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Searches haystack for
needle and returns the key if it is found in
the array, FALSE
otherwise.
If needle is a string, the comparison is done in a case-sensitive manner.
Prior to PHP 4.2.0, array_search() returns
NULL
on failure instead of FALSE
.
If the optional third parameter strict is set to
TRUE
then the array_search()
will also check the types of the needle
in the haystack.
If needle is found in haystack more than once, the first matching key is returned. To return the keys for all matching values, use array_keys() with the optional search_value parameter instead.
<?php
$array = array(0 => 'blue', 1 => 'red', 2 => 'green', 3 => 'red');
$key = array_search('green', $array); // $key = 2;
$key = array_search('red', $array); // $key = 1;
?>
This function may
return Boolean FALSE
, but may also return a non-Boolean value which
evaluates to FALSE
, such as 0
or
"". Please read the section on Booleans for more
information. Use the ===
operator for testing the return value of this
function.
See also array_keys(), array_values(), array_key_exists(), and in_array().