How do I convert an object to an array?
<?php
print_r($response->response->docs);
?>
Outputs the following:
Array
(
[0] => Object
(
[_fields:private] => Array
(
[id]=>9093
[name]=>zahir
)
Object
(
[_fields:private] => Array
(
[id]=>9094
[name]=>hussain
)..
)
)
How can I convert this object to an array? I'd like to output the following:
Array
(
[0]=>
(
[id]=>9093
[name]=>zahir
)
[1]=>
(
[id]=>9094
[name]=>hussain
)...
)
Is this possible?
Solution 1:
Single-dimensional arrays
For converting single-dimension arrays, you can cast using (array)
or there's get_object_vars
, which Benoit mentioned in
his answer.
// Cast to an array
$array = (array) $object;
// get_object_vars
$array = get_object_vars($object);
They work slightly different from each other. For example, get_object_vars
will return an array with only publicly accessible properties unless it is called from within the scope of the object you're passing (ie in a member function of the object). (array)
, on the other hand, will cast to an array with all public, private and protected members intact on the array, though all public now, of course.
Multi-dimensional arrays
A somewhat dirty method is to use PHP >= 5.2's native JSON functions to encode to JSON and then decode back to an array. This will not include private and protected members, however, and is not suitable for objects that contain data that cannot be JSON encoded (such as binary data).
// The second parameter of json_decode forces parsing into an associative array
$array = json_decode(json_encode($object), true);
Alternatively, the following function will convert from an object to an array including private and protected members, taken from here and modified to use casting:
function objectToArray ($object) {
if(!is_object($object) && !is_array($object))
return $object;
return array_map('objectToArray', (array) $object);
}
Solution 2:
You should look at get_object_vars , as your properties are declared private you should call this inside the class and return its results.
Be careful, for primitive data types like strings it will work great, but I don't know how it behaves with nested objects.
in your case you have to do something like;
<?php
print_r(get_object_vars($response->response->docs));
?>
Solution 3:
You can quickly convert deeply nested objects to associative arrays by relying on the behavior of the JSON encode/decode functions:
$array = json_decode(json_encode($response->response->docs), true);