How can I get the last key of an array?
18 Answers
A solution would be to use a combination of end and key (quoting) :
end()advances array 's internal pointer to the last element, and returns its value.key()returns the index element of the current array position.
So, a portion of code such as this one should do the trick :
$array = array( 'first' => 123, 'second' => 456, 'last' => 789, ); end($array); // move the internal pointer to the end of the array $key = key($array); // fetches the key of the element pointed to by the internal pointer var_dump($key); Will output :
string 'last' (length=4) i.e. the key of the last element of my array.
After this has been done the array's internal pointer will be at the end of the array. As pointed out in the comments, you may want to run reset() on the array to bring the pointer back to the beginning of the array.
9 Comments
reset()) ;; but you're right in pointing that function, which could be useful.array('a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'a') it will return key 0 rather than 4.Although end() seems to be the easiest, it's not the fastest. The faster, and much stronger alternative is array_slice():
$lastKey = key(array_slice($array, -1, 1, true)); As the tests say, on an array with 500000 elements, it is almost 7x faster!
12 Comments
end($arr);$key = key($arr);reset($arr); against (b) $key = key(array_slice($arr,-1,1,true)); ... which resulting in end() being MUCH faster! end() = 0.05326 seconds, array_slice = 8.506 seconds ... huh??end() is fastest because it can be derived from a very simple C-function, such as: int top(void){ int i; for(i = 0; stack[i] != '\0'; i++); return stack[--i]; }last to the last element. Making end() pretty much O(1). :-)Since PHP 7.3 (2018) there is (finally) function for this: http://php.net/manual/en/function.array-key-last.php
$array = ['apple'=>10,'grape'=>15,'orange'=>20]; echo array_key_last ( $array ) will output
orange 2 Comments
I prefer
end(array_keys($myarr)) 10 Comments
end((array_keys($myarr))) to get around the notice.Just use : echo $array[count($array) - 1];
9 Comments
int top(void){ int i; for(i = 0; stack[i] != '\0'; i++); return stack[--i]; } which is interesting but not good for business when you're on a time budget$a[1] = 1; $a[5] = 5; $a[0] = 0; Then you will have an array with keys (1, 5, 0), in that order. count($a) will yield 3 and $a[2] is not defined. It certainly doesn't give you 5 back.Dont know if this is going to be faster or not, but it seems easier to do it this way, and you avoid the error by not passing in a function to end()...
it just needed a variable... not a big deal to write one more line of code, then unset it if you needed to.
$array = array( 'first' => 123, 'second' => 456, 'last' => 789, ); $keys = array_keys($array); $last = end($keys); 1 Comment
As of PHP7.3 you can directly access the last key in (the outer level of) an array with array_key_last()
The definitively puts much of the debate on this page to bed. It is hands-down the best performer, suffers no side effects, and is a direct, intuitive, single-call technique to deliver exactly what this question seeks.
A rough benchmark as proof: https://3v4l.org/hO1Yf
array_slice() + key(): 1.4 end() + key(): 13.7 array_key_last(): 0.00015*test array contains 500000 elements, microtime repeated 100x then averaged then multiplied by 1000 to avoid scientific notation. Credit to @MAChitgarha for the initial benchmark commented under @TadejMagajna's answer.
This means you can retrieve the value of the final key without:
- moving the array pointer (which requires two lines of code) or
- sorting, reversing, popping, counting, indexing an array of keys, or any other tomfoolery
This function was long overdue and a welcome addition to the array function tool belt that improves performance, avoids unwanted side-effects, and enables clean/direct/intuitive code.
Here is a demo:
$array = ["a" => "one", "b" => "two", "c" => "three"]; if (!function_exists('array_key_last')) { echo "please upgrade to php7.3"; } else { echo "First Key: " , key($array) , "\n"; echo "Last Key: " , array_key_last($array) , "\n"; next($array); // move array pointer to second element echo "Second Key: " , key($array) , "\n"; echo "Still Last Key: " , array_key_last($array); } Output:
First Key: a Last Key: c // <-- unaffected by the pointer position, NICE! Second Key: b Last Key: c // <-- unaffected by the pointer position, NICE! Some notes:
array_key_last()is the sibling function of array_key_first().- Both of these functions are "pointer-ignorant".
- Both functions return
nullif the array is empty. - Discarded sibling functions (
array_value_first()&array_value_last()) also would have offered the pointer-ignorant access to bookend elements, but they evidently failed to garner sufficient votes to come to life.
Here are some relevant pages discussing the new features:
- https://laravel-news.com/outer-array-functions-php-7-3
- https://kinsta.com/blog/php-7-3/#array-key-first-last
- https://wiki.php.net/rfc/array_key_first_last
p.s. If anyone is weighing up some of the other techniques, you may refer to this small collection of comparisons: (Demo)
Duration of array_slice() + key(): 0.35353660583496 Duration of end() + key(): 6.7495584487915 Duration of array_key_last(): 0.00025749206542969 Duration of array_keys() + end(): 7.6123380661011 Duration of array_reverse() + key(): 6.7875385284424 Duration of array_slice() + foreach(): 0.28870105743408
Comments
As of PHP >= 7.3 array_key_last() is the best way to get the last key of any of an array. Using combination of end(), key() and reset() just to get last key of an array is outrageous.
$array = array("one" => bird, "two" => "fish", 3 => "elephant"); $key = array_key_last($array); var_dump($key) //output 3 compare that to
end($array) $key = key($array) var_dump($key) //output 3 reset($array) You must reset array for the pointer to be at the beginning if you are using combination of end() and key()
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Try using array_pop and array_keys function as follows:
<?php $array = array( 'one' => 1, 'two' => 2, 'three' => 3 ); echo array_pop(array_keys($array)); // prints three ?> 6 Comments
array_pop() operates on the return value of array_keys() and not on the original array.You can use this:
$array = array("one" => "apple", "two" => "orange", "three" => "pear"); end($array); echo key($array); Another Solution is to create a function and use it:
function endKey($array){ end($array); return key($array); } $array = array("one" => "apple", "two" => "orange", "three" => "pear"); echo endKey($array); 6 Comments
It is strange, but why this topic is not have this answer:
$lastKey = array_keys($array)[count($array)-1];
1 Comment
array_key_last() (which is suitable for all array structures) was released 6 December 2018 and will not longer be supported from 6 December 2021. Modern applications should have already upgraded their php versions. This explains why this page doesn't need array_keys($a[count($a) - 1) as late as 2020.$arr = array('key1'=>'value1','key2'=>'value2','key3'=>'value3'); list($last_key) = each(array_reverse($arr)); print $last_key; // key3 1 Comment
I would also like to offer an alternative solution to this problem.
Assuming all your keys are numeric without any gaps, my preferred method is to count the array then minus 1 from that value (to account for the fact that array keys start at 0.
$array = array(0=>'dog', 1=>'cat'); $lastKey = count($array)-1; $lastKeyValue = $array[$lastKey]; var_dump($lastKey); print_r($lastKeyValue); This would give you:
int(1) cat
4 Comments
$array = array( 'something' => array(1,2,3), 'somethingelse' => array(1,2,3,4) ); $last_value = end($array); $last_key = key($array); // 'somethingelse' This works because PHP moves it's array pointer internally for $array
1 Comment
The best possible solution that can be also used used inline:
end($arr) && false ?: key($arr) This solution is only expression/statement and provides good is not the best possible performance.
Inlined example usage:
$obj->setValue( end($arr) && false ?: key($arr) // last $arr key );
UPDATE: In PHP 7.3+: use (of course) the newly added array_key_last() method.
Comments
Try this to preserve compatibility with older versions of PHP:
$array_keys = array_keys( $array ); $last_item_key = array_pop( $array_keys ); 1 Comment
array_key_last() because it is perfectly suited.