
from offset
up until the end of the
array
.
preserve_keys
Note that array_slice() will reorder and reset the
numeric array indices by default. You can change this behaviour by setting
preserve_keys
to TRUE
.
Returns the slice.
Version | Description |
---|---|
5.0.2 |
The optional preserve_keys parameter was added.
|
Example #1 array_slice() examples
<?php
$input = array("a", "b", "c", "d", "e");
$output = array_slice($input, 2); // returns "c", "d", and "e"
$output = array_slice($input, -2, 1); // returns "d"
$output = array_slice($input, 0, 3); // returns "a", "b", and "c"
// note the differences in the array keys
print_r(array_slice($input, 2, -1));
print_r(array_slice($input, 2, -1, true));
?>
The above example will output:
Array ( [0] => c [1] => d ) Array ( [2] => c [3] => d )