A quick addendum to the comment left by "sumeruter": the recursive property will only work if all the sub-arrays are exactly the same length. Otherwise it will just return the longest array every time.
max
(PHP 4, PHP 5)
max — Maximalwert bestimmen
Beschreibung
Ist der erste und einzige Parameter ist ein Array, gibt max() den höchsten Wert dieses Arrays zurück. Sind mindestens zwei Parameter übergeben, gibt max() den größeren dieser Werte zurück.
Hinweis: PHP evaluiert nicht-numerische string-Daten zu 0, wenn sie mit einem integer-Wert verglichen werden, gibt aber trotzdem die Zeichenkette zurück, wenn sie den numerisch höheren Wert hat. Werden mehrere Argumente zu 0 evaluiert, gibt max() den numerischen Wert 0, sofern er übergeben wurde, andernfalls den alphabetisch höchstwertigen String.
Parameter-Liste
- values
-
Ein die Werte enthaltendes Array.
Rückgabewerte
max() liefert den numerisch größten Parameterwert zurück.
Beispiele
Beispiel #1 Verwendungsbeispiel von max()
<?php
echo max(1, 3, 5, 6, 7); // 7
echo max(array(2, 4, 5)); // 5
echo max(0, 'hello'); // 0
echo max('hello', 0); // hello
echo max(-1, 'hello'); // hello
// Bei multiplen Arrays vergleicht max von links nach rechts,
// daher ist in unserem Beispiel 2 == 2, aber 4 < 5
$val = max(array(2, 4, 8), array(2, 5, 7)); // array(2, 5, 7)
// Sind ein Array und ein Nicht-Array-Parameter gegeben, wird immer
// das Array als größerer Wert angesehen
$val = max('string', array(2, 5, 7), 42); // array(2, 5, 7)
?>
max
07-Jul-2009 07:58
11-May-2009 02:34
Note that max() can compare dates, so if you write something like this:
<?php
$dates = array('2009-02-15', '2009-03-15');
echo max($dates);
?>
you will get: 2009-03-15.
09-Dec-2008 11:54
An interesting feature not mentioned is that if a recursive array is passed to max, max will return the sub-array containing the highest value.
Example:
<?php
$depth3=array(
array(array(1,6,3),array(7,2,5),array(9,3,0)),
array(array(2,1,8),array(4,4,5),array( 99 ,6,7)),
array(array(0,3,2),array(5,91,11),array(42,25,12)));
$depth2=max($depth3);
// = array(array(2,1,8),array(4,4,5),array( 99 ,6,7))
$depth1=max($depth2);
// = array( 99 ,6,7)
$depth0=max($depth1);
// = 99
echo max(max(max($depth3)));
// echo 99;
?>
09-Nov-2008 02:36
I had several occasions that using max is a lot slower then using a if/then/else construct. Be sure to check this in your routines!
Ries
29-Sep-2008 04:47
This code loops through seven arrays and finds the highest average value within those arrays - and changes the font color for it. Great for highlighting.
The biggest take-away is this the row
if($average[$i] == max($average))
The number_format just rounds the numbers to 0 decimal points.
<?php
for ( $i = 0; $i <= 6; $i++) {
$num = $i+1;
if($average[$i] == max($average)) {
echo "Value ".$num.": <font color='red'>".number_format($average[$i], 0, '.', '')." % </font<br>";
} else {
echo "Value ".$num.": ".number_format($average[$i],0,'.','')." %<br>";
}
}
?>
### OUTPUT
Value 1: 52 %
Value 2: 58 %
Value 3: 56 %
Value 4: 73 %
Value 5: 77 % <- this 77 is highlighted in red
Value 6: 71 %
Value 7: 75 %
16-Apr-2008 07:05
In a publication by WROX I noted a variant of the earlier "bound" function:
A parameter had to be between 1 and 3...
$par=round((min(max($x,1),3));
03-Mar-2008 07:11
mick at wireframe dot com's solution to finding the key for the highest value didn't work for me, so I wrote one myself:
<?php
function max_key($array) {
foreach ($array as $key => $val) {
if ($val == max($array)) return $key;
}
}
$array = array(1, 2, 5, 7, 4);
echo max($array); // 7
echo max_key($array); // 3
?>
of course this also works with associative arrays, but it will only return a single result!
21-Feb-2008 05:56
A way to bound a integer between two values is:
function bound($x, $min, $max)
{
return min(max($x, $min), $max);
}
which is the same as:
$tmp = $x;
if($tmp < $min)
{
$tmp = $min;
}
if($tmp > $max)
{
$tmp = $max;
}
$y = $tmp;
So if you wanted to bound an integer between 1 and 12 for example:
Input:
$x = 0;
echo bound(0, 1, 12).'<br />';
$x = 1;
echo bound($x, 1, 12).'<br />';
$x = 6;
echo bound($x, 1, 12).'<br />';
$x = 12;
echo bound($x, 1, 12).'<br />';
$x = 13;
echo bound($x, 1, 12).'<br />';
Output:
1
1
6
12
12
30-Oct-2007 11:51
There are a couple of things you can do for cleaner code if you want the keys returned from the array. I am not sure how they each impact performance, but the visual readability is more beneficial for me -- your mileage may vary.
In the first example keys and max value is returned:
<?php
// First, let's pretend we have an array like this:
$Some_Array = array(
'john' => 40,
'susan' => 40,
'jane' => 24,
'michael' => 19,
'jimmy' => 38
);
function max_extract($My_Array) {
$Max_Value = max($My_Array);
return array_fill_keys(array_keys($My_Array, $Max_Value), $Max_Value);
} // ! max_extract()
?>
Or, if you are only interested in the keys and don't care what the max is:
<?php
function max_extract($My_Array) {
return array_keys($My_Array, max($My_Array));
// You can also array_flip() this is you want them as keys
// or if some other reason makes this relevant/needed.
} // ! max_extract()
?>
There are many possible variations when using the search parameter of array_keys() along with other array functions.
07-Sep-2007 04:05
Or to take multiple maximum values into consideration:
function doublemax($mylist){
$maxvalue=max($mylist);
$max_keys = array();
while(list($key,$value)=each($mylist)){
if($value==$maxvalue)
array_push($max_keys,$key);
}
return $max_keys;
}
14-Jul-2007 05:11
This is highly ineficient, but can be a bit better
<?
function doublemax($mylist){
$maxvalue=max($mylist);
while(list($key,$value)=each($mylist)){
if($value==$maxvalue)
return array("key"=>$key,"value"=>$value);
}
}
?>
04-Jul-2007 10:00
Matlab users and others may feel lonely without the double argument output from min and max functions.
To have the INDEX of the highest value in an array, as well as the value itself, use the following, or a derivative:
<?
function doublemax($mylist){
$maxvalue=max($mylist);
while(list($key,$value)=each($mylist)){
if($value==$maxvalue)$maxindex=$key;
}
return array("m"=>$maxvalue,"i"=>$maxindex);
}
?>
14-Jun-2007 10:09
max on a an array with key/values
<?
$tmp = array(1 => 5, 2=> 3);
echo max($tmp);
?>
this return 5, so the max is done on the values.
17-May-2007 07:35
To find the maximum value from a set of 1-dimensional arrays, do this:
$d1 = array(450,420,440,430,421);
$d2 = array(460,410,410,430,413,375,256,411,656);
$d3 = array(430,440,470,435,434,255,198);
$t = max(max($d1),max($d2),max($d3));
// $t is 656
The inner max() functions operate on the arrays, the outer max compares the numeric results of the inner ones.
02-May-2006 04:27
Regarding boolean parameters in min() and max():
(a) If any of your parameters is boolean, max and min will cast the rest of them to boolean to do the comparison.
(b) true > false
(c) However, max and min will return the actual parameter value that wins the comparison (not the cast).
Here's some test cases to illustrate:
1. max(true,100)=true
2. max(true,0)=true
3. max(100,true)=100
4. max(false,100)=100
5. max(100,false)=100
6. min(true,100)=true
7. min(true,0)=0
8. min(100,true)=100
9. min(false,100)=false
10. min(100,false)=false
11. min(true,false)=false
12. max(true,false)=true
08-Nov-2005 09:56
In response to the previous two posters (zher0 at netcarrier dot com & walkingmantis):
I was trying to do exactly what zher0 suggested; calculate the max value of a multi-dimensional array with variably sized 'sub-arrays'. Here is a simple little function I came up with to do just that:
<?php
function multimax( $array ) {
// use foreach to iterate over our input array.
foreach( $array as $value ) {
// check if $value is an array...
if( is_array($value) ) {
// ... $value is an array so recursively pass it into multimax() to
// determine it's highest value.
$subvalue = multimax($value);
// if the returned $subvalue is greater than our current highest value,
// set it as our $return value.
if( $subvalue > $return ) {
$return = $subvalue;
}
} elseif($value > $return) {
// ... $value is not an array so set the return variable if it's greater
// than our highest value so far.
$return = $value;
}
}
// return (what should be) the highest value from any dimension.
return $return;
}
?>
Please note that I have only performed very limited testing on this code -- be sure to check it thoroughly if you implement it somewhere!
17-Dec-2003 03:50
If you are working with numbers, then you can use:
$a = ($b > $c) ? $b : $c;
which is somewhat faster (roughly 16%) than
$a = max($b, $c);
I tested this on several loops using integers and floats, over 1 million iterations.
I'm running PHP 4.3.1 as a module for Apache 1.3.27.
13-May-2003 11:32
Note that in version 4.0.3 (the only version I tested):
max (0, 0); // returns 0.
max (0, false); // returns 0.
max (false, 0); // returns false.
max (false, false); // returns false.
As a solution use this:
(int) max (false, 0); // returns 0.
(int) max (false, false); // returns 0.
