What is the difference between IMPLODE
& JOIN
as both works the same way.
In short the reality is that in php, join() and implode() methods function the same way.
One can be interchanged for the other as they work in the same way.
Can't think of any. The one is an alias of the other. They both combine array elements into a string.
They are aliases of each other. They should theoretically work exactly the same. Although, using explode/implode has been shown to increase the awesomeness of your code by 10%
Join: Join is an Alias of implode().
Example:
<?php
$arr = array('Test1', 'Test2', 'Test3');
$str = join(",", $arr);
echo $str;
?>
Output: Test1,Test2,Test3.
Implode: implode Returns a string from array elements.
Example:
<?php
$arr = array('Test1', 'Test2', 'Test3');
$str = implode(",", $arr);
echo $str;
?>
Output: Test1,Test2,Test3.
UPDATE:
I tested them in Benchmark and they are same in speed. There is no difference between them.
join()
is an alias for implode()
, so implode
is theoretically more "PHP native" though there is absolutely no performance increase to be gained by using it.
On the other hand, join()
is found in, amongst other languages, Perl, Python and ECMAScript (including JavaScript) and so is much more portable in terms of comprehensibility to a wider audience of programmers.
So although explode
and implode
are unarguably way more dramatic-sounding, I would vote for join
as a more universal way to express the concatenation of every value of an array into a string.