1176
votes

I have an array:

array( 4 => 'apple', 7 => 'orange', 13 => 'plum' )

I would like to get the first element of this array. Expected result: string apple

One requirement: it cannot be done with passing by reference, so array_shift is not a good solution.

How can I do this?

30
What do you mean, can't be done by reference?cjk
Function should not works using &$array as params.hsz
I suspect that what you "really" mean by "can't be done by reference", is that your array is being returned dynamically from a database, and you don't want to pass the array into a variable before taking the first element from it. If I'm right, then the vast majority of all the solutions provided to you below (including the accepted answer), are insufficient.cartbeforehorse
Do you just have to get it or get it and remove it from the existing array?Jo Smo
For basic use of Arrays you can review this link technofusions.com/introduction-to-arrays-in-phpVikrant Vir Bhalla

30 Answers

1502
votes

Original answer, but costly (O(n)):

array_shift(array_values($array));

In O(1):

array_pop(array_reverse($array));

Other use cases, etc...

If modifying (in the sense of resetting array pointers) of $array is not a problem, you might use:

reset($array);

This should be theoretically more efficient, if a array "copy" is needed:

array_shift(array_slice($array, 0, 1));

With PHP 5.4+ (but might cause an index error if empty):

array_values($array)[0];
819
votes

As Mike pointed out (the easiest possible way):

$arr = array( 4 => 'apple', 7 => 'orange', 13 => 'plum' )
echo reset($arr); // Echoes "apple"

If you want to get the key: (execute it after reset)

echo key($arr); // Echoes "4"

From PHP's documentation:

mixed reset ( array &$array );

Description:

reset() rewinds array's internal pointer to the first element and returns the value of the first array element, or FALSE if the array is empty.

297
votes
$first_value = reset($array); // First element's value
$first_key = key($array); // First element's key
118
votes

current($array)

returns the first element of an array, according to the PHP manual.

Every array has an internal pointer to its "current" element, which is initialized to the first element inserted into the array.

So it works until you have re-positioned the array pointer, and otherwise you'll have to use reset() which ll rewind array and ll return first element of array

According to the PHP manual reset.

reset() rewinds array's internal pointer to the first element and returns the value of the first array element.

Examples of current() and reset()

$array = array('step one', 'step two', 'step three', 'step four');

// by default, the pointer is on the first element
echo current($array) . "<br />\n"; // "step one"

//Forward the array pointer and then reset it

// skip two steps
next($array);
next($array);
echo current($array) . "<br />\n"; // "step three"

// reset pointer, start again on step one
echo reset($array) . "<br />\n"; // "step one"
104
votes
$arr = $array = array( 9 => 'apple', 7 => 'orange', 13 => 'plum' );
echo reset($arr); // echoes 'apple'

If you don't want to lose the current pointer position, just create an alias for the array.

73
votes

You can get the Nth element with a language construct, "list":

// First item
list($firstItem) = $yourArray;

// First item from an array that is returned from a function
list($firstItem) = functionThatReturnsArray();

// Second item
list( , $secondItem) = $yourArray;

With the array_keys function you can do the same for keys:

list($firstKey) = array_keys($yourArray);
list(, $secondKey) = array_keys($yourArray);
55
votes

PHP 5.4+:

array_values($array)[0];
48
votes

PHP 7.3 added two functions for getting the first and the last key of an array directly without modification of the original array and without creating any temporary objects:

Apart from being semantically meaningful, these functions don't even move the array pointer (as foreach would do).

Having the keys, one can get the values by the keys directly.


Examples (all of them require PHP 7.3+)

Getting the first/last key and value:

$my_array = ['IT', 'rules', 'the', 'world'];

$first_key = array_key_first($my_array);
$first_value = $my_array[$first_key];

$last_key = array_key_last($my_array);
$last_value = $my_array[$last_key];

Getting the first/last value as one-liners, assuming the array cannot be empty:

$first_value = $my_array[ array_key_first($my_array) ];

$last_value = $my_array[ array_key_last($my_array) ];

Getting the first/last value as one-liners, with defaults for empty arrays:

$first_value = empty($my_array) ? 'default' : $my_array[ array_key_first($my_array) ];

$last_value = empty($my_array) ? 'default' : $my_array[ array_key_last($my_array) ];
28
votes

Suppose:

$array = array( 4 => 'apple', 7 => 'orange', 13 => 'plum' );

Just use:

$array[key($array)]

to get first element or

key($array)

to get first key.

Or you can unlink the first if you want to remove it.

27
votes

Some arrays don't work with functions like list, reset or current. Maybe they're "faux" arrays - partially implementing ArrayIterator, for example.

If you want to pull the first value regardless of the array, you can short-circuit an iterator:

foreach($array_with_unknown_keys as $value) break;

Your value will then be available in $value and the loop will break after the first iteration. This is more efficient than copying a potentially large array to a function like array_unshift(array_values($arr)).

You can grab the key this way too:

foreach($array_with_unknown_keys as $key=>$value) break;

If you're calling this from a function, simply return early:

function grab_first($arr) {
    foreach($arr as $value) return $value;
}
21
votes

From Laravel's helpers:

function head($array)
{
    return reset($array);
}

The array being passed by value to the function, the reset() affects the internal pointer of a copy of the array, and it doesn't touch the original array (note it returns false if the array is empty).

Usage example:

$data = ['foo', 'bar', 'baz'];

current($data); // foo
next($data); // bar
head($data); // foo
next($data); // baz

Also, here is an alternative. It's very marginally faster, but more interesting. It lets easily change the default value if the array is empty:

function head($array, $default = null)
{
    foreach ($array as $item) {
        return $item;
    }
    return $default;
}

For the record, here is another answer of mine, for the array's last element.

19
votes

Keep this simple! There are lots of correct answers here, but to minimize all the confusion, these two work and reduce a lot of overhead:

key($array) gets the first key of an array
current($array) gets the first value of an array


EDIT:
Regarding the comments below. The following example will output: string(13) "PHP code test"

$array = array
(
   '1'           => 'PHP code test',  
   'foo'         => 'bar', 5 , 5 => 89009, 
   'case'        => 'Random Stuff: '.rand(100,999),
   'PHP Version' => phpversion(),
   0             => 'ending text here'
);

var_dump(current($array));
14
votes

Simply do:

array_shift(array_slice($array,0,1));
13
votes

I would do echo current($array) .

12
votes
$arr = array( 4 => 'apple', 7 => 'orange', 13 => 'plum' );
foreach($arr as $first) break;
echo $first;

Output:

apple
9
votes
$myArray = array (4 => 'apple', 7 => 'orange', 13 => 'plum');
$arrayKeys = array_keys($myArray);

// The first element of your array is:
echo $myArray[$arrayKeys[0]];
8
votes
$array=array( 4 => 'apple', 7 => 'orange', 13 => 'plum' );

$firstValue = each($array)[1];

This is much more efficient than array_values() because the each() function does not copy the entire array.

For more info see http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.each.php

8
votes

Get first element:

array_values($arr)[0]

Get last element

array_reverse($arr)[0]
8
votes

PHP 7.3 added two functions for getting the first and the last key of an array directly without modification of the original array and without creating any temporary objects:

"There are several ways to provide this functionality for versions prior to PHP 7.3.0. It is possible to use array_keys(), but that may be rather inefficient. It is also possible to use reset() and key(), but that may change the internal array pointer. An efficient solution, which does not change the internal array pointer, written as polyfill:"

<?php
if (!function_exists('array_key_first')) {
    function array_key_first($arr) {
        foreach($arr as $key => $unused) {
            return $key;
        }
        return NULL;
    }
}

if (!function_exists('array_key_last')) {
    function array_key_last($arr) {
        return array_key_first(array_reverse($arr, true));
    }
}
?>
7
votes

A kludgy way is:

$foo = array( 4 => 'apple', 7 => 'orange', 13 => 'plum' );

function get_first ($foo) {
    foreach ($foo as $k=>$v){
        return $v;
    }
}

print get_first($foo);
6
votes

Most of these work! BUT for a quick single line (low resource) call:

$array = array( 4 => 'apple', 7 => 'orange', 13 => 'plum' );
echo $array[key($array)];

// key($array) -> will return the first key (which is 4 in this example)

Although this works, and decently well, please also see my additional answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/48410351/1804013

5
votes

Use:

$first = array_slice($array, 0, 1);  
$val= $first[0];

By default, array_slice does not preserve keys, so we can safely use zero as the index.

4
votes

This is a little late to the game, but I was presented with a problem where my array contained array elements as children inside it, and thus I couldn't just get a string representation of the first array element. By using PHP's current() function, I managed this:

<?php
    $original = array(4 => array('one', 'two'), 7 => array('three', 'four'));
    reset($original);  // to reset the internal array pointer...
    $first_element = current($original);  // get the current element...
?>

Thanks to all the current solutions helped me get to this answer, I hope this helps someone sometime!

3
votes

I think using array_values would be your best bet here. You could return the value at index zero from the result of that function to get 'apple'.

3
votes

Two solutions for you.

Solution 1 - Just use the key. You have not said that you can not use it. :)

<?php
    // Get the first element of this array.
    $array = array( 4 => 'apple', 7 => 'orange', 13 => 'plum' );

    // Gets the first element by key
    $result = $array[4];

    // Expected result: string apple
    assert('$result === "apple" /* Expected result: string apple. */');
?>

Solution 2 - array_flip() + key()

<?php
    // Get first element of this array. Expected result: string apple
    $array = array( 4 => 'apple', 7 => 'orange', 13 => 'plum' );

    // Turn values to keys
    $array = array_flip($array);

    // You might thrown a reset in just to make sure
    // that the array pointer is at the first element.
    // Also, reset returns the first element.
    // reset($myArray);

    // Return the first key
    $firstKey = key($array);

    assert('$firstKey === "apple" /* Expected result: string apple. */');
?>

Solution 3 - array_keys()

echo $array[array_keys($array)[0]];
2
votes

No one has suggested using the ArrayIterator class:

$array = array( 4 => 'apple', 7 => 'orange', 13 => 'plum' );
$first_element = (new ArrayIterator($array))->current();
echo $first_element; //'apple'

gets around the by reference stipulation of the OP.

2
votes

I imagine the author just was looking for a way to get the first element of an array after getting it from some function (mysql_fetch_row, for example) without generating a STRICT "Only variables should be passed by reference".

If it so, almost all the ways described here will get this message... and some of them uses a lot of additional memory duplicating an array (or some part of it). An easy way to avoid it is just assigning the value inline before calling any of those functions:

$first_item_of_array = current($tmp_arr = mysql_fetch_row(...));
// or
$first_item_of_array = reset($tmp_arr = func_get_my_huge_array());

This way you don't get the STRICT message on screen, nor in logs, and you don't create any additional arrays. It works with both indexed AND associative arrays.

1
votes

Use array_keys() to access the keys of your associative array as a numerical indexed array, which is then again can be used as key for the array.

When the solution is arr[0]:

(Note, that since the array with the keys is 0-based index, the 1st element is index 0)

You can use a variable and then subtract one, to get your logic, that 1 => 'apple'.

$i = 1;
$arr = array( 4 => 'apple', 7 => 'orange', 13 => 'plum' );
echo $arr[array_keys($arr)[$i-1]];

Output:

apple

Well, for simplicity- just use:

$arr = array( 4 => 'apple', 7 => 'orange', 13 => 'plum' );
echo $arr[array_keys($arr)[0]];

Output:

apple

By the first method not just the first element, but can treat an associative array like an indexed array.

1
votes

I don't like fiddling with the array's internal pointer, but it's also inefficient to build a second array with array_keys() or array_values(), so I usually define this:

function array_first(array $f) {
    foreach ($f as $v) {
        return $v;
    }
    throw new Exception('array was empty');
}
1
votes

Try this:

$fruits = array( 4 => 'apple', 7 => 'orange', 13 => 'plum' );
echo reset($fruits)."\n";