array_filter
    (PHP 4 >= 4.0.6, PHP 5)
array_filter -- 
     Filters elements of an array using a callback function
    
Description
array 
array_filter ( array input [, callback callback] )
     array_filter() iterates over each value in
     the input array passing them to the
     callback function.  If the 
     callback function returns true, the current
     value from input is returned into the
     result array.  Array keys are preserved.
    
     
Example 1. array_filter() example 
<?php function odd($var)  {     return($var & 1); }
  function even($var)  {     return(!($var & 1)); }
  $array1 = array("a"=>1, "b"=>2, "c"=>3, "d"=>4, "e"=>5); $array2 = array(6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12);
  echo "Odd :\n"; print_r(array_filter($array1, "odd")); echo "Even:\n"; print_r(array_filter($array2, "even")); ?>
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 The above example will output: 
Odd : Array (     [a] => 1     [c] => 3     [e] => 5 ) Even: Array (     [0] => 6     [2] => 8     [4] => 10     [6] => 12 )
 |  
  | 
    
     Users may not change the array itself from the callback
     function. e.g. Add/delete an element, unset the array that
     array_filter() is applied to. If the array
     is changed, the behavior of this function is undefined.
    
     If the callback function is not supplied,
     array_filter() will remove all the entries of
     input that are equal to FALSE. See converting to boolean 
     for more information.
    
     
Example 2. array_filter() without
      callback 
<?php
  $entry = array(              0 => 'foo',              1 => false,              2 => -1,              3 => null,              4 => ''           );
  print_r(array_filter($entry)); ?>
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 The above example will output: Array
(
    [0] => foo
    [2] => -1
) |  
  | 
    
     See also array_map(),
     array_reduce(), and array_walk().