each(function ($value, $key) { * echo "Element $key: $value"; * }); * ``` * * @param callable $c callable function that will receive each of the elements * in this collection * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function each(callable $c); /** * Looks through each value in the collection, and returns another collection with * all the values that pass a truth test. Only the values for which the callback * returns true will be present in the resulting collection. * * Each time the callback is executed it will receive the value of the element * in the current iteration, the key of the element and this collection as * arguments, in that order. * * ### Example: * * Filtering odd numbers in an array, at the end only the value 2 will * be present in the resulting collection: * * ``` * $collection = (new Collection([1, 2, 3]))->filter(function ($value, $key) { * return $value % 2 === 0; * }); * ``` * * @param callable|null $c the method that will receive each of the elements and * returns true whether or not they should be in the resulting collection. * If left null, a callback that filters out falsey values will be used. * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function filter(callable $c = null); /** * Looks through each value in the collection, and returns another collection with * all the values that do not pass a truth test. This is the opposite of `filter`. * * Each time the callback is executed it will receive the value of the element * in the current iteration, the key of the element and this collection as * arguments, in that order. * * ### Example: * * Filtering even numbers in an array, at the end only values 1 and 3 will * be present in the resulting collection: * * ``` * $collection = (new Collection([1, 2, 3]))->reject(function ($value, $key) { * return $value % 2 === 0; * }); * ``` * * @param callable $c the method that will receive each of the elements and * returns true whether or not they should be out of the resulting collection. * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function reject(callable $c); /** * Returns true if all values in this collection pass the truth test provided * in the callback. * * Each time the callback is executed it will receive the value of the element * in the current iteration and the key of the element as arguments, in that * order. * * ### Example: * * ``` * $overTwentyOne = (new Collection([24, 45, 60, 15]))->every(function ($value, $key) { * return $value > 21; * }); * ``` * * Empty collections always return true because it is a vacuous truth. * * @param callable $c a callback function * @return bool true if for all elements in this collection the provided * callback returns true, false otherwise. */ public function every(callable $c); /** * Returns true if any of the values in this collection pass the truth test * provided in the callback. * * Each time the callback is executed it will receive the value of the element * in the current iteration and the key of the element as arguments, in that * order. * * ### Example: * * ``` * $hasYoungPeople = (new Collection([24, 45, 15]))->every(function ($value, $key) { * return $value < 21; * }); * ``` * * @param callable $c a callback function * @return bool true if the provided callback returns true for any element in this * collection, false otherwise */ public function some(callable $c); /** * Returns true if $value is present in this collection. Comparisons are made * both by value and type. * * @param mixed $value The value to check for * @return bool true if $value is present in this collection */ public function contains($value); /** * Returns another collection after modifying each of the values in this one using * the provided callable. * * Each time the callback is executed it will receive the value of the element * in the current iteration, the key of the element and this collection as * arguments, in that order. * * ### Example: * * Getting a collection of booleans where true indicates if a person is female: * * ``` * $collection = (new Collection($people))->map(function ($person, $key) { * return $person->gender === 'female'; * }); * ``` * * @param callable $c the method that will receive each of the elements and * returns the new value for the key that is being iterated * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function map(callable $c); /** * Folds the values in this collection to a single value, as the result of * applying the callback function to all elements. $zero is the initial state * of the reduction, and each successive step of it should be returned * by the callback function. * If $zero is omitted the first value of the collection will be used in its place * and reduction will start from the second item. * * @param callable $c The callback function to be called * @param mixed $zero The state of reduction * @return mixed */ public function reduce(callable $c, $zero = null); /** * Returns a new collection containing the column or property value found in each * of the elements, as requested in the $matcher param. * * The matcher can be a string with a property name to extract or a dot separated * path of properties that should be followed to get the last one in the path. * * If a column or property could not be found for a particular element in the * collection, that position is filled with null. * * ### Example: * * Extract the user name for all comments in the array: * * ``` * $items = [ * ['comment' => ['body' => 'cool', 'user' => ['name' => 'Mark']], * ['comment' => ['body' => 'very cool', 'user' => ['name' => 'Renan']] * ]; * $extracted = (new Collection($items))->extract('comment.user.name'); * * // Result will look like this when converted to array * ['Mark', 'Renan'] * ``` * * It is also possible to extract a flattened collection out of nested properties * * ``` * $items = [ * ['comment' => ['votes' => [['value' => 1], ['value' => 2], ['value' => 3]]], * ['comment' => ['votes' => [['value' => 4]] * ]; * $extracted = (new Collection($items))->extract('comment.votes.{*}.value'); * * // Result will contain * [1, 2, 3, 4] * ``` * * @param string $matcher a dot separated string symbolizing the path to follow * inside the hierarchy of each value so that the column can be extracted. * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function extract($matcher); /** * Returns the top element in this collection after being sorted by a property. * Check the sortBy method for information on the callback and $type parameters * * ### Examples: * * ``` * // For a collection of employees * $max = $collection->max('age'); * $max = $collection->max('user.salary'); * $max = $collection->max(function ($e) { * return $e->get('user')->get('salary'); * }); * * // Display employee name * echo $max->name; * ``` * * @param callable|string $callback the callback or column name to use for sorting * @param int $type the type of comparison to perform, either SORT_STRING * SORT_NUMERIC or SORT_NATURAL * @see \Cake\Collection\CollectionIterface::sortBy() * @return mixed The value of the top element in the collection */ public function max($callback, $type = \SORT_NUMERIC); /** * Returns the bottom element in this collection after being sorted by a property. * Check the sortBy method for information on the callback and $type parameters * * ### Examples: * * ``` * // For a collection of employees * $min = $collection->min('age'); * $min = $collection->min('user.salary'); * $min = $collection->min(function ($e) { * return $e->get('user')->get('salary'); * }); * * // Display employee name * echo $min->name; * ``` * * @param callable|string $callback the callback or column name to use for sorting * @param int $type the type of comparison to perform, either SORT_STRING * SORT_NUMERIC or SORT_NATURAL * @see \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface::sortBy() * @return mixed The value of the bottom element in the collection */ public function min($callback, $type = \SORT_NUMERIC); /** * Returns the average of all the values extracted with $matcher * or of this collection. * * ### Example: * * ``` * $items = [ * ['invoice' => ['total' => 100]], * ['invoice' => ['total' => 200]] * ]; * * $total = (new Collection($items))->avg('invoice.total'); * * // Total: 150 * * $total = (new Collection([1, 2, 3]))->avg(); * // Total: 2 * ``` * * @param string|callable|null $matcher The property name to sum or a function * If no value is passed, an identity function will be used. * that will return the value of the property to sum. * @return float|int|null */ public function avg($matcher = null); /** * Returns the median of all the values extracted with $matcher * or of this collection. * * ### Example: * * ``` * $items = [ * ['invoice' => ['total' => 400]], * ['invoice' => ['total' => 500]] * ['invoice' => ['total' => 100]] * ['invoice' => ['total' => 333]] * ['invoice' => ['total' => 200]] * ]; * * $total = (new Collection($items))->median('invoice.total'); * * // Total: 333 * * $total = (new Collection([1, 2, 3, 4]))->median(); * // Total: 2.5 * ``` * * @param string|callable|null $matcher The property name to sum or a function * If no value is passed, an identity function will be used. * that will return the value of the property to sum. * @return float|int|null */ public function median($matcher = null); /** * Returns a sorted iterator out of the elements in this collection, * ranked in ascending order by the results of running each value through a * callback. $callback can also be a string representing the column or property * name. * * The callback will receive as its first argument each of the elements in $items, * the value returned by the callback will be used as the value for sorting such * element. Please note that the callback function could be called more than once * per element. * * ### Example: * * ``` * $items = $collection->sortBy(function ($user) { * return $user->age; * }); * * // alternatively * $items = $collection->sortBy('age'); * * // or use a property path * $items = $collection->sortBy('department.name'); * * // output all user name order by their age in descending order * foreach ($items as $user) { * echo $user->name; * } * ``` * * @param callable|string $callback the callback or column name to use for sorting * @param int $dir either SORT_DESC or SORT_ASC * @param int $type the type of comparison to perform, either SORT_STRING * SORT_NUMERIC or SORT_NATURAL * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function sortBy($callback, $dir = SORT_DESC, $type = \SORT_NUMERIC); /** * Splits a collection into sets, grouped by the result of running each value * through the callback. If $callback is a string instead of a callable, * groups by the property named by $callback on each of the values. * * When $callback is a string it should be a property name to extract or * a dot separated path of properties that should be followed to get the last * one in the path. * * ### Example: * * ``` * $items = [ * ['id' => 1, 'name' => 'foo', 'parent_id' => 10], * ['id' => 2, 'name' => 'bar', 'parent_id' => 11], * ['id' => 3, 'name' => 'baz', 'parent_id' => 10], * ]; * * $group = (new Collection($items))->groupBy('parent_id'); * * // Or * $group = (new Collection($items))->groupBy(function ($e) { * return $e['parent_id']; * }); * * // Result will look like this when converted to array * [ * 10 => [ * ['id' => 1, 'name' => 'foo', 'parent_id' => 10], * ['id' => 3, 'name' => 'baz', 'parent_id' => 10], * ], * 11 => [ * ['id' => 2, 'name' => 'bar', 'parent_id' => 11], * ] * ]; * ``` * * @param callable|string $callback the callback or column name to use for grouping * or a function returning the grouping key out of the provided element * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function groupBy($callback); /** * Given a list and a callback function that returns a key for each element * in the list (or a property name), returns an object with an index of each item. * Just like groupBy, but for when you know your keys are unique. * * When $callback is a string it should be a property name to extract or * a dot separated path of properties that should be followed to get the last * one in the path. * * ### Example: * * ``` * $items = [ * ['id' => 1, 'name' => 'foo'], * ['id' => 2, 'name' => 'bar'], * ['id' => 3, 'name' => 'baz'], * ]; * * $indexed = (new Collection($items))->indexBy('id'); * * // Or * $indexed = (new Collection($items))->indexBy(function ($e) { * return $e['id']; * }); * * // Result will look like this when converted to array * [ * 1 => ['id' => 1, 'name' => 'foo'], * 3 => ['id' => 3, 'name' => 'baz'], * 2 => ['id' => 2, 'name' => 'bar'], * ]; * ``` * * @param callable|string $callback the callback or column name to use for indexing * or a function returning the indexing key out of the provided element * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function indexBy($callback); /** * Sorts a list into groups and returns a count for the number of elements * in each group. Similar to groupBy, but instead of returning a list of values, * returns a count for the number of values in that group. * * When $callback is a string it should be a property name to extract or * a dot separated path of properties that should be followed to get the last * one in the path. * * ### Example: * * ``` * $items = [ * ['id' => 1, 'name' => 'foo', 'parent_id' => 10], * ['id' => 2, 'name' => 'bar', 'parent_id' => 11], * ['id' => 3, 'name' => 'baz', 'parent_id' => 10], * ]; * * $group = (new Collection($items))->countBy('parent_id'); * * // Or * $group = (new Collection($items))->countBy(function ($e) { * return $e['parent_id']; * }); * * // Result will look like this when converted to array * [ * 10 => 2, * 11 => 1 * ]; * ``` * * @param callable|string $callback the callback or column name to use for indexing * or a function returning the indexing key out of the provided element * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function countBy($callback); /** * Returns the total sum of all the values extracted with $matcher * or of this collection. * * ### Example: * * ``` * $items = [ * ['invoice' => ['total' => 100]], * ['invoice' => ['total' => 200]] * ]; * * $total = (new Collection($items))->sumOf('invoice.total'); * * // Total: 300 * * $total = (new Collection([1, 2, 3]))->sumOf(); * // Total: 6 * ``` * * @param string|callable|null $matcher The property name to sum or a function * If no value is passed, an identity function will be used. * that will return the value of the property to sum. * @return float|int */ public function sumOf($matcher = null); /** * Returns a new collection with the elements placed in a random order, * this function does not preserve the original keys in the collection. * * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function shuffle(); /** * Returns a new collection with maximum $size random elements * from this collection * * @param int $size the maximum number of elements to randomly * take from this collection * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function sample($size = 10); /** * Returns a new collection with maximum $size elements in the internal * order this collection was created. If a second parameter is passed, it * will determine from what position to start taking elements. * * @param int $size the maximum number of elements to take from * this collection * @param int $from A positional offset from where to take the elements * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function take($size = 1, $from = 0); /** * Returns the last N elements of a collection * * ### Example: * * ``` * $items = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]; * * $last = (new Collection($items))->takeLast(3); * * // Result will look like this when converted to array * [3, 4, 5]; * ``` * * @param int $howMany The number of elements at the end of the collection * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function takeLast($howMany); /** * Returns a new collection that will skip the specified amount of elements * at the beginning of the iteration. * * @param int $howMany The number of elements to skip. * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function skip($howMany); /** * Looks through each value in the list, returning a Collection of all the * values that contain all of the key-value pairs listed in $conditions. * * ### Example: * * ``` * $items = [ * ['comment' => ['body' => 'cool', 'user' => ['name' => 'Mark']], * ['comment' => ['body' => 'very cool', 'user' => ['name' => 'Renan']] * ]; * * $extracted = (new Collection($items))->match(['user.name' => 'Renan']); * * // Result will look like this when converted to array * [ * ['comment' => ['body' => 'very cool', 'user' => ['name' => 'Renan']] * ] * ``` * * @param array $conditions a key-value list of conditions where * the key is a property path as accepted by `Collection::extract, * and the value the condition against with each element will be matched * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function match(array $conditions); /** * Returns the first result matching all of the key-value pairs listed in * conditions. * * @param array $conditions a key-value list of conditions where the key is * a property path as accepted by `Collection::extract`, and the value the * condition against with each element will be matched * @see \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface::match() * @return mixed */ public function firstMatch(array $conditions); /** * Returns the first result in this collection * * @return mixed The first value in the collection will be returned. */ public function first(); /** * Returns the last result in this collection * * @return mixed The last value in the collection will be returned. */ public function last(); /** * Returns a new collection as the result of concatenating the list of elements * in this collection with the passed list of elements * * @param array|\Traversable $items Items list. * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function append($items); /** * Returns a new collection where the values extracted based on a value path * and then indexed by a key path. Optionally this method can produce parent * groups based on a group property path. * * ### Examples: * * ``` * $items = [ * ['id' => 1, 'name' => 'foo', 'parent' => 'a'], * ['id' => 2, 'name' => 'bar', 'parent' => 'b'], * ['id' => 3, 'name' => 'baz', 'parent' => 'a'], * ]; * * $combined = (new Collection($items))->combine('id', 'name'); * * // Result will look like this when converted to array * [ * 1 => 'foo', * 2 => 'bar', * 3 => 'baz', * ]; * * $combined = (new Collection($items))->combine('id', 'name', 'parent'); * * // Result will look like this when converted to array * [ * 'a' => [1 => 'foo', 3 => 'baz'], * 'b' => [2 => 'bar'] * ]; * ``` * * @param callable|string $keyPath the column name path to use for indexing * or a function returning the indexing key out of the provided element * @param callable|string $valuePath the column name path to use as the array value * or a function returning the value out of the provided element * @param callable|string|null $groupPath the column name path to use as the parent * grouping key or a function returning the key out of the provided element * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function combine($keyPath, $valuePath, $groupPath = null); /** * Returns a new collection where the values are nested in a tree-like structure * based on an id property path and a parent id property path. * * @param callable|string $idPath the column name path to use for determining * whether an element is parent of another * @param callable|string $parentPath the column name path to use for determining * whether an element is child of another * @param string $nestingKey The key name under which children are nested * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function nest($idPath, $parentPath, $nestingKey = 'children'); /** * Returns a new collection containing each of the elements found in `$values` as * a property inside the corresponding elements in this collection. The property * where the values will be inserted is described by the `$path` parameter. * * The $path can be a string with a property name or a dot separated path of * properties that should be followed to get the last one in the path. * * If a column or property could not be found for a particular element in the * collection as part of the path, the element will be kept unchanged. * * ### Example: * * Insert ages into a collection containing users: * * ``` * $items = [ * ['comment' => ['body' => 'cool', 'user' => ['name' => 'Mark']], * ['comment' => ['body' => 'awesome', 'user' => ['name' => 'Renan']] * ]; * $ages = [25, 28]; * $inserted = (new Collection($items))->insert('comment.user.age', $ages); * * // Result will look like this when converted to array * [ * ['comment' => ['body' => 'cool', 'user' => ['name' => 'Mark', 'age' => 25]], * ['comment' => ['body' => 'awesome', 'user' => ['name' => 'Renan', 'age' => 28]] * ]; * ``` * * @param string $path a dot separated string symbolizing the path to follow * inside the hierarchy of each value so that the value can be inserted * @param mixed $values The values to be inserted at the specified path, * values are matched with the elements in this collection by its positional index. * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function insert($path, $values); /** * Returns an array representation of the results * * @param bool $preserveKeys whether to use the keys returned by this * collection as the array keys. Keep in mind that it is valid for iterators * to return the same key for different elements, setting this value to false * can help getting all items if keys are not important in the result. * @return array */ public function toArray($preserveKeys = true); /** * Returns an numerically-indexed array representation of the results. * This is equivalent to calling `toArray(false)` * * @return array */ public function toList(); /** * Convert a result set into JSON. * * Part of JsonSerializable interface. * * @return array The data to convert to JSON */ public function jsonSerialize(); /** * Iterates once all elements in this collection and executes all stacked * operations of them, finally it returns a new collection with the result. * This is useful for converting non-rewindable internal iterators into * a collection that can be rewound and used multiple times. * * A common use case is to re-use the same variable for calculating different * data. In those cases it may be helpful and more performant to first compile * a collection and then apply more operations to it. * * ### Example: * * ``` * $collection->map($mapper)->sortBy('age')->extract('name'); * $compiled = $collection->compile(); * $isJohnHere = $compiled->some($johnMatcher); * $allButJohn = $compiled->filter($johnMatcher); * ``` * * In the above example, had the collection not been compiled before, the * iterations for `map`, `sortBy` and `extract` would've been executed twice: * once for getting `$isJohnHere` and once for `$allButJohn` * * You can think of this method as a way to create save points for complex * calculations in a collection. * * @param bool $preserveKeys whether to use the keys returned by this * collection as the array keys. Keep in mind that it is valid for iterators * to return the same key for different elements, setting this value to false * can help getting all items if keys are not important in the result. * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function compile($preserveKeys = true); /** * Returns a new collection where any operations chained after it are guaranteed * to be run lazily. That is, elements will be yieleded one at a time. * * A lazy collection can only be iterated once. A second attempt results in an error. * * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function lazy(); /** * Returns a new collection where the operations performed by this collection. * No matter how many times the new collection is iterated, those operations will * only be performed once. * * This can also be used to make any non-rewindable iterator rewindable. * * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function buffered(); /** * Returns a new collection with each of the elements of this collection * after flattening the tree structure. The tree structure is defined * by nesting elements under a key with a known name. It is possible * to specify such name by using the '$nestingKey' parameter. * * By default all elements in the tree following a Depth First Search * will be returned, that is, elements from the top parent to the leaves * for each branch. * * It is possible to return all elements from bottom to top using a Breadth First * Search approach by passing the '$dir' parameter with 'asc'. That is, it will * return all elements for the same tree depth first and from bottom to top. * * Finally, you can specify to only get a collection with the leaf nodes in the * tree structure. You do so by passing 'leaves' in the first argument. * * The possible values for the first argument are aliases for the following * constants and it is valid to pass those instead of the alias: * * - desc: TreeIterator::SELF_FIRST * - asc: TreeIterator::CHILD_FIRST * - leaves: TreeIterator::LEAVES_ONLY * * ### Example: * * ``` * $collection = new Collection([ * ['id' => 1, 'children' => [['id' => 2, 'children' => [['id' => 3]]]]], * ['id' => 4, 'children' => [['id' => 5]]] * ]); * $flattenedIds = $collection->listNested()->extract('id'); // Yields [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] * ``` * * @param string|int $dir The direction in which to return the elements * @param string|callable $nestingKey The key name under which children are nested * or a callable function that will return the children list * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function listNested($dir = 'desc', $nestingKey = 'children'); /** * Creates a new collection that when iterated will stop yielding results if * the provided condition evaluates to true. * * This is handy for dealing with infinite iterators or any generator that * could start returning invalid elements at a certain point. For example, * when reading lines from a file stream you may want to stop the iteration * after a certain value is reached. * * ### Example: * * Get an array of lines in a CSV file until the timestamp column is less than a date * * ``` * $lines = (new Collection($fileLines))->stopWhen(function ($value, $key) { * return (new DateTime($value))->format('Y') < 2012; * }) * ->toArray(); * ``` * * Get elements until the first unapproved message is found: * * ``` * $comments = (new Collection($comments))->stopWhen(['is_approved' => false]); * ``` * * @param callable $condition the method that will receive each of the elements and * returns true when the iteration should be stopped. * If an array, it will be interpreted as a key-value list of conditions where * the key is a property path as accepted by `Collection::extract`, * and the value the condition against with each element will be matched. * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function stopWhen($condition); /** * Creates a new collection where the items are the * concatenation of the lists of items generated by the transformer function * applied to each item in the original collection. * * The transformer function will receive the value and the key for each of the * items in the collection, in that order, and it must return an array or a * Traversable object that can be concatenated to the final result. * * If no transformer function is passed, an "identity" function will be used. * This is useful when each of the elements in the source collection are * lists of items to be appended one after another. * * ### Example: * * ``` * $items [[1, 2, 3], [4, 5]]; * $unfold = (new Collection($items))->unfold(); // Returns [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] * ``` * * Using a transformer * * ``` * $items [1, 2, 3]; * $allItems = (new Collection($items))->unfold(function ($page) { * return $service->fetchPage($page)->toArray(); * }); * ``` * * @param callable|null $transformer A callable function that will receive each of * the items in the collection and should return an array or Traversable object * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function unfold(callable $transformer = null); /** * Passes this collection through a callable as its first argument. * This is useful for decorating the full collection with another object. * * ### Example: * * ``` * $items = [1, 2, 3]; * $decorated = (new Collection($items))->through(function ($collection) { * return new MyCustomCollection($collection); * }); * ``` * * @param callable $handler A callable function that will receive * this collection as first argument. * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function through(callable $handler); /** * Combines the elements of this collection with each of the elements of the * passed iterables, using their positional index as a reference. * * ### Example: * * ``` * $collection = new Collection([1, 2]); * $collection->zip([3, 4], [5, 6])->toList(); // returns [[1, 3, 5], [2, 4, 6]] * ``` * * @param array|\Traversable ...$items The collections to zip. * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function zip($items); /** * Combines the elements of this collection with each of the elements of the * passed iterables, using their positional index as a reference. * * The resulting element will be the return value of the $callable function. * * ### Example: * * ``` * $collection = new Collection([1, 2]); * $zipped = $collection->zipWith([3, 4], [5, 6], function (...$args) { * return array_sum($args); * }); * $zipped->toList(); // returns [9, 12]; [(1 + 3 + 5), (2 + 4 + 6)] * ``` * * @param array|\Traversable ...$items The collections to zip. * @param callable $callable The function to use for zipping the elements together. * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function zipWith($items, $callable); /** * Breaks the collection into smaller arrays of the given size. * * ### Example: * * ``` * $items [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11]; * $chunked = (new Collection($items))->chunk(3)->toList(); * // Returns [[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6], [7, 8, 9], [10, 11]] * ``` * * @param int $chunkSize The maximum size for each chunk * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function chunk($chunkSize); /** * Breaks the collection into smaller arrays of the given size. * * ### Example: * * ``` * $items ['a' => 1, 'b' => 2, 'c' => 3, 'd' => 4, 'e' => 5, 'f' => 6]; * $chunked = (new Collection($items))->chunkWithKeys(3)->toList(); * // Returns [['a' => 1, 'b' => 2, 'c' => 3], ['d' => 4, 'e' => 5, 'f' => 6]] * ``` * * @param int $chunkSize The maximum size for each chunk * @param bool $preserveKeys If the keys of the array should be preserved * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function chunkWithKeys($chunkSize, $preserveKeys = true); /** * Returns whether or not there are elements in this collection * * ### Example: * * ``` * $items [1, 2, 3]; * (new Collection($items))->isEmpty(); // false * ``` * * ``` * (new Collection([]))->isEmpty(); // true * ``` * * @return bool */ public function isEmpty(); /** * Returns the closest nested iterator that can be safely traversed without * losing any possible transformations. This is used mainly to remove empty * IteratorIterator wrappers that can only slowdown the iteration process. * * @return \Traversable */ public function unwrap(); /** * Transpose rows and columns into columns and rows * * ### Example: * * ``` * $items = [ * ['Products', '2012', '2013', '2014'], * ['Product A', '200', '100', '50'], * ['Product B', '300', '200', '100'], * ['Product C', '400', '300', '200'], * ] * * $transpose = (new Collection($items))->transpose()->toList(); * * // Returns * // [ * // ['Products', 'Product A', 'Product B', 'Product C'], * // ['2012', '200', '300', '400'], * // ['2013', '100', '200', '300'], * // ['2014', '50', '100', '200'], * // ] * ``` * * @return \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface */ public function transpose(); /** * Returns the amount of elements in the collection. * * ## WARNINGS: * * ### Consumes all elements for NoRewindIterator collections: * * On certain type of collections, calling this method may render unusable afterwards. * That is, you may not be able to get elements out of it, or to iterate on it anymore. * * Specifically any collection wrapping a Generator (a function with a yield statement) * or a unbuffered database cursor will not accept any other function calls after calling * `count()` on it. * * Create a new collection with `buffered()` method to overcome this problem. * * ### Can report more elements than unique keys: * * Any collection constructed by appending collections together, or by having internal iterators * returning duplicate keys, will report a larger amount of elements using this functions than * the final amount of elements when converting the collections to a keyed array. This is because * duplicate keys will be collapsed into a single one in the final array, whereas this count method * is only concerned by the amount of elements after converting it to a plain list. * * If you need the count of elements after taking the keys in consideration * (the count of unique keys), you can call `countKeys()` * * ### Will change the current position of the iterator: * * Calling this method at the same time that you are iterating this collections, for example in * a foreach, will result in undefined behavior. Avoid doing this. * * * @return int */ public function count(); /** * Returns the number of unique keys in this iterator. This is, the number of * elements the collection will contain after calling `toArray()` * * This method comes with a number of caveats. Please refer to `CollectionInterface::count()` * for details. * * @see \Cake\Collection\CollectionInterface::count() * @return int */ public function countKeys(); }