Implode an array with ", " and add "and " before the last item
PhpArraysPhp Problem Overview
This array holds a list of items, and I want to turn it into a string, but I don't know how to make the last item have a &/and before it instead of a comma.
1 => coke 2=> sprite 3=> fanta
should become
coke, sprite and fanta
This is the regular implode function:
$listString = implode(', ', $listArrau);
What's an easy way to do it?
Php Solutions
Solution 1 - Php
A long-liner that works with any number of items:
echo join(' and ', array_filter(array_merge(array(join(', ', array_slice($array, 0, -1))), array_slice($array, -1)), 'strlen'));
Or, if you really prefer the verboseness:
$last = array_slice($array, -1);
$first = join(', ', array_slice($array, 0, -1));
$both = array_filter(array_merge(array($first), $last), 'strlen');
echo join(' and ', $both);
The point is that this slicing, merging, filtering and joining handles all cases, including 0, 1 and 2 items, correctly without extra if..else
statements. And it happens to be collapsible into a one-liner.
Solution 2 - Php
I'm not sure that a one liner is the most elegant solution to this problem.
I wrote this a while ago and drop it in as required:
/**
* Join a string with a natural language conjunction at the end.
* https://gist.github.com/angry-dan/e01b8712d6538510dd9c
*/
function natural_language_join(array $list, $conjunction = 'and') {
$last = array_pop($list);
if ($list) {
return implode(', ', $list) . ' ' . $conjunction . ' ' . $last;
}
return $last;
}
You don't have to use "and" as your join string, it's efficient and works with anything from 0 to an unlimited number of items:
// null
var_dump(natural_language_join(array()));
// string 'one'
var_dump(natural_language_join(array('one')));
// string 'one and two'
var_dump(natural_language_join(array('one', 'two')));
// string 'one, two and three'
var_dump(natural_language_join(array('one', 'two', 'three')));
// string 'one, two, three or four'
var_dump(natural_language_join(array('one', 'two', 'three', 'four'), 'or'));
It's easy to modify to include an Oxford comma if you want:
function natural_language_join( array $list, $conjunction = 'and' ) : string {
$oxford_separator = count( $list ) == 2 ? ' ' : ', ';
$last = array_pop( $list );
if ( $list ) {
return implode( ', ', $list ) . $oxford_separator . $conjunction . ' ' . $last;
}
return $last;
}
Solution 3 - Php
You can pop last item and then join it with the text:
$yourArray = ('a', 'b', 'c');
$lastItem = array_pop($yourArray); // c
$text = implode(', ', $yourArray); // a, b
$text .= ' and '.$lastItem; // a, b and c
Solution 4 - Php
Try this:
$str = array_pop($array);
if ($array)
$str = implode(', ', $array)." and ".$str;
Solution 5 - Php
Another possible short solution:
$values = array('coke', 'sprite', 'fanta');
$values[] = implode(' and ', array_splice($values, -2));
print implode(', ', $values); // "coke, sprite and fanta"
It works fine with any number of values.
Solution 6 - Php
My go-to, similar to Enrique's answer, but optionally handles the oxford comma.
public static function listifyArray($array,$conjunction='and',$oxford=true) {
$last = array_pop($array);
$remaining = count($array);
return ($remaining ?
implode(', ',$array) . (($oxford && $remaining > 1) ? ',' : '') . " $conjunction "
: '') . $last;
}
Solution 7 - Php
I know im way to late for the answer, but surely this is a better way of doing it?
$list = array('breakfast', 'lunch', 'dinner');
$list[count($list)-1] = "and " . $list[count($list)-1];
echo implode(', ', $list);
Solution 8 - Php
This can be done with array_fill
and array_map
. It is also a one-liner (seems that many enjoy them)), but formated for readability:
$string = implode(array_map(
function ($item, $glue) { return $item . $glue; },
$array,
array_slice(array_fill(0, count($array), ', ') + ['last' => ' and '], 2)
));
Not the most optimal solution, but nevertheless.
Here is the demo.
Solution 9 - Php
Try this,
<?php
$listArray = array("coke","sprite","fanta");
foreach($listArray as $key => $value)
{
if(count($listArray)-1 == $key)
echo "and " . $value;
else if(count($listArray)-2 == $key)
echo $value . " ";
else
echo $value . ", ";
}
?>
Solution 10 - Php
try this
$arr = Array("coke","sprite","fanta");
$str = "";
$lenArr = sizeof($arr);
for($i=0; $i<$lenArr; $i++)
{
if($i==0)
$str .= $arr[$i];
else if($i==($lenArr-1))
$str .= " and ".$arr[$i];
else
$str .= " , ".$arr[$i];
}
print_r($str);
Solution 11 - Php
I just coded this based on the suggestions on this page. I left in my pseudo-code in the comments in case anyone needed it. My code differs from others here as it handles different-sized arrays differently and uses the Oxford comma notation for lists of three or more.
/**
* Create a comma separated list of items using the Oxford comma notation. A
* single item returns just that item. 2 array elements returns the items
* separated by "and". 3 or more items return the comma separated list.
*
* @param array $items Array of strings to list
* @return string List of items joined by comma using Oxford comma notation
*/
function _createOxfordCommaList($items) {
if (count($items) == 1) {
// return the single name
return array_pop($items);
}
elseif (count($items) == 2) {
// return array joined with "and"
return implode(" and ", $items);
}
else {
// pull of the last item
$last = array_pop($items);
// join remaining list with commas
$list = implode(", ", $items);
// add the last item back using ", and"
$list .= ", and " . $last;
return $list;
}
}
Solution 12 - Php
This is quite old at this point, but I figured it can't hurt to add my solution to the pile. It's a bit more code than other solutions, but I'm okay with that.
I wanted something with a bit of flexibility, so I created a utility method that allows for setting what the final separator should be (so you could use an ampersand, for instance) and whether or not to use an Oxford comma. It also properly handles lists with 0, 1, and 2 items (something quite a few of the answers here do not do)
$androidVersions = ['Donut', 'Eclair', 'Froyo', 'Gingerbread', 'Honeycomb', 'Ice Cream Sandwich', 'Jellybean', 'Kit Kat', 'Lollipop', 'Marshmallow'];
echo joinListWithFinalSeparator(array_slice($androidVersions, 0, 1)); // Donut
echo joinListWithFinalSeparator(array_slice($androidVersions, 0, 2)); // Donut and Eclair
echo joinListWithFinalSeparator($androidVersions); // Donut, Eclair, Froyo, Gingerbread, Honeycomb, Ice Cream Sandwich, Jellybean, Kit Kat, Lollipop, and Marshmallow
echo joinListWithFinalSeparator($androidVersions, '&', false); // Donut, Eclair, Froyo, Gingerbread, Honeycomb, Ice Cream Sandwich, Jellybean, Kit Kat, Lollipop & Marshmallow
function joinListWithFinalSeparator(array $arr, $lastSeparator = 'and', $oxfordComma = true) {
if (count($arr) > 1) {
return sprintf(
'%s%s %s %s',
implode(', ', array_slice($arr, 0, -1)),
$oxfordComma && count($arr) > 2 ? ',':'',
$lastSeparator ?: '',
array_pop($arr)
);
}
// not a fan of this, but it's the simplest way to return a string from an array of 0-1 items without warnings
return implode('', $arr);
}
Solution 13 - Php
OK, so this is getting pretty old, but I have to say I reckon most of the answers are very inefficient with multiple implodes or array merges and stuff like that, all far more complex than necessary IMO.
Why not just:
implode(',', array_slice($array, 0, -1)) . ' and ' . array_slice($array, -1)[0]
Solution 14 - Php
Simple human_implode using regex.
function human_implode($glue = ",", $last = "y", $elements = array(), $filter = null){
if ($filter) {
$elements = array_map($filter, $elements);
}
$str = implode("{$glue} ", $elements);
if (count($elements) == 2) {
return str_replace("{$glue} ", " {$last} ", $str);
}
return preg_replace("/[{$glue}](?!.*[{$glue}])/", " {$last}", $str);
}
print_r(human_implode(",", "and", ["Joe","Hugh", "Jack"])); // => Joe, Hugh and Jack
Solution 15 - Php
Another, although slightly more verbose, solution I came up with. In my situation, I wanted to make the words in the array plural, so this will add an "s" to the end of each item (unless the word already ends in 's':
$models = array("F150","Express","CR-V","Rav4","Silverado");
foreach($models as $k=>$model){
echo $model;
if(!preg_match("/s|S$/",$model))
echo 's'; // add S to end (if it doesn't already end in S)
if(isset($models[$k+1])) { // if there is another after this one.
echo ", ";
if(!isset($models[$k+2]))
echo "and "; // If this is next-to-last, add ", and"
}
}
}
outputs:
F150s, Express, CR-Vs, Rav4s, and Silverados
Solution 16 - Php
It's faster then deceze's solution and works with huge arrays (1M+ elements). The only flaw of both solutions is a poor interaction with a number 0 in a less then three elements arrays becouse of array_filter use.
echo implode(' and ', array_filter(array_reverse(array_merge(array(array_pop($array)), array(implode(', ',$array))))));