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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T06:31:07+00:00 2026-05-12T06:31:07+00:00

When declaring an associative array, how do you handle the indentation of the elements

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When declaring an associative array, how do you handle the indentation of the elements of the array? I’ve seen a number of different styles (PHP syntax, since that’s what I’ve been in lately). This is a pretty picky and trivial thing, so move along if you’re interested in more serious pursuits.

1) Indent elements one more level:

$array = array(
    'Foo' => 'Bar',
    'Baz' => 'Qux'
    );

2) Indent elements two levels:

$array = array(
        'Foo' => 'Bar',
        'Baz' => 'Qux'
        );

3) Indent elements beyond the array constructor, with closing brace aligned with the start of the constructor:

$array = array(
            'Foo' => 'Bar',
            'Baz' => 'Qux'
        );

4) Indent elements beyond the array construct, with closing brace aligned with opening brace:

$array = array(
            'Foo' => 'Bar',
            'Baz' => 'Qux'
              );

Personally, I like #3—the broad indentation makes it clear that we’re at a break point in the code (constructing the array), and having the closing brace floating a bit to the left of all of the array’s data makes it clear that this declaration is done.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T06:31:07+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 6:31 am

    Personally I always go:

    $array = array(
      '1' => '2',
      3 => 4,
    );
    

    The indent is one tab level (typically 4 spaces, sometimes 2). I detest excessive white-space. This works well with nested arrays.

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