Introduction
The Illuminate\Support\Collection
class
provides a fluent, convenient wrapper for working with
arrays of data. For example, check out the following
code. We'll use the collect
helper to
create a new collection instance from the array, run the
strtoupper
function on each element, and
then remove all empty elements:
$collection = collect(['taylor', 'abigail', null])->map(function (?string $name) {
return strtoupper($name);
})->reject(function (string $name) {
return empty($name);
});
As you can see, the Collection
class allows
you to chain its methods to perform fluent mapping and
reducing of the underlying array. In general,
collections are immutable, meaning every
Collection
method returns an entirely new
Collection
instance.
Creating Collections
As mentioned above, the collect
helper
returns a new Illuminate\Support\Collection
instance for the given array. So, creating a collection
is as simple as:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3]);
Note:
The results of Eloquent queries are always returned asCollection
instances.
Extending Collections
Collections are "macroable", which allows you
to add additional methods to the Collection
class at run time. The
Illuminate\Support\Collection
class'
macro
method accepts a closure that will be
executed when your macro is called. The macro closure
may access the collection's other methods via
$this
, just as if it were a real method of
the collection class. For example, the following code
adds a toUpper
method to the
Collection
class:
use Illuminate\Support\Collection;
use Illuminate\Support\Str;
Collection::macro('toUpper', function () {
return $this->map(function (string $value) {
return Str::upper($value);
});
});
$collection = collect(['first', 'second']);
$upper = $collection->toUpper();
// ['FIRST', 'SECOND']
Typically, you should declare collection macros in the
boot
method of a service provider.
Macro Arguments
If necessary, you may define macros that accept additional arguments:
use Illuminate\Support\Collection;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Lang;
Collection::macro('toLocale', function (string $locale) {
return $this->map(function (string $value) use ($locale) {
return Lang::get($value, [], $locale);
});
});
$collection = collect(['first', 'second']);
$translated = $collection->toLocale('es');
Available Methods
For the majority of the remaining collection
documentation, we'll discuss each method available on
the Collection
class. Remember, all of
these methods may be chained to fluently manipulate the
underlying array. Furthermore, almost every method
returns a new Collection
instance, allowing
you to preserve the original copy of the collection when
necessary:
all average avg chunk chunkWhile collapse collect combine concat contains containsOneItem containsStrict count countBy crossJoin dd diff diffAssoc diffAssocUsing diffKeys doesntContain dot dump duplicates duplicatesStrict each eachSpread ensure every except filter first firstOrFail firstWhere flatMap flatten flip forget forPage get groupBy has hasAny implode intersect intersectAssoc intersectByKeys isEmpty isNotEmpty join keyBy keys last lazy macro make map mapInto mapSpread mapToGroups mapWithKeys max median merge mergeRecursive min mode nth only pad partition percentage pipe pipeInto pipeThrough pluck pop prepend pull push put random range reduce reduceSpread reject replace replaceRecursive reverse search select shift shuffle skip skipUntil skipWhile slice sliding sole some sort sortBy sortByDesc sortDesc sortKeys sortKeysDesc sortKeysUsing splice split splitIn sum take takeUntil takeWhile tap times toArray toJson transform undot union unique uniqueStrict unless unlessEmpty unlessNotEmpty unwrap value values when whenEmpty whenNotEmpty where whereStrict whereBetween whereIn whereInStrict whereInstanceOf whereNotBetween whereNotIn whereNotInStrict whereNotNull whereNull wrap zip
Method Listing
all()
{.collection-method
.first-collection-method}
The all
method returns the underlying array
represented by the collection:
collect([1, 2, 3])->all();
// [1, 2, 3]
average()
Alias for the avg
method.
avg()
The avg
method returns the average
value of a given key:
$average = collect([
['foo' => 10],
['foo' => 10],
['foo' => 20],
['foo' => 40]
])->avg('foo');
// 20
$average = collect([1, 1, 2, 4])->avg();
// 2
chunk()
The chunk
method breaks the collection into
multiple, smaller collections of a given size:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7]);
$chunks = $collection->chunk(4);
$chunks->all();
// [[1, 2, 3, 4], [5, 6, 7]]
This method is especially useful in views when working with a grid system such as Bootstrap. For example, imagine you have a collection of Eloquent models you want to display in a grid:
@foreach ($products->chunk(3) as $chunk)
<div class="row">
@foreach ($chunk as $product)
<div class="col-xs-4">{{ $product->name }}</div>
@endforeach
</div>
@endforeach
chunkWhile()
The chunkWhile
method breaks the collection
into multiple, smaller collections based on the
evaluation of the given callback. The
$chunk
variable passed to the closure may
be used to inspect the previous element:
$collection = collect(str_split('AABBCCCD'));
$chunks = $collection->chunkWhile(function (string $value, int $key, Collection $chunk) {
return $value === $chunk->last();
});
$chunks->all();
// [['A', 'A'], ['B', 'B'], ['C', 'C', 'C'], ['D']]
collapse()
The collapse
method collapses a collection
of arrays into a single, flat collection:
$collection = collect([
[1, 2, 3],
[4, 5, 6],
[7, 8, 9],
]);
$collapsed = $collection->collapse();
$collapsed->all();
// [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
collect()
The collect
method returns a new
Collection
instance with the items
currently in the collection:
$collectionA = collect([1, 2, 3]);
$collectionB = $collectionA->collect();
$collectionB->all();
// [1, 2, 3]
The collect
method is primarily useful for
converting lazy
collections into standard
Collection
instances:
$lazyCollection = LazyCollection::make(function () {
yield 1;
yield 2;
yield 3;
});
$collection = $lazyCollection->collect();
$collection::class;
// 'Illuminate\Support\Collection'
$collection->all();
// [1, 2, 3]
Note:
Thecollect
method is especially useful when you have an instance ofEnumerable
and need a non-lazy collection instance. Sincecollect()
is part of theEnumerable
contract, you can safely use it to get aCollection
instance.
combine()
The combine
method combines the values of
the collection, as keys, with the values of another
array or collection:
$collection = collect(['name', 'age']);
$combined = $collection->combine(['George', 29]);
$combined->all();
// ['name' => 'George', 'age' => 29]
concat()
The concat
method appends the given
array
or collection's values onto the end
of another collection:
$collection = collect(['John Doe']);
$concatenated = $collection->concat(['Jane Doe'])->concat(['name' => 'Johnny Doe']);
$concatenated->all();
// ['John Doe', 'Jane Doe', 'Johnny Doe']
The concat
method numerically reindexes keys
for items concatenated onto the original collection. To
maintain keys in associative collections, see the merge method.
contains()
The contains
method determines whether the
collection contains a given item. You may pass a closure
to the contains
method to determine if an
element exists in the collection matching a given truth
test:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
$collection->contains(function (int $value, int $key) {
return $value > 5;
});
// false
Alternatively, you may pass a string to the
contains
method to determine whether the
collection contains a given item value:
$collection = collect(['name' => 'Desk', 'price' => 100]);
$collection->contains('Desk');
// true
$collection->contains('New York');
// false
You may also pass a key / value pair to the
contains
method, which will determine if
the given pair exists in the collection:
$collection = collect([
['product' => 'Desk', 'price' => 200],
['product' => 'Chair', 'price' => 100],
]);
$collection->contains('product', 'Bookcase');
// false
The contains
method uses "loose"
comparisons when checking item values, meaning a string
with an integer value will be considered equal to an
integer of the same value. Use the containsStrict
method to filter using "strict"
comparisons.
For the inverse of contains
, see the doesntContain
method.
containsOneItem()
The containsOneItem
method determines
whether the collection contains a single item:
collect([])->containsOneItem();
// false
collect(['1'])->containsOneItem();
// true
collect(['1', '2'])->containsOneItem();
// false
containsStrict()
This method has the same signature as the contains
method; however, all values are compared using
"strict" comparisons.
Note:
This method's behavior is modified when using Eloquent Collections.
count()
The count
method returns the total number of
items in the collection:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4]);
$collection->count();
// 4
countBy()
The countBy
method counts the occurrences of
values in the collection. By default, the method counts
the occurrences of every element, allowing you to count
certain "types" of elements in the
collection:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 2, 2, 3]);
$counted = $collection->countBy();
$counted->all();
// [1 => 1, 2 => 3, 3 => 1]
You pass a closure to the countBy
method to
count all items by a custom value:
$collection = collect(['alice@gmail.com', 'bob@yahoo.com', 'carlos@gmail.com']);
$counted = $collection->countBy(function (string $email) {
return substr(strrchr($email, "@"), 1);
});
$counted->all();
// ['gmail.com' => 2, 'yahoo.com' => 1]
crossJoin()
The crossJoin
method cross joins the
collection's values among the given arrays or
collections, returning a Cartesian product with all
possible permutations:
$collection = collect([1, 2]);
$matrix = $collection->crossJoin(['a', 'b']);
$matrix->all();
/*
[
[1, 'a'],
[1, 'b'],
[2, 'a'],
[2, 'b'],
]
*/
$collection = collect([1, 2]);
$matrix = $collection->crossJoin(['a', 'b'], ['I', 'II']);
$matrix->all();
/*
[
[1, 'a', 'I'],
[1, 'a', 'II'],
[1, 'b', 'I'],
[1, 'b', 'II'],
[2, 'a', 'I'],
[2, 'a', 'II'],
[2, 'b', 'I'],
[2, 'b', 'II'],
]
*/
dd()
The dd
method dumps the collection's items
and ends execution of the script:
$collection = collect(['John Doe', 'Jane Doe']);
$collection->dd();
/*
Collection {
#items: array:2 [
0 => "John Doe"
1 => "Jane Doe"
]
}
*/
If you do not want to stop executing the script, use the
dump
method
instead.
diff()
The diff
method compares the collection
against another collection or a plain PHP
array
based on its values. This method will
return the values in the original collection that are
not present in the given collection:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
$diff = $collection->diff([2, 4, 6, 8]);
$diff->all();
// [1, 3, 5]
Note:
This method's behavior is modified when using Eloquent Collections.
diffAssoc()
The diffAssoc
method compares the collection
against another collection or a plain PHP
array
based on its keys and values. This
method will return the key / value pairs in the original
collection that are not present in the given
collection:
$collection = collect([
'color' => 'orange',
'type' => 'fruit',
'remain' => 6,
]);
$diff = $collection->diffAssoc([
'color' => 'yellow',
'type' => 'fruit',
'remain' => 3,
'used' => 6,
]);
$diff->all();
// ['color' => 'orange', 'remain' => 6]
diffAssocUsing()
Unlike diffAssoc
,
diffAssocUsing
accepts a user supplied
callback function for the indices comparison:
$collection = collect([
'color' => 'orange',
'type' => 'fruit',
'remain' => 6,
]);
$diff = $collection->diffAssocUsing([
'Color' => 'yellow',
'Type' => 'fruit',
'Remain' => 3,
], 'strnatcasecmp');
$diff->all();
// ['color' => 'orange', 'remain' => 6]
The callback must be a comparison function that returns
an integer less than, equal to, or greater than zero.
For more information, refer to the PHP documentation on
array_diff_uassoc
,
which is the PHP function that the
diffAssocUsing
method utilizes
internally.
diffKeys()
The diffKeys
method compares the collection
against another collection or a plain PHP
array
based on its keys. This method will
return the key / value pairs in the original collection
that are not present in the given collection:
$collection = collect([
'one' => 10,
'two' => 20,
'three' => 30,
'four' => 40,
'five' => 50,
]);
$diff = $collection->diffKeys([
'two' => 2,
'four' => 4,
'six' => 6,
'eight' => 8,
]);
$diff->all();
// ['one' => 10, 'three' => 30, 'five' => 50]
doesntContain()
The doesntContain
method determines whether
the collection does not contain a given item. You may
pass a closure to the doesntContain
method
to determine if an element does not exist in the
collection matching a given truth test:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
$collection->doesntContain(function (int $value, int $key) {
return $value < 5;
});
// false
Alternatively, you may pass a string to the
doesntContain
method to determine whether
the collection does not contain a given item value:
$collection = collect(['name' => 'Desk', 'price' => 100]);
$collection->doesntContain('Table');
// true
$collection->doesntContain('Desk');
// false
You may also pass a key / value pair to the
doesntContain
method, which will determine
if the given pair does not exist in the collection:
$collection = collect([
['product' => 'Desk', 'price' => 200],
['product' => 'Chair', 'price' => 100],
]);
$collection->doesntContain('product', 'Bookcase');
// true
The doesntContain
method uses
"loose" comparisons when checking item values,
meaning a string with an integer value will be
considered equal to an integer of the same value.
dot()
The dot
method flattens a multi-dimensional
collection into a single level collection that uses
"dot" notation to indicate depth:
$collection = collect(['products' => ['desk' => ['price' => 100]]]);
$flattened = $collection->dot();
$flattened->all();
// ['products.desk.price' => 100]
dump()
The dump
method dumps the collection's
items:
$collection = collect(['John Doe', 'Jane Doe']);
$collection->dump();
/*
Collection {
#items: array:2 [
0 => "John Doe"
1 => "Jane Doe"
]
}
*/
If you want to stop executing the script after dumping
the collection, use the dd
method
instead.
duplicates()
The duplicates
method retrieves and returns
duplicate values from the collection:
$collection = collect(['a', 'b', 'a', 'c', 'b']);
$collection->duplicates();
// [2 => 'a', 4 => 'b']
If the collection contains arrays or objects, you can pass the key of the attributes that you wish to check for duplicate values:
$employees = collect([
['email' => 'abigail@example.com', 'position' => 'Developer'],
['email' => 'james@example.com', 'position' => 'Designer'],
['email' => 'victoria@example.com', 'position' => 'Developer'],
]);
$employees->duplicates('position');
// [2 => 'Developer']
duplicatesStrict()
This method has the same signature as the duplicates
method; however, all values are compared using
"strict" comparisons.
each()
The each
method iterates over the items in
the collection and passes each item to a closure:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4]);
$collection->each(function (int $item, int $key) {
// ...
});
If you would like to stop iterating through the items,
you may return false
from your closure:
$collection->each(function (int $item, int $key) {
if (/* condition */) {
return false;
}
});
eachSpread()
The eachSpread
method iterates over the
collection's items, passing each nested item value into
the given callback:
$collection = collect([['John Doe', 35], ['Jane Doe', 33]]);
$collection->eachSpread(function (string $name, int $age) {
// ...
});
You may stop iterating through the items by returning
false
from the callback:
$collection->eachSpread(function (string $name, int $age) {
return false;
});
ensure()
The ensure
method may be used to verify that
all elements of a collection are of a given type or list
of types. Otherwise, an
UnexpectedValueException
will be
thrown:
return $collection->ensure(User::class);
return $collection->ensure([User::class, Customer::class]);
Primitive types such as string
,
int
, float
, bool
,
and array
may also be specified:
return $collection->ensure('int');
Warning!
Theensure
method does not guarantee that elements of different types will not be added to the collection at a later time.
every()
The every
method may be used to verify that
all elements of a collection pass a given truth
test:
collect([1, 2, 3, 4])->every(function (int $value, int $key) {
return $value > 2;
});
// false
If the collection is empty, the every
method
will return true:
$collection = collect([]);
$collection->every(function (int $value, int $key) {
return $value > 2;
});
// true
except()
The except
method returns all items in the
collection except for those with the specified keys:
$collection = collect(['product_id' => 1, 'price' => 100, 'discount' => false]);
$filtered = $collection->except(['price', 'discount']);
$filtered->all();
// ['product_id' => 1]
For the inverse of except
, see the only method.
Note:
This method's behavior is modified when using Eloquent Collections.
filter()
The filter
method filters the collection
using the given callback, keeping only those items that
pass a given truth test:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4]);
$filtered = $collection->filter(function (int $value, int $key) {
return $value > 2;
});
$filtered->all();
// [3, 4]
If no callback is supplied, all entries of the collection
that are equivalent to false
will be
removed:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, null, false, '', 0, []]);
$collection->filter()->all();
// [1, 2, 3]
For the inverse of filter
, see the reject method.
first()
The first
method returns the first element
in the collection that passes a given truth test:
collect([1, 2, 3, 4])->first(function (int $value, int $key) {
return $value > 2;
});
// 3
You may also call the first
method with no
arguments to get the first element in the collection. If
the collection is empty, null
is
returned:
collect([1, 2, 3, 4])->first();
// 1
firstOrFail()
The firstOrFail
method is identical to the
first
method; however, if no result is
found, an
Illuminate\Support\ItemNotFoundException
exception will be thrown:
collect([1, 2, 3, 4])->firstOrFail(function (int $value, int $key) {
return $value > 5;
});
// Throws ItemNotFoundException...
You may also call the firstOrFail
method
with no arguments to get the first element in the
collection. If the collection is empty, an
Illuminate\Support\ItemNotFoundException
exception will be thrown:
collect([])->firstOrFail();
// Throws ItemNotFoundException...
firstWhere()
The firstWhere
method returns the first
element in the collection with the given key / value
pair:
$collection = collect([
['name' => 'Regena', 'age' => null],
['name' => 'Linda', 'age' => 14],
['name' => 'Diego', 'age' => 23],
['name' => 'Linda', 'age' => 84],
]);
$collection->firstWhere('name', 'Linda');
// ['name' => 'Linda', 'age' => 14]
You may also call the firstWhere
method with
a comparison operator:
$collection->firstWhere('age', '>=', 18);
// ['name' => 'Diego', 'age' => 23]
Like the where method, you
may pass one argument to the firstWhere
method. In this scenario, the firstWhere
method will return the first item where the given item
key's value is "truthy":
$collection->firstWhere('age');
// ['name' => 'Linda', 'age' => 14]
flatMap()
The flatMap
method iterates through the
collection and passes each value to the given closure.
The closure is free to modify the item and return it,
thus forming a new collection of modified items. Then,
the array is flattened by one level:
$collection = collect([
['name' => 'Sally'],
['school' => 'Arkansas'],
['age' => 28]
]);
$flattened = $collection->flatMap(function (array $values) {
return array_map('strtoupper', $values);
});
$flattened->all();
// ['name' => 'SALLY', 'school' => 'ARKANSAS', 'age' => '28'];
flatten()
The flatten
method flattens a
multi-dimensional collection into a single
dimension:
$collection = collect([
'name' => 'taylor',
'languages' => [
'php', 'javascript'
]
]);
$flattened = $collection->flatten();
$flattened->all();
// ['taylor', 'php', 'javascript'];
If necessary, you may pass the flatten
method a "depth" argument:
$collection = collect([
'Apple' => [
[
'name' => 'iPhone 6S',
'brand' => 'Apple'
],
],
'Samsung' => [
[
'name' => 'Galaxy S7',
'brand' => 'Samsung'
],
],
]);
$products = $collection->flatten(1);
$products->values()->all();
/*
[
['name' => 'iPhone 6S', 'brand' => 'Apple'],
['name' => 'Galaxy S7', 'brand' => 'Samsung'],
]
*/
In this example, calling flatten
without
providing the depth would have also flattened the nested
arrays, resulting in ['iPhone 6S', 'Apple',
'Galaxy S7', 'Samsung']
. Providing a depth
allows you to specify the number of levels nested arrays
will be flattened.
flip()
The flip
method swaps the collection's keys
with their corresponding values:
$collection = collect(['name' => 'taylor', 'framework' => 'laravel']);
$flipped = $collection->flip();
$flipped->all();
// ['taylor' => 'name', 'laravel' => 'framework']
forget()
The forget
method removes an item from the
collection by its key:
$collection = collect(['name' => 'taylor', 'framework' => 'laravel']);
$collection->forget('name');
$collection->all();
// ['framework' => 'laravel']
Warning!
Unlike most other collection methods,forget
does not return a new modified collection; it modifies the collection it is called on.
forPage()
The forPage
method returns a new collection
containing the items that would be present on a given
page number. The method accepts the page number as its
first argument and the number of items to show per page
as its second argument:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]);
$chunk = $collection->forPage(2, 3);
$chunk->all();
// [4, 5, 6]
get()
The get
method returns the item at a given
key. If the key does not exist, null
is
returned:
$collection = collect(['name' => 'taylor', 'framework' => 'laravel']);
$value = $collection->get('name');
// taylor
You may optionally pass a default value as the second argument:
$collection = collect(['name' => 'taylor', 'framework' => 'laravel']);
$value = $collection->get('age', 34);
// 34
You may even pass a callback as the method's default value. The result of the callback will be returned if the specified key does not exist:
$collection->get('email', function () {
return 'taylor@example.com';
});
// taylor@example.com
groupBy()
The groupBy
method groups the collection's
items by a given key:
$collection = collect([
['account_id' => 'account-x10', 'product' => 'Chair'],
['account_id' => 'account-x10', 'product' => 'Bookcase'],
['account_id' => 'account-x11', 'product' => 'Desk'],
]);
$grouped = $collection->groupBy('account_id');
$grouped->all();
/*
[
'account-x10' => [
['account_id' => 'account-x10', 'product' => 'Chair'],
['account_id' => 'account-x10', 'product' => 'Bookcase'],
],
'account-x11' => [
['account_id' => 'account-x11', 'product' => 'Desk'],
],
]
*/
Instead of passing a string key
, you may
pass a callback. The callback should return the value
you wish to key the group by:
$grouped = $collection->groupBy(function (array $item, int $key) {
return substr($item['account_id'], -3);
});
$grouped->all();
/*
[
'x10' => [
['account_id' => 'account-x10', 'product' => 'Chair'],
['account_id' => 'account-x10', 'product' => 'Bookcase'],
],
'x11' => [
['account_id' => 'account-x11', 'product' => 'Desk'],
],
]
*/
Multiple grouping criteria may be passed as an array. Each array element will be applied to the corresponding level within a multi-dimensional array:
$data = new Collection([
10 => ['user' => 1, 'skill' => 1, 'roles' => ['Role_1', 'Role_3']],
20 => ['user' => 2, 'skill' => 1, 'roles' => ['Role_1', 'Role_2']],
30 => ['user' => 3, 'skill' => 2, 'roles' => ['Role_1']],
40 => ['user' => 4, 'skill' => 2, 'roles' => ['Role_2']],
]);
$result = $data->groupBy(['skill', function (array $item) {
return $item['roles'];
}], preserveKeys: true);
/*
[
1 => [
'Role_1' => [
10 => ['user' => 1, 'skill' => 1, 'roles' => ['Role_1', 'Role_3']],
20 => ['user' => 2, 'skill' => 1, 'roles' => ['Role_1', 'Role_2']],
],
'Role_2' => [
20 => ['user' => 2, 'skill' => 1, 'roles' => ['Role_1', 'Role_2']],
],
'Role_3' => [
10 => ['user' => 1, 'skill' => 1, 'roles' => ['Role_1', 'Role_3']],
],
],
2 => [
'Role_1' => [
30 => ['user' => 3, 'skill' => 2, 'roles' => ['Role_1']],
],
'Role_2' => [
40 => ['user' => 4, 'skill' => 2, 'roles' => ['Role_2']],
],
],
];
*/
has()
The has
method determines if a given key
exists in the collection:
$collection = collect(['account_id' => 1, 'product' => 'Desk', 'amount' => 5]);
$collection->has('product');
// true
$collection->has(['product', 'amount']);
// true
$collection->has(['amount', 'price']);
// false
hasAny()
The hasAny
method determines whether any of
the given keys exist in the collection:
$collection = collect(['account_id' => 1, 'product' => 'Desk', 'amount' => 5]);
$collection->hasAny(['product', 'price']);
// true
$collection->hasAny(['name', 'price']);
// false
implode()
The implode
method joins items in a
collection. Its arguments depend on the type of items in
the collection. If the collection contains arrays or
objects, you should pass the key of the attributes you
wish to join, and the "glue" string you wish
to place between the values:
$collection = collect([
['account_id' => 1, 'product' => 'Desk'],
['account_id' => 2, 'product' => 'Chair'],
]);
$collection->implode('product', ', ');
// Desk, Chair
If the collection contains simple strings or numeric values, you should pass the "glue" as the only argument to the method:
collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5])->implode('-');
// '1-2-3-4-5'
You may pass a closure to the implode
method
if you would like to format the values being
imploded:
$collection->implode(function (array $item, int $key) {
return strtoupper($item['product']);
}, ', ');
// DESK, CHAIR
intersect()
The intersect
method removes any values from
the original collection that are not present in the
given array
or collection. The resulting
collection will preserve the original collection's
keys:
$collection = collect(['Desk', 'Sofa', 'Chair']);
$intersect = $collection->intersect(['Desk', 'Chair', 'Bookcase']);
$intersect->all();
// [0 => 'Desk', 2 => 'Chair']
Note:
This method's behavior is modified when using Eloquent Collections.
intersectAssoc()
The intersectAssoc
method compares the
original collection against another collection or
array
, returning the key / value pairs that
are present in all of the given collections:
$collection = collect([
'color' => 'red',
'size' => 'M',
'material' => 'cotton'
]);
$intersect = $collection->intersectAssoc([
'color' => 'blue',
'size' => 'M',
'material' => 'polyester'
]);
$intersect->all();
// ['size' => 'M']
intersectByKeys()
The intersectByKeys
method removes any keys
and their corresponding values from the original
collection that are not present in the given
array
or collection:
$collection = collect([
'serial' => 'UX301', 'type' => 'screen', 'year' => 2009,
]);
$intersect = $collection->intersectByKeys([
'reference' => 'UX404', 'type' => 'tab', 'year' => 2011,
]);
$intersect->all();
// ['type' => 'screen', 'year' => 2009]
isEmpty()
The isEmpty
method returns true
if the collection is empty; otherwise,
false
is returned:
collect([])->isEmpty();
// true
isNotEmpty()
The isNotEmpty
method returns
true
if the collection is not empty;
otherwise, false
is returned:
collect([])->isNotEmpty();
// false
join()
The join
method joins the collection's
values with a string. Using this method's second
argument, you may also specify how the final element
should be appended to the string:
collect(['a', 'b', 'c'])->join(', '); // 'a, b, c'
collect(['a', 'b', 'c'])->join(', ', ', and '); // 'a, b, and c'
collect(['a', 'b'])->join(', ', ' and '); // 'a and b'
collect(['a'])->join(', ', ' and '); // 'a'
collect([])->join(', ', ' and '); // ''
keyBy()
The keyBy
method keys the collection by the
given key. If multiple items have the same key, only the
last one will appear in the new collection:
$collection = collect([
['product_id' => 'prod-100', 'name' => 'Desk'],
['product_id' => 'prod-200', 'name' => 'Chair'],
]);
$keyed = $collection->keyBy('product_id');
$keyed->all();
/*
[
'prod-100' => ['product_id' => 'prod-100', 'name' => 'Desk'],
'prod-200' => ['product_id' => 'prod-200', 'name' => 'Chair'],
]
*/
You may also pass a callback to the method. The callback should return the value to key the collection by:
$keyed = $collection->keyBy(function (array $item, int $key) {
return strtoupper($item['product_id']);
});
$keyed->all();
/*
[
'PROD-100' => ['product_id' => 'prod-100', 'name' => 'Desk'],
'PROD-200' => ['product_id' => 'prod-200', 'name' => 'Chair'],
]
*/
keys()
The keys
method returns all of the
collection's keys:
$collection = collect([
'prod-100' => ['product_id' => 'prod-100', 'name' => 'Desk'],
'prod-200' => ['product_id' => 'prod-200', 'name' => 'Chair'],
]);
$keys = $collection->keys();
$keys->all();
// ['prod-100', 'prod-200']
last()
The last
method returns the last element in
the collection that passes a given truth test:
collect([1, 2, 3, 4])->last(function (int $value, int $key) {
return $value < 3;
});
// 2
You may also call the last
method with no
arguments to get the last element in the collection. If
the collection is empty, null
is
returned:
collect([1, 2, 3, 4])->last();
// 4
lazy()
The lazy
method returns a new LazyCollection
instance from the underlying array of items:
$lazyCollection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4])->lazy();
$lazyCollection::class;
// Illuminate\Support\LazyCollection
$lazyCollection->all();
// [1, 2, 3, 4]
This is especially useful when you need to perform
transformations on a huge Collection
that
contains many items:
$count = $hugeCollection
->lazy()
->where('country', 'FR')
->where('balance', '>', '100')
->count();
By converting the collection to a
LazyCollection
, we avoid having to allocate
a ton of additional memory. Though the original
collection still keeps its values in memory,
the subsequent filters will not. Therefore, virtually no
additional memory will be allocated when filtering the
collection's results.
macro()
The static macro
method allows you to add
methods to the Collection
class at run
time. Refer to the documentation on extending
collections for more information.
make()
The static make
method creates a new
collection instance. See the Creating
Collections section.
map()
The map
method iterates through the
collection and passes each value to the given callback.
The callback is free to modify the item and return it,
thus forming a new collection of modified items:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
$multiplied = $collection->map(function (int $item, int $key) {
return $item * 2;
});
$multiplied->all();
// [2, 4, 6, 8, 10]
Warning!
Like most other collection methods,map
returns a new collection instance; it does not modify the collection it is called on. If you want to transform the original collection, use thetransform
method.
mapInto()
The mapInto()
method iterates over the
collection, creating a new instance of the given class
by passing the value into the constructor:
class Currency
{
/**
* Create a new currency instance.
*/
function __construct(
public string $code
) {}
}
$collection = collect(['USD', 'EUR', 'GBP']);
$currencies = $collection->mapInto(Currency::class);
$currencies->all();
// [Currency('USD'), Currency('EUR'), Currency('GBP')]
mapSpread()
The mapSpread
method iterates over the
collection's items, passing each nested item value into
the given closure. The closure is free to modify the
item and return it, thus forming a new collection of
modified items:
$collection = collect([0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]);
$chunks = $collection->chunk(2);
$sequence = $chunks->mapSpread(function (int $even, int $odd) {
return $even $odd;
});
$sequence->all();
// [1, 5, 9, 13, 17]
mapToGroups()
The mapToGroups
method groups the
collection's items by the given closure. The closure
should return an associative array containing a single
key / value pair, thus forming a new collection of
grouped values:
$collection = collect([
[
'name' => 'John Doe',
'department' => 'Sales',
],
[
'name' => 'Jane Doe',
'department' => 'Sales',
],
[
'name' => 'Johnny Doe',
'department' => 'Marketing',
]
]);
$grouped = $collection->mapToGroups(function (array $item, int $key) {
return [$item['department'] => $item['name']];
});
$grouped->all();
/*
[
'Sales' => ['John Doe', 'Jane Doe'],
'Marketing' => ['Johnny Doe'],
]
*/
$grouped->get('Sales')->all();
// ['John Doe', 'Jane Doe']
mapWithKeys()
The mapWithKeys
method iterates through the
collection and passes each value to the given callback.
The callback should return an associative array
containing a single key / value pair:
$collection = collect([
[
'name' => 'John',
'department' => 'Sales',
'email' => 'john@example.com',
],
[
'name' => 'Jane',
'department' => 'Marketing',
'email' => 'jane@example.com',
]
]);
$keyed = $collection->mapWithKeys(function (array $item, int $key) {
return [$item['email'] => $item['name']];
});
$keyed->all();
/*
[
'john@example.com' => 'John',
'jane@example.com' => 'Jane',
]
*/
max()
The max
method returns the maximum value of
a given key:
$max = collect([
['foo' => 10],
['foo' => 20]
])->max('foo');
// 20
$max = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5])->max();
// 5
median()
The median
method returns the median
value of a given key:
$median = collect([
['foo' => 10],
['foo' => 10],
['foo' => 20],
['foo' => 40]
])->median('foo');
// 15
$median = collect([1, 1, 2, 4])->median();
// 1.5
merge()
The merge
method merges the given array or
collection with the original collection. If a string key
in the given items matches a string key in the original
collection, the given item's value will overwrite the
value in the original collection:
$collection = collect(['product_id' => 1, 'price' => 100]);
$merged = $collection->merge(['price' => 200, 'discount' => false]);
$merged->all();
// ['product_id' => 1, 'price' => 200, 'discount' => false]
If the given item's keys are numeric, the values will be appended to the end of the collection:
$collection = collect(['Desk', 'Chair']);
$merged = $collection->merge(['Bookcase', 'Door']);
$merged->all();
// ['Desk', 'Chair', 'Bookcase', 'Door']
mergeRecursive()
The mergeRecursive
method merges the given
array or collection recursively with the original
collection. If a string key in the given items matches a
string key in the original collection, then the values
for these keys are merged together into an array, and
this is done recursively:
$collection = collect(['product_id' => 1, 'price' => 100]);
$merged = $collection->mergeRecursive([
'product_id' => 2,
'price' => 200,
'discount' => false
]);
$merged->all();
// ['product_id' => [1, 2], 'price' => [100, 200], 'discount' => false]
min()
The min
method returns the minimum value of
a given key:
$min = collect([['foo' => 10], ['foo' => 20]])->min('foo');
// 10
$min = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5])->min();
// 1
mode()
The mode
method returns the mode
value of a given key:
$mode = collect([
['foo' => 10],
['foo' => 10],
['foo' => 20],
['foo' => 40]
])->mode('foo');
// [10]
$mode = collect([1, 1, 2, 4])->mode();
// [1]
$mode = collect([1, 1, 2, 2])->mode();
// [1, 2]
nth()
The nth
method creates a new collection
consisting of every n-th element:
$collection = collect(['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e', 'f']);
$collection->nth(4);
// ['a', 'e']
You may optionally pass a starting offset as the second argument:
$collection->nth(4, 1);
// ['b', 'f']
only()
The only
method returns the items in the
collection with the specified keys:
$collection = collect([
'product_id' => 1,
'name' => 'Desk',
'price' => 100,
'discount' => false
]);
$filtered = $collection->only(['product_id', 'name']);
$filtered->all();
// ['product_id' => 1, 'name' => 'Desk']
For the inverse of only
, see the except method.
Note:
This method's behavior is modified when using Eloquent Collections.
pad()
The pad
method will fill the array with the
given value until the array reaches the specified size.
This method behaves like the array_pad
PHP function.
To pad to the left, you should specify a negative size. No padding will take place if the absolute value of the given size is less than or equal to the length of the array:
$collection = collect(['A', 'B', 'C']);
$filtered = $collection->pad(5, 0);
$filtered->all();
// ['A', 'B', 'C', 0, 0]
$filtered = $collection->pad(-5, 0);
$filtered->all();
// [0, 0, 'A', 'B', 'C']
partition()
The partition
method may be combined with
PHP array destructuring to separate elements that pass a
given truth test from those that do not:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]);
[$underThree, $equalOrAboveThree] = $collection->partition(function (int $i) {
return $i < 3;
});
$underThree->all();
// [1, 2]
$equalOrAboveThree->all();
// [3, 4, 5, 6]
percentage()
The percentage
method may be used to quickly
determine the percentage of items in the collection that
pass a given truth test:
$collection = collect([1, 1, 2, 2, 2, 3]);
$percentage = $collection->percentage(fn ($value) => $value === 1);
// 33.33
By default, the percentage will be rounded to two decimal places. However, you may customize this behavior by providing a second argument to the method:
$percentage = $collection->percentage(fn ($value) => $value === 1, precision: 3);
// 33.333
pipe()
The pipe
method passes the collection to the
given closure and returns the result of the executed
closure:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3]);
$piped = $collection->pipe(function (Collection $collection) {
return $collection->sum();
});
// 6
pipeInto()
The pipeInto
method creates a new instance
of the given class and passes the collection into the
constructor:
class ResourceCollection
{
/**
* Create a new ResourceCollection instance.
*/
public function __construct(
public Collection $collection,
) {}
}
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3]);
$resource = $collection->pipeInto(ResourceCollection::class);
$resource->collection->all();
// [1, 2, 3]
pipeThrough()
The pipeThrough
method passes the collection
to the given array of closures and returns the result of
the executed closures:
use Illuminate\Support\Collection;
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3]);
$result = $collection->pipeThrough([
function (Collection $collection) {
return $collection->merge([4, 5]);
},
function (Collection $collection) {
return $collection->sum();
},
]);
// 15
pluck()
The pluck
method retrieves all of the values
for a given key:
$collection = collect([
['product_id' => 'prod-100', 'name' => 'Desk'],
['product_id' => 'prod-200', 'name' => 'Chair'],
]);
$plucked = $collection->pluck('name');
$plucked->all();
// ['Desk', 'Chair']
You may also specify how you wish the resulting collection to be keyed:
$plucked = $collection->pluck('name', 'product_id');
$plucked->all();
// ['prod-100' => 'Desk', 'prod-200' => 'Chair']
The pluck
method also supports retrieving
nested values using "dot" notation:
$collection = collect([
[
'name' => 'Laracon',
'speakers' => [
'first_day' => ['Rosa', 'Judith'],
],
],
[
'name' => 'VueConf',
'speakers' => [
'first_day' => ['Abigail', 'Joey'],
],
],
]);
$plucked = $collection->pluck('speakers.first_day');
$plucked->all();
// [['Rosa', 'Judith'], ['Abigail', 'Joey']]
If duplicate keys exist, the last matching element will be inserted into the plucked collection:
$collection = collect([
['brand' => 'Tesla', 'color' => 'red'],
['brand' => 'Pagani', 'color' => 'white'],
['brand' => 'Tesla', 'color' => 'black'],
['brand' => 'Pagani', 'color' => 'orange'],
]);
$plucked = $collection->pluck('color', 'brand');
$plucked->all();
// ['Tesla' => 'black', 'Pagani' => 'orange']
pop()
The pop
method removes and returns the last
item from the collection:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
$collection->pop();
// 5
$collection->all();
// [1, 2, 3, 4]
You may pass an integer to the pop
method to
remove and return multiple items from the end of a
collection:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
$collection->pop(3);
// collect([5, 4, 3])
$collection->all();
// [1, 2]
prepend()
The prepend
method adds an item to the
beginning of the collection:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
$collection->prepend(0);
$collection->all();
// [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
You may also pass a second argument to specify the key of the prepended item:
$collection = collect(['one' => 1, 'two' => 2]);
$collection->prepend(0, 'zero');
$collection->all();
// ['zero' => 0, 'one' => 1, 'two' => 2]
pull()
The pull
method removes and returns an item
from the collection by its key:
$collection = collect(['product_id' => 'prod-100', 'name' => 'Desk']);
$collection->pull('name');
// 'Desk'
$collection->all();
// ['product_id' => 'prod-100']
push()
The push
method appends an item to the end
of the collection:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4]);
$collection->push(5);
$collection->all();
// [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
put()
The put
method sets the given key and value
in the collection:
$collection = collect(['product_id' => 1, 'name' => 'Desk']);
$collection->put('price', 100);
$collection->all();
// ['product_id' => 1, 'name' => 'Desk', 'price' => 100]
random()
The random
method returns a random item from
the collection:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
$collection->random();
// 4 - (retrieved randomly)
You may pass an integer to random
to specify
how many items you would like to randomly retrieve. A
collection of items is always returned when explicitly
passing the number of items you wish to receive:
$random = $collection->random(3);
$random->all();
// [2, 4, 5] - (retrieved randomly)
If the collection instance has fewer items than
requested, the random
method will throw an
InvalidArgumentException
.
The random
method also accepts a closure,
which will receive the current collection instance:
use Illuminate\Support\Collection;
$random = $collection->random(fn (Collection $items) => min(10, count($items)));
$random->all();
// [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] - (retrieved randomly)
range()
The range
method returns a collection
containing integers between the specified range:
$collection = collect()->range(3, 6);
$collection->all();
// [3, 4, 5, 6]
reduce()
The reduce
method reduces the collection to
a single value, passing the result of each iteration
into the subsequent iteration:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3]);
$total = $collection->reduce(function (?int $carry, int $item) {
return $carry $item;
});
// 6
The value for $carry
on the first iteration
is null
; however, you may specify its
initial value by passing a second argument to
reduce
:
$collection->reduce(function (int $carry, int $item) {
return $carry $item;
}, 4);
// 10
The reduce
method also passes array keys in
associative collections to the given callback:
$collection = collect([
'usd' => 1400,
'gbp' => 1200,
'eur' => 1000,
]);
$ratio = [
'usd' => 1,
'gbp' => 1.37,
'eur' => 1.22,
];
$collection->reduce(function (int $carry, int $value, int $key) use ($ratio) {
return $carry ($value * $ratio[$key]);
});
// 4264
reduceSpread()
The reduceSpread
method reduces the
collection to an array of values, passing the results of
each iteration into the subsequent iteration. This
method is similar to the reduce
method;
however, it can accept multiple initial values:
[$creditsRemaining, $batch] = Image::where('status', 'unprocessed')
->get()
->reduceSpread(function (int $creditsRemaining, Collection $batch, Image $image) {
if ($creditsRemaining >= $image->creditsRequired()) {
$batch->push($image);
$creditsRemaining -= $image->creditsRequired();
}
return [$creditsRemaining, $batch];
}, $creditsAvailable, collect());
reject()
The reject
method filters the collection
using the given closure. The closure should return
true
if the item should be removed from the
resulting collection:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4]);
$filtered = $collection->reject(function (int $value, int $key) {
return $value > 2;
});
$filtered->all();
// [1, 2]
For the inverse of the reject
method, see
the filter
method.
replace()
The replace
method behaves similarly to
merge
; however, in addition to overwriting
matching items that have string keys, the
replace
method will also overwrite items in
the collection that have matching numeric keys:
$collection = collect(['Taylor', 'Abigail', 'James']);
$replaced = $collection->replace([1 => 'Victoria', 3 => 'Finn']);
$replaced->all();
// ['Taylor', 'Victoria', 'James', 'Finn']
replaceRecursive()
This method works like replace
, but it will
recur into arrays and apply the same replacement process
to the inner values:
$collection = collect([
'Taylor',
'Abigail',
[
'James',
'Victoria',
'Finn'
]
]);
$replaced = $collection->replaceRecursive([
'Charlie',
2 => [1 => 'King']
]);
$replaced->all();
// ['Charlie', 'Abigail', ['James', 'King', 'Finn']]
reverse()
The reverse
method reverses the order of the
collection's items, preserving the original keys:
$collection = collect(['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e']);
$reversed = $collection->reverse();
$reversed->all();
/*
[
4 => 'e',
3 => 'd',
2 => 'c',
1 => 'b',
0 => 'a',
]
*/
search()
The search
method searches the collection
for the given value and returns its key if found. If the
item is not found, false
is returned:
$collection = collect([2, 4, 6, 8]);
$collection->search(4);
// 1
The search is done using a "loose" comparison,
meaning a string with an integer value will be
considered equal to an integer of the same value. To use
"strict" comparison, pass true
as
the second argument to the method:
collect([2, 4, 6, 8])->search('4', $strict = true);
// false
Alternatively, you may provide your own closure to search for the first item that passes a given truth test:
collect([2, 4, 6, 8])->search(function (int $item, int $key) {
return $item > 5;
});
// 2
select()
The select
method selects the given keys
from the collection, similar to an SQL
SELECT
statement:
$users = collect([
['name' => 'Taylor Otwell', 'role' => 'Developer', 'status' => 'active'],
['name' => 'Victoria Faith', 'role' => 'Researcher', 'status' => 'active'],
]);
$users->select(['name', 'role']);
/*
[
['name' => 'Taylor Otwell', 'role' => 'Developer'],
['name' => 'Victoria Faith', 'role' => 'Researcher'],
],
*/
shift()
The shift
method removes and returns the
first item from the collection:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
$collection->shift();
// 1
$collection->all();
// [2, 3, 4, 5]
You may pass an integer to the shift
method
to remove and return multiple items from the beginning
of a collection:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
$collection->shift(3);
// collect([1, 2, 3])
$collection->all();
// [4, 5]
shuffle()
The shuffle
method randomly shuffles the
items in the collection:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
$shuffled = $collection->shuffle();
$shuffled->all();
// [3, 2, 5, 1, 4] - (generated randomly)
skip()
The skip
method returns a new collection,
with the given number of elements removed from the
beginning of the collection:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]);
$collection = $collection->skip(4);
$collection->all();
// [5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]
skipUntil()
The skipUntil
method skips over items from
the collection until the given callback returns
true
and then returns the remaining items
in the collection as a new collection instance:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4]);
$subset = $collection->skipUntil(function (int $item) {
return $item >= 3;
});
$subset->all();
// [3, 4]
You may also pass a simple value to the
skipUntil
method to skip all items until
the given value is found:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4]);
$subset = $collection->skipUntil(3);
$subset->all();
// [3, 4]
Warning!
If the given value is not found or the callback never returnstrue
, theskipUntil
method will return an empty collection.
skipWhile()
The skipWhile
method skips over items from
the collection while the given callback returns
true
and then returns the remaining items
in the collection as a new collection:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4]);
$subset = $collection->skipWhile(function (int $item) {
return $item <= 3;
});
$subset->all();
// [4]
Warning!
If the callback never returnsfalse
, theskipWhile
method will return an empty collection.
slice()
The slice
method returns a slice of the
collection starting at the given index:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]);
$slice = $collection->slice(4);
$slice->all();
// [5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]
If you would like to limit the size of the returned slice, pass the desired size as the second argument to the method:
$slice = $collection->slice(4, 2);
$slice->all();
// [5, 6]
The returned slice will preserve keys by default. If you
do not wish to preserve the original keys, you can use
the values
method to reindex them.
sliding()
The sliding
method returns a new collection
of chunks representing a "sliding window" view
of the items in the collection:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
$chunks = $collection->sliding(2);
$chunks->toArray();
// [[1, 2], [2, 3], [3, 4], [4, 5]]
This is especially useful in conjunction with the eachSpread
method:
$transactions->sliding(2)->eachSpread(function (Collection $previous, Collection $current) {
$current->total = $previous->total $current->amount;
});
You may optionally pass a second "step" value, which determines the distance between the first item of every chunk:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
$chunks = $collection->sliding(3, step: 2);
$chunks->toArray();
// [[1, 2, 3], [3, 4, 5]]
sole()
The sole
method returns the first element in
the collection that passes a given truth test, but only
if the truth test matches exactly one element:
collect([1, 2, 3, 4])->sole(function (int $value, int $key) {
return $value === 2;
});
// 2
You may also pass a key / value pair to the
sole
method, which will return the first
element in the collection that matches the given pair,
but only if it exactly one element matches:
$collection = collect([
['product' => 'Desk', 'price' => 200],
['product' => 'Chair', 'price' => 100],
]);
$collection->sole('product', 'Chair');
// ['product' => 'Chair', 'price' => 100]
Alternatively, you may also call the sole
method with no argument to get the first element in the
collection if there is only one element:
$collection = collect([
['product' => 'Desk', 'price' => 200],
]);
$collection->sole();
// ['product' => 'Desk', 'price' => 200]
If there are no elements in the collection that should be
returned by the sole
method, an
\Illuminate\Collections\ItemNotFoundException
exception will be thrown. If there is more than one
element that should be returned, an
\Illuminate\Collections\MultipleItemsFoundException
will be thrown.
some()
Alias for the contains
method.
sort()
The sort
method sorts the collection. The
sorted collection keeps the original array keys, so in
the following example we will use the values
method
to reset the keys to consecutively numbered indexes:
$collection = collect([5, 3, 1, 2, 4]);
$sorted = $collection->sort();
$sorted->values()->all();
// [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
If your sorting needs are more advanced, you may pass a
callback to sort
with your own algorithm.
Refer to the PHP documentation on uasort
,
which is what the collection's sort
method
calls utilizes internally.
Note:
If you need to sort a collection of nested arrays or objects, see thesortBy
andsortByDesc
methods.
sortBy()
The sortBy
method sorts the collection by
the given key. The sorted collection keeps the original
array keys, so in the following example we will use the
values
method
to reset the keys to consecutively numbered indexes:
$collection = collect([
['name' => 'Desk', 'price' => 200],
['name' => 'Chair', 'price' => 100],
['name' => 'Bookcase', 'price' => 150],
]);
$sorted = $collection->sortBy('price');
$sorted->values()->all();
/*
[
['name' => 'Chair', 'price' => 100],
['name' => 'Bookcase', 'price' => 150],
['name' => 'Desk', 'price' => 200],
]
*/
The sortBy
method accepts sort
flags as its second argument:
$collection = collect([
['title' => 'Item 1'],
['title' => 'Item 12'],
['title' => 'Item 3'],
]);
$sorted = $collection->sortBy('title', SORT_NATURAL);
$sorted->values()->all();
/*
[
['title' => 'Item 1'],
['title' => 'Item 3'],
['title' => 'Item 12'],
]
*/
Alternatively, you may pass your own closure to determine how to sort the collection's values:
$collection = collect([
['name' => 'Desk', 'colors' => ['Black', 'Mahogany']],
['name' => 'Chair', 'colors' => ['Black']],
['name' => 'Bookcase', 'colors' => ['Red', 'Beige', 'Brown']],
]);
$sorted = $collection->sortBy(function (array $product, int $key) {
return count($product['colors']);
});
$sorted->values()->all();
/*
[
['name' => 'Chair', 'colors' => ['Black']],
['name' => 'Desk', 'colors' => ['Black', 'Mahogany']],
['name' => 'Bookcase', 'colors' => ['Red', 'Beige', 'Brown']],
]
*/
If you would like to sort your collection by multiple
attributes, you may pass an array of sort operations to
the sortBy
method. Each sort operation
should be an array consisting of the attribute that you
wish to sort by and the direction of the desired
sort:
$collection = collect([
['name' => 'Taylor Otwell', 'age' => 34],
['name' => 'Abigail Otwell', 'age' => 30],
['name' => 'Taylor Otwell', 'age' => 36],
['name' => 'Abigail Otwell', 'age' => 32],
]);
$sorted = $collection->sortBy([
['name', 'asc'],
['age', 'desc'],
]);
$sorted->values()->all();
/*
[
['name' => 'Abigail Otwell', 'age' => 32],
['name' => 'Abigail Otwell', 'age' => 30],
['name' => 'Taylor Otwell', 'age' => 36],
['name' => 'Taylor Otwell', 'age' => 34],
]
*/
When sorting a collection by multiple attributes, you may also provide closures that define each sort operation:
$collection = collect([
['name' => 'Taylor Otwell', 'age' => 34],
['name' => 'Abigail Otwell', 'age' => 30],
['name' => 'Taylor Otwell', 'age' => 36],
['name' => 'Abigail Otwell', 'age' => 32],
]);
$sorted = $collection->sortBy([
fn (array $a, array $b) => $a['name'] <=> $b['name'],
fn (array $a, array $b) => $b['age'] <=> $a['age'],
]);
$sorted->values()->all();
/*
[
['name' => 'Abigail Otwell', 'age' => 32],
['name' => 'Abigail Otwell', 'age' => 30],
['name' => 'Taylor Otwell', 'age' => 36],
['name' => 'Taylor Otwell', 'age' => 34],
]
*/
sortByDesc()
This method has the same signature as the sortBy
method, but will sort the collection in the opposite
order.
sortDesc()
This method will sort the collection in the opposite
order as the sort
method:
$collection = collect([5, 3, 1, 2, 4]);
$sorted = $collection->sortDesc();
$sorted->values()->all();
// [5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
Unlike sort
, you may not pass a closure to
sortDesc
. Instead, you should use the sort
method and
invert your comparison.
sortKeys()
The sortKeys
method sorts the collection by
the keys of the underlying associative array:
$collection = collect([
'id' => 22345,
'first' => 'John',
'last' => 'Doe',
]);
$sorted = $collection->sortKeys();
$sorted->all();
/*
[
'first' => 'John',
'id' => 22345,
'last' => 'Doe',
]
*/
sortKeysDesc()
This method has the same signature as the sortKeys
method, but will sort the collection in the opposite
order.
sortKeysUsing()
The sortKeysUsing
method sorts the
collection by the keys of the underlying associative
array using a callback:
$collection = collect([
'ID' => 22345,
'first' => 'John',
'last' => 'Doe',
]);
$sorted = $collection->sortKeysUsing('strnatcasecmp');
$sorted->all();
/*
[
'first' => 'John',
'ID' => 22345,
'last' => 'Doe',
]
*/
The callback must be a comparison function that returns
an integer less than, equal to, or greater than zero.
For more information, refer to the PHP documentation on
uksort
,
which is the PHP function that
sortKeysUsing
method utilizes
internally.
splice()
The splice
method removes and returns a
slice of items starting at the specified index:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
$chunk = $collection->splice(2);
$chunk->all();
// [3, 4, 5]
$collection->all();
// [1, 2]
You may pass a second argument to limit the size of the resulting collection:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
$chunk = $collection->splice(2, 1);
$chunk->all();
// [3]
$collection->all();
// [1, 2, 4, 5]
In addition, you may pass a third argument containing the new items to replace the items removed from the collection:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
$chunk = $collection->splice(2, 1, [10, 11]);
$chunk->all();
// [3]
$collection->all();
// [1, 2, 10, 11, 4, 5]
split()
The split
method breaks a collection into
the given number of groups:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
$groups = $collection->split(3);
$groups->all();
// [[1, 2], [3, 4], [5]]
splitIn()
The splitIn
method breaks a collection into
the given number of groups, filling non-terminal groups
completely before allocating the remainder to the final
group:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]);
$groups = $collection->splitIn(3);
$groups->all();
// [[1, 2, 3, 4], [5, 6, 7, 8], [9, 10]]
sum()
The sum
method returns the sum of all items
in the collection:
collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5])->sum();
// 15
If the collection contains nested arrays or objects, you should pass a key that will be used to determine which values to sum:
$collection = collect([
['name' => 'JavaScript: The Good Parts', 'pages' => 176],
['name' => 'JavaScript: The Definitive Guide', 'pages' => 1096],
]);
$collection->sum('pages');
// 1272
In addition, you may pass your own closure to determine which values of the collection to sum:
$collection = collect([
['name' => 'Chair', 'colors' => ['Black']],
['name' => 'Desk', 'colors' => ['Black', 'Mahogany']],
['name' => 'Bookcase', 'colors' => ['Red', 'Beige', 'Brown']],
]);
$collection->sum(function (array $product) {
return count($product['colors']);
});
// 6
take()
The take
method returns a new collection
with the specified number of items:
$collection = collect([0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
$chunk = $collection->take(3);
$chunk->all();
// [0, 1, 2]
You may also pass a negative integer to take the specified number of items from the end of the collection:
$collection = collect([0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
$chunk = $collection->take(-2);
$chunk->all();
// [4, 5]
takeUntil()
The takeUntil
method returns items in the
collection until the given callback returns
true
:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4]);
$subset = $collection->takeUntil(function (int $item) {
return $item >= 3;
});
$subset->all();
// [1, 2]
You may also pass a simple value to the
takeUntil
method to get the items until the
given value is found:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4]);
$subset = $collection->takeUntil(3);
$subset->all();
// [1, 2]
Warning!
If the given value is not found or the callback never returnstrue
, thetakeUntil
method will return all items in the collection.
takeWhile()
The takeWhile
method returns items in the
collection until the given callback returns
false
:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4]);
$subset = $collection->takeWhile(function (int $item) {
return $item < 3;
});
$subset->all();
// [1, 2]
Warning!
If the callback never returnsfalse
, thetakeWhile
method will return all items in the collection.
tap()
The tap
method passes the collection to the
given callback, allowing you to "tap" into the
collection at a specific point and do something with the
items while not affecting the collection itself. The
collection is then returned by the tap
method:
collect([2, 4, 3, 1, 5])
->sort()
->tap(function (Collection $collection) {
Log::debug('Values after sorting', $collection->values()->all());
})
->shift();
// 1
times()
The static times
method creates a new
collection by invoking the given closure a specified
number of times:
$collection = Collection::times(10, function (int $number) {
return $number * 9;
});
$collection->all();
// [9, 18, 27, 36, 45, 54, 63, 72, 81, 90]
toArray()
The toArray
method converts the collection
into a plain PHP array
. If the collection's
values are Eloquent models,
the models will also be converted to arrays:
$collection = collect(['name' => 'Desk', 'price' => 200]);
$collection->toArray();
/*
[
['name' => 'Desk', 'price' => 200],
]
*/
Warning!
toArray
also converts all of the collection's nested objects that are an instance ofArrayable
to an array. If you want to get the raw array underlying the collection, use theall
method instead.
toJson()
The toJson
method converts the collection
into a JSON serialized string:
$collection = collect(['name' => 'Desk', 'price' => 200]);
$collection->toJson();
// '{"name":"Desk", "price":200}'
transform()
The transform
method iterates over the
collection and calls the given callback with each item
in the collection. The items in the collection will be
replaced by the values returned by the callback:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
$collection->transform(function (int $item, int $key) {
return $item * 2;
});
$collection->all();
// [2, 4, 6, 8, 10]
Warning!
Unlike most other collection methods,transform
modifies the collection itself. If you wish to create a new collection instead, use themap
method.
undot()
The undot
method expands a
single-dimensional collection that uses "dot"
notation into a multi-dimensional collection:
$person = collect([
'name.first_name' => 'Marie',
'name.last_name' => 'Valentine',
'address.line_1' => '2992 Eagle Drive',
'address.line_2' => '',
'address.suburb' => 'Detroit',
'address.state' => 'MI',
'address.postcode' => '48219'
]);
$person = $person->undot();
$person->toArray();
/*
[
"name" => [
"first_name" => "Marie",
"last_name" => "Valentine",
],
"address" => [
"line_1" => "2992 Eagle Drive",
"line_2" => "",
"suburb" => "Detroit",
"state" => "MI",
"postcode" => "48219",
],
]
*/
union()
The union
method adds the given array to the
collection. If the given array contains keys that are
already in the original collection, the original
collection's values will be preferred:
$collection = collect([1 => ['a'], 2 => ['b']]);
$union = $collection->union([3 => ['c'], 1 => ['d']]);
$union->all();
// [1 => ['a'], 2 => ['b'], 3 => ['c']]
unique()
The unique
method returns all of the unique
items in the collection. The returned collection keeps
the original array keys, so in the following example we
will use the values
method
to reset the keys to consecutively numbered indexes:
$collection = collect([1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 4, 2]);
$unique = $collection->unique();
$unique->values()->all();
// [1, 2, 3, 4]
When dealing with nested arrays or objects, you may specify the key used to determine uniqueness:
$collection = collect([
['name' => 'iPhone 6', 'brand' => 'Apple', 'type' => 'phone'],
['name' => 'iPhone 5', 'brand' => 'Apple', 'type' => 'phone'],
['name' => 'Apple Watch', 'brand' => 'Apple', 'type' => 'watch'],
['name' => 'Galaxy S6', 'brand' => 'Samsung', 'type' => 'phone'],
['name' => 'Galaxy Gear', 'brand' => 'Samsung', 'type' => 'watch'],
]);
$unique = $collection->unique('brand');
$unique->values()->all();
/*
[
['name' => 'iPhone 6', 'brand' => 'Apple', 'type' => 'phone'],
['name' => 'Galaxy S6', 'brand' => 'Samsung', 'type' => 'phone'],
]
*/
Finally, you may also pass your own closure to the
unique
method to specify which value should
determine an item's uniqueness:
$unique = $collection->unique(function (array $item) {
return $item['brand'].$item['type'];
});
$unique->values()->all();
/*
[
['name' => 'iPhone 6', 'brand' => 'Apple', 'type' => 'phone'],
['name' => 'Apple Watch', 'brand' => 'Apple', 'type' => 'watch'],
['name' => 'Galaxy S6', 'brand' => 'Samsung', 'type' => 'phone'],
['name' => 'Galaxy Gear', 'brand' => 'Samsung', 'type' => 'watch'],
]
*/
The unique
method uses "loose"
comparisons when checking item values, meaning a string
with an integer value will be considered equal to an
integer of the same value. Use the uniqueStrict
method to filter using "strict"
comparisons.
Note:
This method's behavior is modified when using Eloquent Collections.
uniqueStrict()
This method has the same signature as the unique
method; however, all values are compared using
"strict" comparisons.
unless()
The unless
method will execute the given
callback unless the first argument given to the method
evaluates to true
:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3]);
$collection->unless(true, function (Collection $collection) {
return $collection->push(4);
});
$collection->unless(false, function (Collection $collection) {
return $collection->push(5);
});
$collection->all();
// [1, 2, 3, 5]
A second callback may be passed to the
unless
method. The second callback will be
executed when the first argument given to the
unless
method evaluates to
true
:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3]);
$collection->unless(true, function (Collection $collection) {
return $collection->push(4);
}, function (Collection $collection) {
return $collection->push(5);
});
$collection->all();
// [1, 2, 3, 5]
For the inverse of unless
, see the when
method.
unlessEmpty()
Alias for the whenNotEmpty
method.
unlessNotEmpty()
Alias for the whenEmpty
method.
unwrap()
The static unwrap
method returns the
collection's underlying items from the given value when
applicable:
Collection::unwrap(collect('John Doe'));
// ['John Doe']
Collection::unwrap(['John Doe']);
// ['John Doe']
Collection::unwrap('John Doe');
// 'John Doe'
value()
The value
method retrieves a given value
from the first element of the collection:
$collection = collect([
['product' => 'Desk', 'price' => 200],
['product' => 'Speaker', 'price' => 400],
]);
$value = $collection->value('price');
// 200
values()
The values
method returns a new collection
with the keys reset to consecutive integers:
$collection = collect([
10 => ['product' => 'Desk', 'price' => 200],
11 => ['product' => 'Desk', 'price' => 200],
]);
$values = $collection->values();
$values->all();
/*
[
0 => ['product' => 'Desk', 'price' => 200],
1 => ['product' => 'Desk', 'price' => 200],
]
*/
when()
The when
method will execute the given
callback when the first argument given to the method
evaluates to true
. The collection instance
and the first argument given to the when
method will be provided to the closure:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3]);
$collection->when(true, function (Collection $collection, int $value) {
return $collection->push(4);
});
$collection->when(false, function (Collection $collection, int $value) {
return $collection->push(5);
});
$collection->all();
// [1, 2, 3, 4]
A second callback may be passed to the when
method. The second callback will be executed when the
first argument given to the when
method
evaluates to false
:
$collection = collect([1, 2, 3]);
$collection->when(false, function (Collection $collection, int $value) {
return $collection->push(4);
}, function (Collection $collection) {
return $collection->push(5);
});
$collection->all();
// [1, 2, 3, 5]
For the inverse of when
, see the unless
method.
whenEmpty()
The whenEmpty
method will execute the given
callback when the collection is empty:
$collection = collect(['Michael', 'Tom']);
$collection->whenEmpty(function (Collection $collection) {
return $collection->push('Adam');
});
$collection->all();
// ['Michael', 'Tom']
$collection = collect();
$collection->whenEmpty(function (Collection $collection) {
return $collection->push('Adam');
});
$collection->all();
// ['Adam']
A second closure may be passed to the
whenEmpty
method that will be executed when
the collection is not empty:
$collection = collect(['Michael', 'Tom']);
$collection->whenEmpty(function (Collection $collection) {
return $collection->push('Adam');
}, function (Collection $collection) {
return $collection->push('Taylor');
});
$collection->all();
// ['Michael', 'Tom', 'Taylor']
For the inverse of whenEmpty
, see the whenNotEmpty
method.
whenNotEmpty()
The whenNotEmpty
method will execute the
given callback when the collection is not empty:
$collection = collect(['michael', 'tom']);
$collection->whenNotEmpty(function (Collection $collection) {
return $collection->push('adam');
});
$collection->all();
// ['michael', 'tom', 'adam']
$collection = collect();
$collection->whenNotEmpty(function (Collection $collection) {
return $collection->push('adam');
});
$collection->all();
// []
A second closure may be passed to the
whenNotEmpty
method that will be executed
when the collection is empty:
$collection = collect();
$collection->whenNotEmpty(function (Collection $collection) {
return $collection->push('adam');
}, function (Collection $collection) {
return $collection->push('taylor');
});
$collection->all();
// ['taylor']
For the inverse of whenNotEmpty
, see the whenEmpty
method.
where()
The where
method filters the collection by a
given key / value pair:
$collection = collect([
['product' => 'Desk', 'price' => 200],
['product' => 'Chair', 'price' => 100],
['product' => 'Bookcase', 'price' => 150],
['product' => 'Door', 'price' => 100],
]);
$filtered = $collection->where('price', 100);
$filtered->all();
/*
[
['product' => 'Chair', 'price' => 100],
['product' => 'Door', 'price' => 100],
]
*/
The where
method uses "loose"
comparisons when checking item values, meaning a string
with an integer value will be considered equal to an
integer of the same value. Use the whereStrict
method to filter using "strict"
comparisons.
Optionally, you may pass a comparison operator as the second parameter. Supported operators are: '===', '!==', '!=', '==', '=', '<>', '>', '<', '>=', and '<=':
$collection = collect([
['name' => 'Jim', 'deleted_at' => '2019-01-01 00:00:00'],
['name' => 'Sally', 'deleted_at' => '2019-01-02 00:00:00'],
['name' => 'Sue', 'deleted_at' => null],
]);
$filtered = $collection->where('deleted_at', '!=', null);
$filtered->all();
/*
[
['name' => 'Jim', 'deleted_at' => '2019-01-01 00:00:00'],
['name' => 'Sally', 'deleted_at' => '2019-01-02 00:00:00'],
]
*/
whereStrict()
This method has the same signature as the where
method;
however, all values are compared using
"strict" comparisons.
whereBetween()
The whereBetween
method filters the
collection by determining if a specified item value is
within a given range:
$collection = collect([
['product' => 'Desk', 'price' => 200],
['product' => 'Chair', 'price' => 80],
['product' => 'Bookcase', 'price' => 150],
['product' => 'Pencil', 'price' => 30],
['product' => 'Door', 'price' => 100],
]);
$filtered = $collection->whereBetween('price', [100, 200]);
$filtered->all();
/*
[
['product' => 'Desk', 'price' => 200],
['product' => 'Bookcase', 'price' => 150],
['product' => 'Door', 'price' => 100],
]
*/
whereIn()
The whereIn
method removes elements from the
collection that do not have a specified item value that
is contained within the given array:
$collection = collect([
['product' => 'Desk', 'price' => 200],
['product' => 'Chair', 'price' => 100],
['product' => 'Bookcase', 'price' => 150],
['product' => 'Door', 'price' => 100],
]);
$filtered = $collection->whereIn('price', [150, 200]);
$filtered->all();
/*
[
['product' => 'Desk', 'price' => 200],
['product' => 'Bookcase', 'price' => 150],
]
*/
The whereIn
method uses "loose"
comparisons when checking item values, meaning a string
with an integer value will be considered equal to an
integer of the same value. Use the whereInStrict
method to filter using "strict"
comparisons.
whereInStrict()
This method has the same signature as the whereIn
method; however, all values are compared using
"strict" comparisons.
whereInstanceOf()
The whereInstanceOf
method filters the
collection by a given class type:
use App\Models\User;
use App\Models\Post;
$collection = collect([
new User,
new User,
new Post,
]);
$filtered = $collection->whereInstanceOf(User::class);
$filtered->all();
// [App\Models\User, App\Models\User]
whereNotBetween()
The whereNotBetween
method filters the
collection by determining if a specified item value is
outside of a given range:
$collection = collect([
['product' => 'Desk', 'price' => 200],
['product' => 'Chair', 'price' => 80],
['product' => 'Bookcase', 'price' => 150],
['product' => 'Pencil', 'price' => 30],
['product' => 'Door', 'price' => 100],
]);
$filtered = $collection->whereNotBetween('price', [100, 200]);
$filtered->all();
/*
[
['product' => 'Chair', 'price' => 80],
['product' => 'Pencil', 'price' => 30],
]
*/
whereNotIn()
The whereNotIn
method removes elements from
the collection that have a specified item value that is
contained within the given array:
$collection = collect([
['product' => 'Desk', 'price' => 200],
['product' => 'Chair', 'price' => 100],
['product' => 'Bookcase', 'price' => 150],
['product' => 'Door', 'price' => 100],
]);
$filtered = $collection->whereNotIn('price', [150, 200]);
$filtered->all();
/*
[
['product' => 'Chair', 'price' => 100],
['product' => 'Door', 'price' => 100],
]
*/
The whereNotIn
method uses "loose"
comparisons when checking item values, meaning a string
with an integer value will be considered equal to an
integer of the same value. Use the whereNotInStrict
method to filter using "strict"
comparisons.
whereNotInStrict()
This method has the same signature as the whereNotIn
method; however, all values are compared using
"strict" comparisons.
whereNotNull()
The whereNotNull
method returns items from
the collection where the given key is not
null
:
$collection = collect([
['name' => 'Desk'],
['name' => null],
['name' => 'Bookcase'],
]);
$filtered = $collection->whereNotNull('name');
$filtered->all();
/*
[
['name' => 'Desk'],
['name' => 'Bookcase'],
]
*/
whereNull()
The whereNull
method returns items from the
collection where the given key is null
:
$collection = collect([
['name' => 'Desk'],
['name' => null],
['name' => 'Bookcase'],
]);
$filtered = $collection->whereNull('name');
$filtered->all();
/*
[
['name' => null],
]
*/
wrap()
The static wrap
method wraps the given value
in a collection when applicable:
use Illuminate\Support\Collection;
$collection = Collection::wrap('John Doe');
$collection->all();
// ['John Doe']
$collection = Collection::wrap(['John Doe']);
$collection->all();
// ['John Doe']
$collection = Collection::wrap(collect('John Doe'));
$collection->all();
// ['John Doe']
zip()
The zip
method merges together the values of
the given array with the values of the original
collection at their corresponding index:
$collection = collect(['Chair', 'Desk']);
$zipped = $collection->zip([100, 200]);
$zipped->all();
// [['Chair', 100], ['Desk', 200]]
Higher Order Messages
Collections also provide support for "higher order
messages", which are short-cuts for performing
common actions on collections. The collection methods
that provide higher order messages are: average
, avg
, contains
,
each
, every
, filter
, first
, flatMap
, groupBy
, keyBy
, map
, max
, min
, partition
,
reject
, skipUntil
,
skipWhile
,
some
, sortBy
, sortByDesc
,
sum
, takeUntil
,
takeWhile
,
and unique
.
Each higher order message can be accessed as a dynamic
property on a collection instance. For instance, let's
use the each
higher order message to call a
method on each object within a collection:
use App\Models\User;
$users = User::where('votes', '>', 500)->get();
$users->each->markAsVip();
Likewise, we can use the sum
higher order
message to gather the total number of "votes"
for a collection of users:
$users = User::where('group', 'Development')->get();
return $users->sum->votes;
Lazy Collections
Introduction
Warning!
Before learning more about Laravel's lazy collections, take some time to familiarize yourself with PHP generators.
To supplement the already powerful
Collection
class, the
LazyCollection
class leverages PHP's generators
to allow you to work with very large datasets while
keeping memory usage low.
For example, imagine your application needs to process a multi-gigabyte log file while taking advantage of Laravel's collection methods to parse the logs. Instead of reading the entire file into memory at once, lazy collections may be used to keep only a small part of the file in memory at a given time:
use App\Models\LogEntry;
use Illuminate\Support\LazyCollection;
LazyCollection::make(function () {
$handle = fopen('log.txt', 'r');
while (($line = fgets($handle)) !== false) {
yield $line;
}
})->chunk(4)->map(function (array $lines) {
return LogEntry::fromLines($lines);
})->each(function (LogEntry $logEntry) {
// Process the log entry...
});
Or, imagine you need to iterate through 10,000 Eloquent models. When using traditional Laravel collections, all 10,000 Eloquent models must be loaded into memory at the same time:
use App\Models\User;
$users = User::all()->filter(function (User $user) {
return $user->id > 500;
});
However, the query builder's cursor
method
returns a LazyCollection
instance. This
allows you to still only run a single query against the
database but also only keep one Eloquent model loaded in
memory at a time. In this example, the
filter
callback is not executed until we
actually iterate over each user individually, allowing
for a drastic reduction in memory usage:
use App\Models\User;
$users = User::cursor()->filter(function (User $user) {
return $user->id > 500;
});
foreach ($users as $user) {
echo $user->id;
}
Creating Lazy Collections
To create a lazy collection instance, you should pass a
PHP generator function to the collection's
make
method:
use Illuminate\Support\LazyCollection;
LazyCollection::make(function () {
$handle = fopen('log.txt', 'r');
while (($line = fgets($handle)) !== false) {
yield $line;
}
});
The Enumerable Contract
Almost all methods available on the
Collection
class are also available on the
LazyCollection
class. Both of these classes
implement the Illuminate\Support\Enumerable
contract, which defines the following methods:
all average avg chunk chunkWhile collapse collect combine concat contains containsStrict count countBy crossJoin dd diff diffAssoc diffKeys dump duplicates duplicatesStrict each eachSpread every except filter first firstOrFail firstWhere flatMap flatten flip forPage get groupBy has implode intersect intersectAssoc intersectByKeys isEmpty isNotEmpty join keyBy keys last macro make map mapInto mapSpread mapToGroups mapWithKeys max median merge mergeRecursive min mode nth only pad partition pipe pluck random reduce reject replace replaceRecursive reverse search shuffle skip slice sole some sort sortBy sortByDesc sortKeys sortKeysDesc split sum take tap times toArray toJson union unique uniqueStrict unless unlessEmpty unlessNotEmpty unwrap values when whenEmpty whenNotEmpty where whereStrict whereBetween whereIn whereInStrict whereInstanceOf whereNotBetween whereNotIn whereNotInStrict wrap zip
Warning!
Methods that mutate the collection (such asshift
,pop
,prepend
etc.) are not available on theLazyCollection
class.
Lazy Collection Methods
In addition to the methods defined in the
Enumerable
contract, the
LazyCollection
class contains the following
methods:
takeUntilTimeout()
The takeUntilTimeout
method returns a new
lazy collection that will enumerate values until the
specified time. After that time, the collection will
then stop enumerating:
$lazyCollection = LazyCollection::times(INF)
->takeUntilTimeout(now()->addMinute());
$lazyCollection->each(function (int $number) {
dump($number);
sleep(1);
});
// 1
// 2
// ...
// 58
// 59
To illustrate the usage of this method, imagine an application that submits invoices from the database using a cursor. You could define a scheduled task that runs every 15 minutes and only processes invoices for a maximum of 14 minutes:
use App\Models\Invoice;
use Illuminate\Support\Carbon;
Invoice::pending()->cursor()
->takeUntilTimeout(
Carbon::createFromTimestamp(LARAVEL_START)->add(14, 'minutes')
)
->each(fn (Invoice $invoice) => $invoice->submit());
tapEach()
While the each
method calls the given
callback for each item in the collection right away, the
tapEach
method only calls the given
callback as the items are being pulled out of the list
one by one:
// Nothing has been dumped so far...
$lazyCollection = LazyCollection::times(INF)->tapEach(function (int $value) {
dump($value);
});
// Three items are dumped...
$array = $lazyCollection->take(3)->all();
// 1
// 2
// 3
remember()
The remember
method returns a new lazy
collection that will remember any values that have
already been enumerated and will not retrieve them again
on subsequent collection enumerations:
// No query has been executed yet...
$users = User::cursor()->remember();
// The query is executed...
// The first 5 users are hydrated from the database...
$users->take(5)->all();
// First 5 users come from the collection's cache...
// The rest are hydrated from the database...
$users->take(20)->all();