For PHP 7.0 and below that is beyond the functionality of list
. The docs state:
list only works on numerical arrays and assumes the numerical indices start at 0.
One of the things that could suit your purpose would be the extract()
function which imports variables from an array into the current symbol table. While with list
you are able to define variable names explicitly, extract()
does not give you this freedom.
Extracting an associative array
With extract
you could do something like that:
<?php
$info = [ 'drink' => 'coffee', 'color' => 'brown', 'power' => 'caffeine' ];
extract($info);
var_dump($drink); // string(6) "coffee"
var_dump($color); // string(5) "brown"
var_dump($power); // string(8) "caffeine"
Extracting an Object
Extracting an object works almost the same. Since extract
only takes an array as an argument we need to get the objects properties as an array. get_object_vars
does that for you. It returns an associative array with all public properties as key and their values as value.
<?php
class User {
public $name="Thomas";
}
$user = new User();
extract( get_object_vars($user) );
var_dump($name); // string(6) "Thomas"
Pitfalls
extract()
is not the same as list
since it does not allow you to explicitly define the variable names that get exported to the symbol table. The variable names correspond the array keys by default.
list
is a language construct whileextract()
is a function- It might happen that you overwrite variables that you have defined beforehand unintentionally
- Your array keys might be invalid as variable names
With the $flags
parameter that you can pass as second argument to extract()
you can influence the behavior in case of colliding or invalid variables. But still it’s important to know how extract()
works and to use it with cauton.
Edit: As of PHP 7.1 this is possible:
http://php.net/manual/en/migration71.new-features.php#migration71.new-features.support-for-keys-in-list
You can now specify keys in list(), or its new shorthand [] syntax. This enables destructuring of arrays with non-integer or non-sequential keys.
https://php.net/manual/en/migration71.new-features.php#migration71.new-features.symmetric-array-destructuring
The shorthand array syntax ([]) may now be used to destructure arrays for assignments (including within foreach), as an alternative to the existing list() syntax, which is still supported.
For example this:
$test_arr = ['a' => 1, 'b' => 2];
list('a' => $a, 'b' => $b) = $test_arr;
var_dump($a);
var_dump($b);
Will output the following as of 7.1.0
int(1)
int(2)