Set Theory Union of arrays in PHP

array_unique( array_merge( ... ) )


Adrien's answer won't necessary produce a sequentially numbered array from two sequentially numbered arrays - here are some options that will:

array_values(array_unique(array_merge($array1, $array2)));

(Adrien's answer with renumbering the keys afterward)

array_keys(array_flip($array1)+array_flip($array2))

(Put the values in the keys, and use the array union operator)

array_merge($array1, array_diff($array2, $array1))

(Remove the shared values from the second array before merging)

Benchmark results (for merging two arrays of length 1000 a thousand times on my system):

  • Unique (Adrien's version): 2.862163066864 seconds
  • Values_Unique: 3.12 seconds
  • Keys_Flip: 2.34 seconds
  • Merge_Diff: 2.64 seconds

Same test, but with the two arrays being very similar (at least 80% duplicate):

  • Unique (Adrien's version): 2.92 seconds
  • Values_Unique: 3.15 seconds
  • Keys_Flip: 1.84 seconds
  • Merge_Diff: 2.36 seconds

It seems using the array union operator to do the actual union is the fastest method. Note however that array_flip is only safe if the array's values are all strings or all integers; if you have to produce the union of an array of objects, I recommend the version with array_merge and array_diff.


Try array_merge:

array_unique(array_merge($array1, $array2));

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