Notice that whenever there is a Number in front of the String, it will be used for Comparison.
<?php
max('7iuwmssuxue', 1); //returns 7iuwmssuxu
max('-7suidha', -4); //returns -4
?>
But just if it is in front of the String
<?php
max('sdihatewin7wduiw', 3); //returns 3
?>
max
(PHP 4, PHP 5)
max — Localiza o maior valor
Descrição
Se o primeiro e único parâmetro é um array, max() retorna o maior valor do array. Se no mínimo dois parâmetros são fornecidos, max() retornará o maior desses valores.
Nota:
O PHP irá avaliar uma string não numérica como 0 se comparado a integer, mas ainda retorna a string como se ela fosse numericamente o maior valor. Se vários agumentos forem avaliados como 0, max() irá retornar um número 0 se dado, senão o maior alfabético valor string será retornado.
Parâmetros
-
values -
Um array contendo os valores.
Valor Retornado
max() retorna o maior numericalmente dos valores dos parâmetros.
Exemplos
Exemplo #1 Exemplos de 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
// Com arrays múltiplos, max compara da esquerda para direita,
// assim nesse exemplo: 2 == 2, mas 4 < 5
$val = max(array(2, 4, 8), array(2, 5, 7)); // array(2, 5, 7)
// Se forem informados um array e um não array, o array
// é sempre retornado como se ele fosse o maior
$val = max('string', array(2, 5, 7), 42); // array(2, 5, 7)
?>
Alex Rath ¶
3 years ago
michaelangel0 at mail.com ¶
5 years ago
Matlab users and others may feel lonely without the double argument output from min and max functions.
To have the INDEX of the highest value in an array, as well as the value itself, use the following, or a derivative:
<?php
function doublemax($mylist){
$maxvalue=max($mylist);
while(list($key,$value)=each($mylist)){
if($value==$maxvalue)$maxindex=$key;
}
return array("m"=>$maxvalue,"i"=>$maxindex);
}
?>
marcini ¶
4 years ago
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.
php at rijkvanwel dot nl ¶
2 years ago
To get the largest key in an array:
<?php
$array = array( 0 => 'first', 1=> 'second', /* ... */ 99 => 'nth' );
$max_key = max( array_keys( $array ) ); // 99
?>
Marcus Zacco ¶
4 years ago
This code loops through seven arrays and finds the highest average value within those arrays - and changes the font color for it. Great for highlighting.
The biggest take-away is this the row
if($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 %
levim at php dot net ¶
9 months ago
<?php
/**
* @param array $array
*
* @return int|null Returns the largest value of the array. Returns NULL if no
* integers are found.
*/
function array_max_recursive(array $array) {
$max = NULL;
$stack = array($array);
do {
$current = array_pop($stack );
foreach ($current as $value) {
if (is_array($value)) {
$stack[] = $value;
} elseif (filter_var($value, FILTER_VALIDATE_INT) !== FALSE) {
// max(NULL, 0) returns NULL, so cast it
$max = (int) max($max, $value);
}
}
} while (!empty($stack));
return $max;
}
?>
- This function is not actually recursive, but fulfills the requirement that it works on sub-arrays. I do this because PHP is not very good at recursion. I also did it because I enjoy doing things this way.
- It returns something of type int, never a string representation of an int. The exception is when you provide an array that does not contain any integers. It will then return NULL.
- It ignores non-array, non-int values.
toon dot baeyens at gmail dot com ¶
1 year ago
A little function for multi-dimensional arrays:
<?php
function amax($array){
if(is_array($array)){
foreach($array as $key => $value){
$array[$key] = amax($value);
}
return max($array);
}else{
return $array;
}
}
?>
sun at drupal dot org ¶
1 year ago
Note that max() throws a warning if the array is empty:
<?php
$a = array();
max($a);
// Warning: max(): Array must contain at least one element
?>
So make sure your data isn't empty.
ries at vantwisk dot nl ¶
4 years ago
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
Hayley Watson ¶
3 months ago
Remember that -INF is by definition less than any number (including doubles).
This is useful for ensuring that an array passed to max() has at least one element (the function doesn't like empty arrays), and for keeping running maxima (it provides a starting value that is guaranteed to be replaced by the first value in the sequence).
Alex Stanhope ¶
2 years ago
If you want to test whether x lies within two bounds:
<?php
static function isInRange($x, $y1, $y2) {
return( ($x >= min($y1, $y2)) && ($x <= max($y1, $y2)) );
}
//called by:
class::isInRange(10,12,2);
//or
$this->isInRange(10,12,2);
//or (drop static)
isInRange(10,12,2);
//simple test function:
static function unit_isInRange() {
$output = array();
$inputlist[] = array(10, 12, 2, true);
$inputlist[] = array(13, 12, 2, false);
$inputlist[] = array(2, -2, 2, true);
$inputlist[] = array(2, -8, -2, false);
foreach($inputlist as $input) {
$output[] = array(
'input' => array($input[0], $input[1], $input[2]),
'output' => self::isInRange($input[0],$input[1],$input[2]),
'expected' => $input[3],
);
}
return($output);
}
?>
grillen at abendstille dot at ¶
3 years ago
max only accepts not empty arrays.
if you work a lot with numerical arrays and with max, this function may come in handy:
<?php
if (!function_exists('emax')) {
function emax($arr) {
if (!is_array($arr)) return call_user_func_array('max', func_get_args());
if (count($arr) == 0) return 0;
return max($arr);
}
}
?>
harmor ¶
5 years ago
A way to bound a integer between two values is:
<?php
function bound($x, $min, $max)
{
return min(max($x, $min), $max);
}
?>
which is the same as:
<?php
$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:
<?php
$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
jeremi23 at gmail dot com ¶
5 years ago
max on a an array with key/values
<?php
$tmp = array(1 => 5, 2=> 3);
echo max($tmp);
?>
this return 5, so the max is done on the values.
johnmott59 at hotmail dot com ¶
6 years ago
To find the maximum value from a set of 1-dimensional arrays, do this:
<?php
$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.
johnphayes at gmail dot com ¶
7 years ago
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
dan at coders dot co dot nz ¶
2 years ago
max() on undefined parameters does not assume the value is zero, it ignores it.
<?php
$dimensions = array('left' => -2);
// If $dimensions['right'] was never set,
// we may expect it to be treated as zero, but
print max($dimensions['left'], $dimensions['right']);
//
// Returns -2, not zero
print max(0+$dimensions['left'], 0+$dimensions['right']);
?>
would be a work-around, but it's probably tidier to ensure your values are set correctly first.
(on PHP 5.2.11 anyway)
artem dot yagutyan at gmail dot com ¶
3 years ago
This Is Good Example: For max to min
<?php
function max_key($array) {
foreach ($array as $key => $val) {
if ($val == max($array)) return $key;
}
}
$array = array(10, 2, 5, 7, 4,15,32,8,41,25);
$array_count=count($array);
for($i=1;$i<=$array_count;$i++){
$max_val[$i]=max_key($array);
$view=$array[$max_val[$i]];
unset($array[$max_val[$i]]);
print $view."<br />"; //
}
/* OUTPUT
41 // Max
32
25
15
10
8
7
5
4
2 //Min
*/
?>
