ArrayObject::getArrayCopy

(PHP 5 >= 5.0.0, PHP 7)

ArrayObject::getArrayCopyCreates a copy of the ArrayObject.

说明

public array ArrayObject::getArrayCopy ( void )

Exports the ArrayObject to an array.

参数

此函数没有参数。

返回值

Returns a copy of the array. When the ArrayObject refers to an object an array of the public properties of that object will be returned.

范例

Example #1 ArrayObject::getArrayCopy() example

<?php
// Array of available fruits
$fruits = array("lemons" => 1"oranges" => 4"bananas" => 5"apples" => 10);

$fruitsArrayObject = new ArrayObject($fruits);
$fruitsArrayObject['pears'] = 4;

// create a copy of the array
$copy $fruitsArrayObject->getArrayCopy();
print_r($copy);

?>

以上例程会输出:

Array
(
    [lemons] => 1
    [oranges] => 4
    [bananas] => 5
    [apples] => 10
    [pears] => 4
)

User Contributed Notes

sorcerer 04-Jan-2017 03:34
When I used print_r ($fruitsArrayObject) instead of print_r ($copy), i.e. ignoring the getArrayCopy() step, I still got the same output. Why?
spidgorny at gmail dot com 15-Dec-2016 12:37
<?php
$data
= $likeArray->getArrayCopy();
?>
will NOT be magically called if you cast to array. Although I've expected it.
<?php
$nothing
= (array)$likeArray;
?>
Here, $data != $nothing.
jlshor at buffalo dot edu 08-Dec-2016 05:53
Is there a difference between casting to an array and using this function?

For instance, if we have:
$arrayObject = new ArrayObject([1, 2, 3]);

Is there a difference between these:
$array = (array) $arrayObject;
vs
$array = $arrayObject->getArrayCopy();

If not, is there any scenario where they would produce different results, or do they produce the result in different ways?
php at webflips dot net 24-May-2014 04:42
"When the ArrayObject refers to an object an array of the public properties of that object will be returned."

This description does not seem to be right:

<?php
class A
{
    public
$var = 'var';
    protected
$foo = 'foo';
    private
$bar = 'bar';
}

$o = new ArrayObject(new A());
var_dump($o->getArrayCopy());

/*
Dumps:

array(3) {
  ["var"]=>
  string(3) "var"
  ["*foo"]=>
  string(3) "foo"
  ["Abar"]=>
  string(3) "bar"
}
*/
?>

So it does not only include the public properties.
Ivo von Putzer 05-Dec-2011 02:06
If you did something like this to make your constructor multidimensional capable you will have some trouble using getArrayCopy to get a plain array straight out of the method:
<?php
public function __construct( $array = array(), $flags = 2 )
{
   
// let's give the objects the right and not the inherited name
   
$class = get_class($this);

    foreach(
$array as $offset => $value)
       
$this->offsetSet($offset, is_array($value) ? new $class($value) : $value);

   
$this->setFlags($flags);
}
?>

That's the way I solved it:

<?php
public function getArray($recursion = false)
{
   
// just in case the object might be multidimensional
   
if ( $this === true)
        return
$this->getArrayCopy();

    return
array_map( function($item){
        return
is_object($item) ? $item->getArray(true) : $item;
    },
$this->getArrayCopy() );
}
?>

Hope this was useful!