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PHP defines the following set of symbols to be used as operators on array data types −
Symbol | Example | Name | Result |
---|---|---|---|
+ | $a + $b | Union | Union of $a and $b. |
== | $a == $b | Equality | TRUE if $a and $b have the same key/value pairs. |
=== | $a === $b | Identity | TRUE if $a and $b have the same key/value pairs in the same order and of the same types. |
!= | $a != $b | Inequality | TRUE if $a is not equal to $b. |
<> | $a <> $b | Inequality | TRUE if $a is not equal to $b. |
!== | $a !== $b | Non identity | TRUE if $a is not identical to $b. |
The Union operator appends the right-hand array appended to left-hand array. If a key exists in both arrays, the elements from the left-hand array will be used, and the matching elements from the right-hand array will be ignored.
Example: Union Opeator in PHP
The following example shows how you can use the union operator in PHP −
<?php $arr1=array("phy"=>70, "che"=>80, "math"=>90); $arr2=array("Eng"=>70, "Bio"=>80,"CompSci"=>90); $arr3=$arr1+$arr2; var_dump($arr3); ?>
It will produce the following output −
array(6) { ["phy"]=> int(70) ["che"]=> int(80) ["math"]=> int(90) ["Eng"]=> int(70) ["Bio"]=> int(80) ["CompSci"]=> int(90) }
Example: When Two Array are Equal
Two arrays are said to be equal if they have the same key-value pairs.
In the following example, we have an indexed array and other associative array with keys corresponding to index of elements in first. Hence, both are equal.
<?php $arr1=array(0=>70, 2=>80, 1=>90); $arr2=array(70,90,80); var_dump ($arr1==$arr2); var_dump ($arr2!=$arr1); ?>
It will produce the following output −
bool(true) bool(false)
Example: When Two Arrays are Identical
Arrays are identical if and only if both of them have same set of key-value pairs and in same order.
<?php $arr1=array(0=>70, 1=>80, 2=>90); $arr2=array(70,90,80); var_dump ($arr1===$arr2); $arr3=[70,80,90]; var_dump ($arr3===$arr1); ?>
It will produce the following output −
bool(false) bool(true)
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