Interface ResultSetInterface
Describes how a collection of datasource results should look like
Method Summary
-
append() public
Returns a new collection as the result of concatenating the list of elements in this collection with the passed list of elements
-
appendItem() public
Append a single item creating a new collection.
-
avg() public
Returns the average of all the values extracted with $path or of this collection.
-
buffered() public
Returns a new collection where the operations performed by this collection. No matter how many times the new collection is iterated, those operations will only be performed once.
-
cartesianProduct() public
Create a new collection that is the cartesian product of the current collection
-
chunk() public
Breaks the collection into smaller arrays of the given size.
-
chunkWithKeys() public
Breaks the collection into smaller arrays of the given size.
-
combine() public
Returns a new collection where the values extracted based on a value path and then indexed by a key path. Optionally this method can produce parent groups based on a group property path.
-
compile() public
Iterates once all elements in this collection and executes all stacked operations of them, finally it returns a new collection with the result. This is useful for converting non-rewindable internal iterators into a collection that can be rewound and used multiple times.
-
contains() public
Returns true if $value is present in this collection. Comparisons are made both by value and type.
-
count() public
Returns the amount of elements in the collection.
-
countBy() public
Sorts a list into groups and returns a count for the number of elements in each group. Similar to groupBy, but instead of returning a list of values, returns a count for the number of values in that group.
-
countKeys() public
Returns the number of unique keys in this iterator. This is the same as the number of elements the collection will contain after calling
toArray()
-
each() public
Applies a callback to the elements in this collection.
-
every() public
Returns true if all values in this collection pass the truth test provided in the callback.
-
extract() public
Returns a new collection containing the column or property value found in each of the elements.
-
filter() public
Looks through each value in the collection, and returns another collection with all the values that pass a truth test. Only the values for which the callback returns true will be present in the resulting collection.
-
first() public
Returns the first result in this collection
-
firstMatch() public
Returns the first result matching all the key-value pairs listed in conditions.
-
groupBy() public
Splits a collection into sets, grouped by the result of running each value through the callback. If $callback is a string instead of a callable, groups by the property named by $callback on each of the values.
-
indexBy() public
Given a list and a callback function that returns a key for each element in the list (or a property name), returns an object with an index of each item. Just like groupBy, but for when you know your keys are unique.
-
insert() public
Returns a new collection containing each of the elements found in
$values
as a property inside the corresponding elements in this collection. The property where the values will be inserted is described by the$path
parameter. -
isEmpty() public
Returns whether there are elements in this collection
-
jsonSerialize() public
Returns the data that can be converted to JSON. This returns the same data as
toArray()
which contains only unique keys. -
last() public
Returns the last result in this collection
-
lazy() public
Returns a new collection where any operations chained after it are guaranteed to be run lazily. That is, elements will be yielded one at a time.
-
listNested() public
Returns a new collection with each of the elements of this collection after flattening the tree structure. The tree structure is defined by nesting elements under a key with a known name. It is possible to specify such name by using the '$nestingKey' parameter.
-
map() public
Returns another collection after modifying each of the values in this one using the provided callable.
-
match() public
Looks through each value in the list, returning a Collection of all the values that contain all of the key-value pairs listed in $conditions.
-
max() public
Returns the top element in this collection after being sorted by a property. Check the sortBy method for information on the callback and $sort parameters
-
median() public
Returns the median of all the values extracted with $path or of this collection.
-
min() public
Returns the bottom element in this collection after being sorted by a property. Check the sortBy method for information on the callback and $sort parameters
-
nest() public
Returns a new collection where the values are nested in a tree-like structure based on an id property path and a parent id property path.
-
prepend() public
Prepend a set of items to a collection creating a new collection
-
prependItem() public
Prepend a single item creating a new collection.
-
reduce() public
Folds the values in this collection to a single value, as the result of applying the callback function to all elements. $zero is the initial state of the reduction, and each successive step of it should be returned by the callback function. If $zero is omitted the first value of the collection will be used in its place and reduction will start from the second item.
-
reject() public
Looks through each value in the collection, and returns another collection with all the values that do not pass a truth test. This is the opposite of
filter
. -
sample() public
Returns a new collection with maximum $length random elements from this collection
-
shuffle() public
Returns a new collection with the elements placed in a random order, this function does not preserve the original keys in the collection.
-
skip() public
Returns a new collection that will skip the specified amount of elements at the beginning of the iteration.
-
some() public
Returns true if any of the values in this collection pass the truth test provided in the callback.
-
sortBy() public
Returns a sorted iterator out of the elements in this collection, ranked based on the results of applying a callback function to each value. The parameter $path can also be a string representing the column or property name.
-
stopWhen() public
Creates a new collection that when iterated will stop yielding results if the provided condition evaluates to true.
-
sumOf() public
Returns the total sum of all the values extracted with $matcher or of this collection.
-
take() public
Returns a new collection with maximum $length elements in the internal order this collection was created. If a second parameter is passed, it will determine from what position to start taking elements.
-
takeLast() public
Returns the last N elements of a collection
-
through() public
Passes this collection through a callable as its first argument. This is useful for decorating the full collection with another object.
-
toArray() public
Returns an array representation of the results
-
toList() public
Returns an numerically-indexed array representation of the results. This is equivalent to calling
toArray(false)
-
transpose() public
Transpose rows and columns into columns and rows
-
unfold() public
Creates a new collection where the items are the concatenation of the lists of items generated by the transformer function applied to each item in the original collection.
-
unique() public
Loops through each value in the collection and returns a new collection with only unique values based on the value returned by
callback
. -
unwrap() public
Returns the closest nested iterator that can be safely traversed without losing any possible transformations. This is used mainly to remove empty IteratorIterator wrappers that can only slowdown the iteration process.
-
zip() public
Combines the elements of this collection with each of the elements of the passed iterables, using their positional index as a reference.
-
zipWith() public
Combines the elements of this collection with each of the elements of the passed iterables, using their positional index as a reference.
Method Detail
append() ¶ public
append(iterable $items): self
Returns a new collection as the result of concatenating the list of elements in this collection with the passed list of elements
Parameters
-
iterable
$items Items list.
Returns
self
appendItem() ¶ public
appendItem(mixed $item, mixed $key = null): self
Append a single item creating a new collection.
Parameters
-
mixed
$item The item to append.
-
mixed
$key optional The key to append the item with. If null a key will be generated.
Returns
self
avg() ¶ public
avg(callable|string|null $path = null): float|int|null
Returns the average of all the values extracted with $path or of this collection.
Example:
$items = [
['invoice' => ['total' => 100]],
['invoice' => ['total' => 200]]
];
$total = (new Collection($items))->avg('invoice.total');
// Total: 150
$total = (new Collection([1, 2, 3]))->avg();
// Total: 2
The average of an empty set or 0 rows is null
. Collections with null
values are not considered empty.
Parameters
-
callable|string|null
$path optional The property name to compute the average or a function If no value is passed, an identity function will be used. that will return the value of the property to compute the average.
Returns
float|int|null
buffered() ¶ public
buffered(): self
Returns a new collection where the operations performed by this collection. No matter how many times the new collection is iterated, those operations will only be performed once.
This can also be used to make any non-rewindable iterator rewindable.
Returns
self
cartesianProduct() ¶ public
cartesianProduct(callable|null $operation = null, callable|null $filter = null): self
Create a new collection that is the cartesian product of the current collection
In order to create a cartesian product a collection must contain a single dimension of data.
Example
$collection = new Collection([['A', 'B', 'C'], [1, 2, 3]]);
$result = $collection->cartesianProduct()->toArray();
$expected = [
['A', 1],
['A', 2],
['A', 3],
['B', 1],
['B', 2],
['B', 3],
['C', 1],
['C', 2],
['C', 3],
];
Parameters
-
callable|null
$operation optional A callable that allows you to customize the product result.
-
callable|null
$filter optional A filtering callback that must return true for a result to be part of the final results.
Returns
self
chunk() ¶ public
chunk(int $chunkSize): self
Breaks the collection into smaller arrays of the given size.
Example:
$items [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11];
$chunked = (new Collection($items))->chunk(3)->toList();
// Returns [[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6], [7, 8, 9], [10, 11]]
Parameters
-
int
$chunkSize The maximum size for each chunk
Returns
self
chunkWithKeys() ¶ public
chunkWithKeys(int $chunkSize, bool $keepKeys = true): self
Breaks the collection into smaller arrays of the given size.
Example:
$items ['a' => 1, 'b' => 2, 'c' => 3, 'd' => 4, 'e' => 5, 'f' => 6];
$chunked = (new Collection($items))->chunkWithKeys(3)->toList();
// Returns [['a' => 1, 'b' => 2, 'c' => 3], ['d' => 4, 'e' => 5, 'f' => 6]]
Parameters
-
int
$chunkSize The maximum size for each chunk
-
bool
$keepKeys optional If the keys of the array should be kept
Returns
self
combine() ¶ public
combine(callable|string $keyPath, callable|string $valuePath, callable|string|null $groupPath = null): self
Returns a new collection where the values extracted based on a value path and then indexed by a key path. Optionally this method can produce parent groups based on a group property path.
Examples:
$items = [
['id' => 1, 'name' => 'foo', 'parent' => 'a'],
['id' => 2, 'name' => 'bar', 'parent' => 'b'],
['id' => 3, 'name' => 'baz', 'parent' => 'a'],
];
$combined = (new Collection($items))->combine('id', 'name');
// Result will look like this when converted to array
[
1 => 'foo',
2 => 'bar',
3 => 'baz',
];
$combined = (new Collection($items))->combine('id', 'name', 'parent');
// Result will look like this when converted to array
[
'a' => [1 => 'foo', 3 => 'baz'],
'b' => [2 => 'bar'],
];
Parameters
-
callable|string
$keyPath the column name path to use for indexing or a function returning the indexing key out of the provided element
-
callable|string
$valuePath the column name path to use as the array value or a function returning the value out of the provided element
-
callable|string|null
$groupPath optional the column name path to use as the parent grouping key or a function returning the key out of the provided element
Returns
self
compile() ¶ public
compile(bool $keepKeys = true): self
Iterates once all elements in this collection and executes all stacked operations of them, finally it returns a new collection with the result. This is useful for converting non-rewindable internal iterators into a collection that can be rewound and used multiple times.
A common use case is to re-use the same variable for calculating different data. In those cases it may be helpful and more performant to first compile a collection and then apply more operations to it.
Example:
$collection->map($mapper)->sortBy('age')->extract('name');
$compiled = $collection->compile();
$isJohnHere = $compiled->some($johnMatcher);
$allButJohn = $compiled->filter($johnMatcher);
In the above example, had the collection not been compiled before, the
iterations for map
, sortBy
and extract
would've been executed twice:
once for getting $isJohnHere
and once for $allButJohn
You can think of this method as a way to create save points for complex calculations in a collection.
Parameters
-
bool
$keepKeys optional Whether to use the keys returned by this collection as the array keys. Keep in mind that it is valid for iterators to return the same key for different elements, setting this value to false can help getting all items if keys are not important in the result.
Returns
self
contains() ¶ public
contains(mixed $value): bool
Returns true if $value is present in this collection. Comparisons are made both by value and type.
Parameters
-
mixed
$value The value to check for
Returns
bool
count() ¶ public
count(): int
Returns the amount of elements in the collection.
WARNINGS:
Will change the current position of the iterator:
Calling this method at the same time that you are iterating this collections, for example in a foreach, will result in undefined behavior. Avoid doing this.
Consumes all elements for NoRewindIterator collections:
On certain type of collections, calling this method may render unusable afterwards. That is, you may not be able to get elements out of it, or to iterate on it anymore.
Specifically any collection wrapping a Generator (a function with a yield statement)
or a unbuffered database cursor will not accept any other function calls after calling
count()
on it.
Create a new collection with buffered()
method to overcome this problem.
Can report more elements than unique keys:
Any collection constructed by appending collections together, or by having internal iterators returning duplicate keys, will report a larger amount of elements using this functions than the final amount of elements when converting the collections to a keyed array. This is because duplicate keys will be collapsed into a single one in the final array, whereas this count method is only concerned by the amount of elements after converting it to a plain list.
If you need the count of elements after taking the keys in consideration
(the count of unique keys), you can call countKeys()
Returns
int
countBy() ¶ public
countBy(callable|string $path): self
Sorts a list into groups and returns a count for the number of elements in each group. Similar to groupBy, but instead of returning a list of values, returns a count for the number of values in that group.
When $callback is a string it should be a property name to extract or a dot separated path of properties that should be followed to get the last one in the path.
Example:
$items = [
['id' => 1, 'name' => 'foo', 'parent_id' => 10],
['id' => 2, 'name' => 'bar', 'parent_id' => 11],
['id' => 3, 'name' => 'baz', 'parent_id' => 10],
];
$group = (new Collection($items))->countBy('parent_id');
// Or
$group = (new Collection($items))->countBy(function ($e) {
return $e['parent_id'];
});
// Result will look like this when converted to array
[
10 => 2,
11 => 1
];
Parameters
-
callable|string
$path The column name to use for indexing or callback that returns the value. or a function returning the indexing key out of the provided element
Returns
self
countKeys() ¶ public
countKeys(): int
Returns the number of unique keys in this iterator. This is the same as the number of
elements the collection will contain after calling toArray()
This method comes with a number of caveats. Please refer to CollectionInterface::count()
for details.
Returns
int
See Also
each() ¶ public
each(callable $callback): $this
Applies a callback to the elements in this collection.
Example:
$collection = (new Collection($items))->each(function ($value, $key) {
echo "Element $key: $value";
});
Parameters
-
callable
$callback Callback to run for each element in collection.
Returns
$this
every() ¶ public
every(callable $callback): bool
Returns true if all values in this collection pass the truth test provided in the callback.
The callback is passed the value and key of the element being tested and should return true if the test passed.
Example:
$overTwentyOne = (new Collection([24, 45, 60, 15]))->every(function ($value, $key) {
return $value > 21;
});
Empty collections always return true.
Parameters
-
callable
$callback a callback function
Returns
bool
extract() ¶ public
extract(callable|string $path): self
Returns a new collection containing the column or property value found in each of the elements.
The matcher can be a string with a property name to extract or a dot separated path of properties that should be followed to get the last one in the path.
If a column or property could not be found for a particular element in the collection, that position is filled with null.
Example:
Extract the user name for all comments in the array:
$items = [
['comment' => ['body' => 'cool', 'user' => ['name' => 'Mark']],
['comment' => ['body' => 'very cool', 'user' => ['name' => 'Renan']]
];
$extracted = (new Collection($items))->extract('comment.user.name');
// Result will look like this when converted to array
['Mark', 'Renan']
It is also possible to extract a flattened collection out of nested properties
$items = [
['comment' => ['votes' => [['value' => 1], ['value' => 2], ['value' => 3]]],
['comment' => ['votes' => [['value' => 4]]
];
$extracted = (new Collection($items))->extract('comment.votes.{*}.value');
// Result will contain
[1, 2, 3, 4]
Parameters
-
callable|string
$path A dot separated path of column to follow so that the final one can be returned or a callable that will take care of doing that.
Returns
self
filter() ¶ public
filter(callable|null $callback = null): self
Looks through each value in the collection, and returns another collection with all the values that pass a truth test. Only the values for which the callback returns true will be present in the resulting collection.
Each time the callback is executed it will receive the value of the element in the current iteration, the key of the element and this collection as arguments, in that order.
Example:
Filtering odd numbers in an array, at the end only the value 2 will be present in the resulting collection:
$collection = (new Collection([1, 2, 3]))->filter(function ($value, $key) {
return $value % 2 === 0;
});
Parameters
-
callable|null
$callback optional the method that will receive each of the elements and returns true whether they should be in the resulting collection. If left null, a callback that filters out falsey values will be used.
Returns
self
firstMatch() ¶ public
firstMatch(array $conditions): mixed
Returns the first result matching all the key-value pairs listed in conditions.
Parameters
-
array
$conditions a key-value list of conditions where the key is a property path as accepted by
Collection::extract
, and the value the condition against with each element will be matched
Returns
mixed
See Also
groupBy() ¶ public
groupBy(callable|string $path): self
Splits a collection into sets, grouped by the result of running each value through the callback. If $callback is a string instead of a callable, groups by the property named by $callback on each of the values.
When $callback is a string it should be a property name to extract or a dot separated path of properties that should be followed to get the last one in the path.
Example:
$items = [
['id' => 1, 'name' => 'foo', 'parent_id' => 10],
['id' => 2, 'name' => 'bar', 'parent_id' => 11],
['id' => 3, 'name' => 'baz', 'parent_id' => 10],
];
$group = (new Collection($items))->groupBy('parent_id');
// Or
$group = (new Collection($items))->groupBy(function ($e) {
return $e['parent_id'];
});
// Result will look like this when converted to array
[
10 => [
['id' => 1, 'name' => 'foo', 'parent_id' => 10],
['id' => 3, 'name' => 'baz', 'parent_id' => 10],
],
11 => [
['id' => 2, 'name' => 'bar', 'parent_id' => 11],
]
];
Parameters
-
callable|string
$path The column name to use for grouping or callback that returns the value. or a function returning the grouping key out of the provided element
Returns
self
indexBy() ¶ public
indexBy(callable|string $path): self
Given a list and a callback function that returns a key for each element in the list (or a property name), returns an object with an index of each item. Just like groupBy, but for when you know your keys are unique.
When $callback is a string it should be a property name to extract or a dot separated path of properties that should be followed to get the last one in the path.
Example:
$items = [
['id' => 1, 'name' => 'foo'],
['id' => 2, 'name' => 'bar'],
['id' => 3, 'name' => 'baz'],
];
$indexed = (new Collection($items))->indexBy('id');
// Or
$indexed = (new Collection($items))->indexBy(function ($e) {
return $e['id'];
});
// Result will look like this when converted to array
[
1 => ['id' => 1, 'name' => 'foo'],
3 => ['id' => 3, 'name' => 'baz'],
2 => ['id' => 2, 'name' => 'bar'],
];
Parameters
-
callable|string
$path The column name to use for indexing or callback that returns the value. or a function returning the indexing key out of the provided element
Returns
self
insert() ¶ public
insert(string $path, mixed $values): self
Returns a new collection containing each of the elements found in $values
as
a property inside the corresponding elements in this collection. The property
where the values will be inserted is described by the $path
parameter.
The $path can be a string with a property name or a dot separated path of properties that should be followed to get the last one in the path.
If a column or property could not be found for a particular element in the collection as part of the path, the element will be kept unchanged.
Example:
Insert ages into a collection containing users:
$items = [
['comment' => ['body' => 'cool', 'user' => ['name' => 'Mark']],
['comment' => ['body' => 'awesome', 'user' => ['name' => 'Renan']]
];
$ages = [25, 28];
$inserted = (new Collection($items))->insert('comment.user.age', $ages);
// Result will look like this when converted to array
[
['comment' => ['body' => 'cool', 'user' => ['name' => 'Mark', 'age' => 25]],
['comment' => ['body' => 'awesome', 'user' => ['name' => 'Renan', 'age' => 28]]
];
Parameters
-
string
$path a dot separated string symbolizing the path to follow inside the hierarchy of each value so that the value can be inserted
-
mixed
$values The values to be inserted at the specified path, values are matched with the elements in this collection by its positional index.
Returns
self
isEmpty() ¶ public
isEmpty(): bool
Returns whether there are elements in this collection
Example:
$items [1, 2, 3];
(new Collection($items))->isEmpty(); // false
(new Collection([]))->isEmpty(); // true
Returns
bool
jsonSerialize() ¶ public
jsonSerialize(): array
Returns the data that can be converted to JSON. This returns the same data
as toArray()
which contains only unique keys.
Part of JsonSerializable interface.
Returns
array
lazy() ¶ public
lazy(): self
Returns a new collection where any operations chained after it are guaranteed to be run lazily. That is, elements will be yielded one at a time.
A lazy collection can only be iterated once. A second attempt results in an error.
Returns
self
listNested() ¶ public
listNested(string|int $order = 'desc', callable|string $nestingKey = 'children'): self
Returns a new collection with each of the elements of this collection after flattening the tree structure. The tree structure is defined by nesting elements under a key with a known name. It is possible to specify such name by using the '$nestingKey' parameter.
By default all elements in the tree following a Depth First Search will be returned, that is, elements from the top parent to the leaves for each branch.
It is possible to return all elements from bottom to top using a Breadth First Search approach by passing the '$dir' parameter with 'asc'. That is, it will return all elements for the same tree depth first and from bottom to top.
Finally, you can specify to only get a collection with the leaf nodes in the tree structure. You do so by passing 'leaves' in the first argument.
The possible values for the first argument are aliases for the following constants and it is valid to pass those instead of the alias:
- desc: RecursiveIteratorIterator::SELF_FIRST
- asc: RecursiveIteratorIterator::CHILD_FIRST
- leaves: RecursiveIteratorIterator::LEAVES_ONLY
Example:
$collection = new Collection([
['id' => 1, 'children' => [['id' => 2, 'children' => [['id' => 3]]]]],
['id' => 4, 'children' => [['id' => 5]]]
]);
$flattenedIds = $collection->listNested()->extract('id'); // Yields [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
Parameters
-
string|int
$order optional The order in which to return the elements
-
callable|string
$nestingKey optional The key name under which children are nested or a callable function that will return the children list
Returns
self
map() ¶ public
map(callable $callback): self
Returns another collection after modifying each of the values in this one using the provided callable.
Each time the callback is executed it will receive the value of the element in the current iteration, the key of the element and this collection as arguments, in that order.
Example:
Getting a collection of booleans where true indicates if a person is female:
$collection = (new Collection($people))->map(function ($person, $key) {
return $person->gender === 'female';
});
Parameters
-
callable
$callback the method that will receive each of the elements and returns the new value for the key that is being iterated
Returns
self
match() ¶ public
match(array $conditions): self
Looks through each value in the list, returning a Collection of all the values that contain all of the key-value pairs listed in $conditions.
Example:
$items = [
['comment' => ['body' => 'cool', 'user' => ['name' => 'Mark']],
['comment' => ['body' => 'very cool', 'user' => ['name' => 'Renan']],
];
$extracted = (new Collection($items))->match(['user.name' => 'Renan']);
// Result will look like this when converted to array
[
['comment' => ['body' => 'very cool', 'user' => ['name' => 'Renan']]]
]
Parameters
-
array
$conditions a key-value list of conditions where the key is a property path as accepted by
Collection::extract
, and the value the condition against with each element will be matched
Returns
self
max() ¶ public
max(callable|string $path, int $sort = SORT_NUMERIC): mixed
Returns the top element in this collection after being sorted by a property. Check the sortBy method for information on the callback and $sort parameters
Examples:
// For a collection of employees
$max = $collection->max('age');
$max = $collection->max('user.salary');
$max = $collection->max(function ($e) {
return $e->get('user')->get('salary');
});
// Display employee name
echo $max->name;
Parameters
-
callable|string
$path The column name to use for sorting or callback that returns the value.
-
int
$sort optional The sort type, one of SORT_STRING, SORT_NUMERIC or SORT_NATURAL
Returns
mixed
See Also
median() ¶ public
median(callable|string|null $path = null): float|int|null
Returns the median of all the values extracted with $path or of this collection.
Example:
$items = [
['invoice' => ['total' => 400]],
['invoice' => ['total' => 500]]
['invoice' => ['total' => 100]]
['invoice' => ['total' => 333]]
['invoice' => ['total' => 200]]
];
$total = (new Collection($items))->median('invoice.total');
// Total: 333
$total = (new Collection([1, 2, 3, 4]))->median();
// Total: 2.5
The median of an empty set or 0 rows is null
. Collections with null
values are not considered empty.
Parameters
-
callable|string|null
$path optional The property name to compute the median or a function If no value is passed, an identity function will be used. that will return the value of the property to compute the median.
Returns
float|int|null
min() ¶ public
min(callable|string $path, int $sort = SORT_NUMERIC): mixed
Returns the bottom element in this collection after being sorted by a property. Check the sortBy method for information on the callback and $sort parameters
Examples:
// For a collection of employees
$min = $collection->min('age');
$min = $collection->min('user.salary');
$min = $collection->min(function ($e) {
return $e->get('user')->get('salary');
});
// Display employee name
echo $min->name;
Parameters
-
callable|string
$path The column name to use for sorting or callback that returns the value.
-
int
$sort optional The sort type, one of SORT_STRING, SORT_NUMERIC or SORT_NATURAL
Returns
mixed
See Also
nest() ¶ public
nest(callable|string $idPath, callable|string $parentPath, string $nestingKey = 'children'): self
Returns a new collection where the values are nested in a tree-like structure based on an id property path and a parent id property path.
Parameters
-
callable|string
$idPath the column name path to use for determining whether an element is a parent of another
-
callable|string
$parentPath the column name path to use for determining whether an element is a child of another
-
string
$nestingKey optional The key name under which children are nested
Returns
self
prepend() ¶ public
prepend(iterable $items): self
Prepend a set of items to a collection creating a new collection
Parameters
-
iterable
$items The items to prepend.
Returns
self
prependItem() ¶ public
prependItem(mixed $item, mixed $key = null): self
Prepend a single item creating a new collection.
Parameters
-
mixed
$item The item to prepend.
-
mixed
$key optional The key to prepend the item with. If null a key will be generated.
Returns
self
reduce() ¶ public
reduce(callable $callback, mixed $initial = null): mixed
Folds the values in this collection to a single value, as the result of applying the callback function to all elements. $zero is the initial state of the reduction, and each successive step of it should be returned by the callback function. If $zero is omitted the first value of the collection will be used in its place and reduction will start from the second item.
Parameters
-
callable
$callback The callback function to be called
-
mixed
$initial optional The state of reduction
Returns
mixed
reject() ¶ public
reject(callable $callback = null): self
Looks through each value in the collection, and returns another collection with
all the values that do not pass a truth test. This is the opposite of filter
.
Each time the callback is executed it will receive the value of the element in the current iteration, the key of the element and this collection as arguments, in that order.
Example:
Filtering even numbers in an array, at the end only values 1 and 3 will be present in the resulting collection:
$collection = (new Collection([1, 2, 3]))->reject(function ($value, $key) {
return $value % 2 === 0;
});
Parameters
-
callable
$callback optional the method that will receive each of the elements and returns true whether they should be out of the resulting collection. If left null, a callback that filters out truthy values will be used.
Returns
self
sample() ¶ public
sample(int $length = 10): self
Returns a new collection with maximum $length random elements from this collection
Parameters
-
int
$length optional the maximum number of elements to randomly take from this collection
Returns
self
shuffle() ¶ public
shuffle(): self
Returns a new collection with the elements placed in a random order, this function does not preserve the original keys in the collection.
Returns
self
skip() ¶ public
skip(int $length): self
Returns a new collection that will skip the specified amount of elements at the beginning of the iteration.
Parameters
-
int
$length The number of elements to skip.
Returns
self
some() ¶ public
some(callable $callback): bool
Returns true if any of the values in this collection pass the truth test provided in the callback.
The callback is passed the value and key of the element being tested and should return true if the test passed.
Example:
$hasYoungPeople = (new Collection([24, 45, 15]))->some(function ($value, $key) {
return $value < 21;
});
Parameters
-
callable
$callback a callback function
Returns
bool
sortBy() ¶ public
sortBy(callable|string $path, int $order = SORT_DESC, int $sort = SORT_NUMERIC): self
Returns a sorted iterator out of the elements in this collection, ranked based on the results of applying a callback function to each value. The parameter $path can also be a string representing the column or property name.
The callback will receive as its first argument each of the elements in $items, the value returned by the callback will be used as the value for sorting such element. Please note that the callback function could be called more than once per element.
Example:
$items = $collection->sortBy(function ($user) {
return $user->age;
});
// alternatively
$items = $collection->sortBy('age');
// or use a property path
$items = $collection->sortBy('department.name');
// output all user name order by their age in descending order
foreach ($items as $user) {
echo $user->name;
}
Parameters
-
callable|string
$path The column name to use for sorting or callback that returns the value.
-
int
$order optional The sort order, either SORT_DESC or SORT_ASC
-
int
$sort optional The sort type, one of SORT_STRING, SORT_NUMERIC or SORT_NATURAL
Returns
self
stopWhen() ¶ public
stopWhen(callable|array $condition): self
Creates a new collection that when iterated will stop yielding results if the provided condition evaluates to true.
This is handy for dealing with infinite iterators or any generator that could start returning invalid elements at a certain point. For example, when reading lines from a file stream you may want to stop the iteration after a certain value is reached.
Example:
Get an array of lines in a CSV file until the timestamp column is less than a date
$lines = (new Collection($fileLines))->stopWhen(function ($value, $key) {
return (new DateTime($value))->format('Y') < 2012;
})
->toArray();
Get elements until the first unapproved message is found:
$comments = (new Collection($comments))->stopWhen(['is_approved' => false]);
Parameters
-
callable|array
$condition the method that will receive each of the elements and returns true when the iteration should be stopped. If an array, it will be interpreted as a key-value list of conditions where the key is a property path as accepted by
Collection::extract
, and the value the condition against with each element will be matched.
Returns
self
sumOf() ¶ public
sumOf(callable|string|null $path = null): float|int
Returns the total sum of all the values extracted with $matcher or of this collection.
Example:
$items = [
['invoice' => ['total' => 100]],
['invoice' => ['total' => 200]],
];
$total = (new Collection($items))->sumOf('invoice.total');
// Total: 300
$total = (new Collection([1, 2, 3]))->sumOf();
// Total: 6
Parameters
-
callable|string|null
$path optional The property name to sum or a function If no value is passed, an identity function will be used. that will return the value of the property to sum.
Returns
float|int
take() ¶ public
take(int $length = 1, int $offset = 0): self
Returns a new collection with maximum $length elements in the internal order this collection was created. If a second parameter is passed, it will determine from what position to start taking elements.
Parameters
-
int
$length optional the maximum number of elements to take from this collection
-
int
$offset optional A positional offset from where to take the elements
Returns
self
takeLast() ¶ public
takeLast(int $length): self
Returns the last N elements of a collection
Example:
$items = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
$last = (new Collection($items))->takeLast(3);
// Result will look like this when converted to array
[3, 4, 5];
Parameters
-
int
$length The number of elements at the end of the collection
Returns
self
through() ¶ public
through(callable $callback): self
Passes this collection through a callable as its first argument. This is useful for decorating the full collection with another object.
Example:
$items = [1, 2, 3];
$decorated = (new Collection($items))->through(function ($collection) {
return new MyCustomCollection($collection);
});
Parameters
-
callable
$callback A callable function that will receive this collection as first argument.
Returns
self
toArray() ¶ public
toArray(bool $keepKeys = true): array
Returns an array representation of the results
Parameters
-
bool
$keepKeys optional Whether to use the keys returned by this collection as the array keys. Keep in mind that it is valid for iterators to return the same key for different elements, setting this value to false can help getting all items if keys are not important in the result.
Returns
array
toList() ¶ public
toList(): array
Returns an numerically-indexed array representation of the results.
This is equivalent to calling toArray(false)
Returns
array
transpose() ¶ public
transpose(): self
Transpose rows and columns into columns and rows
Example:
$items = [
['Products', '2012', '2013', '2014'],
['Product A', '200', '100', '50'],
['Product B', '300', '200', '100'],
['Product C', '400', '300', '200'],
]
$transpose = (new Collection($items))->transpose()->toList();
// Returns
// [
// ['Products', 'Product A', 'Product B', 'Product C'],
// ['2012', '200', '300', '400'],
// ['2013', '100', '200', '300'],
// ['2014', '50', '100', '200'],
// ]
Returns
self
unfold() ¶ public
unfold(callable|null $callback = null): self
Creates a new collection where the items are the concatenation of the lists of items generated by the transformer function applied to each item in the original collection.
The transformer function will receive the value and the key for each of the items in the collection, in that order, and it must return an array or a Traversable object that can be concatenated to the final result.
If no transformer function is passed, an "identity" function will be used. This is useful when each of the elements in the source collection are lists of items to be appended one after another.
Example:
$items [[1, 2, 3], [4, 5]];
$unfold = (new Collection($items))->unfold(); // Returns [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
Using a transformer
$items [1, 2, 3];
$allItems = (new Collection($items))->unfold(function ($page) {
return $service->fetchPage($page)->toArray();
});
Parameters
-
callable|null
$callback optional A callable function that will receive each of the items in the collection and should return an array or Traversable object
Returns
self
unique() ¶ public
unique(callable $callback = null): self
Loops through each value in the collection and returns a new collection
with only unique values based on the value returned by callback
.
The callback is passed the value as the first argument and the key as the second argument.
Parameters
-
callable
$callback optional the method that will receive each of the elements and returns the value used to determine uniqueness.
Returns
self
unwrap() ¶ public
unwrap(): Iterator
Returns the closest nested iterator that can be safely traversed without losing any possible transformations. This is used mainly to remove empty IteratorIterator wrappers that can only slowdown the iteration process.
Returns
Iterator
zip() ¶ public
zip(iterable ...$items): self
Combines the elements of this collection with each of the elements of the passed iterables, using their positional index as a reference.
Example:
$collection = new Collection([1, 2]);
$collection->zip([3, 4], [5, 6])->toList(); // returns [[1, 3, 5], [2, 4, 6]]
Parameters
-
iterable
...$items The collections to zip.
Returns
self
zipWith() ¶ public
zipWith(iterable $items, callable $callback): self
Combines the elements of this collection with each of the elements of the passed iterables, using their positional index as a reference.
The resulting element will be the return value of the $callable function.
Example:
$collection = new Collection([1, 2]);
$zipped = $collection->zipWith([3, 4], [5, 6], function (...$args) {
return array_sum($args);
});
$zipped->toList(); // returns [9, 12]; [(1 + 3 + 5), (2 + 4 + 6)]
Parameters
-
iterable
$items The collections to zip.
-
callable
$callback The function to use for zipping the elements together.
Returns
self