sort
(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7)
sort — Сортирует массив
Описание
&$array
[, int $sort_flags
= SORT_REGULAR
] )Эта функция сортирует массив. После завершения работы функции элементы массива будут расположены в порядке возрастания.
Список параметров
-
array
-
Входной массив.
-
sort_flags
-
Дополнительный второй параметр
sort_flags
можно использовать для изменения поведения сортировки, используя следующие значения:Флаги сортировки:
-
SORT_REGULAR
- обычное сравнение элементов (без изменения типов) -
SORT_NUMERIC
- числовое сравнение элементов -
SORT_STRING
- строковое сравнение элементов -
SORT_LOCALE_STRING
- сравнивает элементы как строки с учетом текущей локали. Используется локаль, которую можно изменять с помощью функции setlocale() -
SORT_NATURAL
- сравнение элементов как строк, используя естественное упорядочение, аналогичное упорядочению в функции natsort() -
SORT_FLAG_CASE
- может быть объединен (побитовое ИЛИ) с константамиSORT_STRING
илиSORT_NATURAL
для сортировки строк без учета регистра.
-
Возвращаемые значения
Возвращает TRUE
в случае успешного завершения или FALSE
в случае возникновения ошибки.
Список изменений
Версия | Описание |
---|---|
5.4.0 |
Добавлена поддержка SORT_NATURAL и
SORT_FLAG_CASE в параметре sort_flags
|
5.0.2 |
Добавлена поддержка SORT_LOCALE_STRING
|
Примеры
Пример #1 Пример использования sort()
<?php
$fruits = array("lemon", "orange", "banana", "apple");
sort($fruits);
foreach ($fruits as $key => $val) {
echo "fruits[" . $key . "] = " . $val . "\n";
}
?>
Результат выполнения данного примера:
fruits[0] = apple fruits[1] = banana fruits[2] = lemon fruits[3] = orange
Фрукты отсортированы в алфавитном порядке.
Пример #2 Пример использования sort() с регистронезависимым естественным упорядочением
<?php
$fruits = array(
"Orange1", "orange2", "Orange3", "orange20"
);
sort($fruits, SORT_NATURAL | SORT_FLAG_CASE);
foreach ($fruits as $key => $val) {
echo "fruits[" . $key . "] = " . $val . "\n";
}
?>
Результат выполнения данного примера:
fruits[0] = Orange1 fruits[1] = orange2 fruits[2] = Orange3 fruits[3] = orange20
Фрукты были отсортированы аналогично функции natcasesort().
Примечания
Замечание: Эта функция присваивает новые ключи элементам
массива
. Она удалит все существующие ключи, а не просто переупорядочит их.
Замечание: Как и большинство функций сортировки в PHP, sort() использует реализацию алгоритма » быстрой сортировки. Основной элемент выбирается из середины сортируемой части, достигая таким образом оптимального времени для уже отсортированных массивов. Следует иметь в виду, что это является деталью реализации и на нее не следует полагаться.
Будьте осторожны при сортировке массивов, содержащих элементы разных типов, так как в этом случае результат работы функции sort() может быть непредсказуемым.
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- uasort
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- usort
Коментарии
I ran into the same problem with case insensitive sorting. Actually I think there should be a SORT_STRING_CASE flag but I tried the following:
usort($listing, 'strcasecmp');
This didn't work (why not?), but you can do a proper case insensitive sort like this:
usort($listing, create_function('$a,$b','return strcasecmp($a,$b);'));
Ik you want to sort case insensitive, use the natcasesort()
In a brief addition to the previous poster's message, the ascending sorting order used by PHP directly corresponds to ISO-8859-1 (ASCII). Therefore the character \48 (numeral 0) would be placed before the character \82 (R), which would be placed before the character \110 (n), and so forth.
I dig the multi_sort function(s) from above. But, they don't work for hash arrays. I added a keys variable to keep track of the key value as the array gets sorted. Feed back welcome.
<?php
function array_qsort (&$array, $column=0, $order=SORT_ASC, $first=0, $last= -2)
{
// $array - the array to be sorted
// $column - index (column) on which to sort
// can be a string if using an associative array
// $order - SORT_ASC (default) for ascending or SORT_DESC for descending
// $first - start index (row) for partial array sort
// $last - stop index (row) for partial array sort
// $keys - array of key values for hash array sort
$keys = array_keys($array);
if($last == -2) $last = count($array) - 1;
if($last > $first) {
$alpha = $first;
$omega = $last;
$key_alpha = $keys[$alpha];
$key_omega = $keys[$omega];
$guess = $array[$key_alpha][$column];
while($omega >= $alpha) {
if($order == SORT_ASC) {
while($array[$key_alpha][$column] < $guess) {$alpha++; $key_alpha = $keys[$alpha]; }
while($array[$key_omega][$column] > $guess) {$omega--; $key_omega = $keys[$omega]; }
} else {
while($array[$key_alpha][$column] > $guess) {$alpha++; $key_alpha = $keys[$alpha]; }
while($array[$key_omega][$column] < $guess) {$omega--; $key_omega = $keys[$omega]; }
}
if($alpha > $omega) break;
$temporary = $array[$key_alpha];
$array[$key_alpha] = $array[$key_omega]; $alpha++;
$key_alpha = $keys[$alpha];
$array[$key_omega] = $temporary; $omega--;
$key_omega = $keys[$omega];
}
array_qsort ($array, $column, $order, $first, $omega);
array_qsort ($array, $column, $order, $alpha, $last);
}
}
?>
It's useful to know that if you're using this function on a multidimensional array, php will sort the first key, then the second and so on. This is similar to being able to use SQL to order by field1, field2 etc.
So:
Array (
[0] => Array ( [category] => work [name] => Smith )
[1] => Array ( [category] => play [name] => Johnson )
[2] => Array ( [category] => work [name] => Berger )
)
will become:
Array (
[0] => Array ( [category] => play [name] => Johnson )
[1] => Array ( [category] => work [name] => Berger )
[2] => Array ( [category] => work [name] => Smith )
)
Hope it helps someone.
I had an array like this:
$arr=array (1,4,3,6,5);
which returns this:
$arr[0]=1
$arr[1]=4
$arr[2]=3
$arr[3]=6
$arr[4]=5
But lets say i remove [2] which is number 3, i get:
$arr[0]=1
$arr[1]=4
$arr[3]=6
$arr[4]=5
And i want to reindex without doing a sort because i dont want to lose the order of the numbers (like a pop in a stack but in the middle of the list), i do this:
$arr=array_chunk($arr,count($arr));
$arr=$arr[0];
the result is:
$arr[0]=1
$arr[1]=4
$arr[2]=6
$arr[3]=5
This can be applied mostly for tree sorting, when you only have the id and the parent values of the node, and you want to have N levels.
Faster, more effective function:
array_sort (array, ['asc'/'desc'])
Second parameter specifies whether to order ascending or descending. Default is ascending.
function array_sort($array, $type='asc'){
$result=array();
foreach($array as $var => $val){
$set=false;
foreach($result as $var2 => $val2){
if($set==false){
if($val>$val2 && $type=='desc' || $val<$val2 && $type=='asc'){
$temp=array();
foreach($result as $var3 => $val3){
if($var3==$var2) $set=true;
if($set){
$temp[$var3]=$val3;
unset($result[$var3]);
}
}
$result[$var]=$val;
foreach($temp as $var3 => $val3){
$result[$var3]=$val3;
}
}
}
}
if(!$set){
$result[$var]=$val;
}
}
return $result;
}
Works for ordering by integers or strings, no need to specify which.
Example:
$array=array('a' => 50, 'b' => 25, 'c' => 75);
print_r(array_sort($array));
Returns:
Array
(
[b] => 25
[a] => 50
[c] => 75
)
#This is a function that will sort an array...
function sort_by($array, $keyname = null, $sortby) {
$myarray = $inarray = array();
# First store the keyvalues in a seperate array
foreach ($array as $i => $befree) {
$myarray[$i] = $array[$i][$keyname];
}
# Sort the new array by
switch ($sortby) {
case 'asc':
# Sort an array and maintain index association...
asort($myarray);
break;
case 'arsort':
# Sort an array in reverse order and maintain index association
arsort($myarray);
break;
case 'natcasesor':
# Sort an array using a case insensitive "natural order" algorithm
natcasesort($myarray);
break;
}
# Rebuild the old array
foreach ( $myarray as $key=> $befree) {
$inarray[$key] = $array[$key];
}
return $inarray;
}
sort_by(); example...
$info = sort_by($myarray, 'name', $use = 'asc');
print_r($info);
<?php
/**
This sort function allows you to sort an associative array while "sticking" some fields.
$sticky_fields = an array of fields that should not be re-sorted. This is a method of achieving sub-sorts within contiguous groups of records that have common data in some fields.
Courtesy of the $5 Script Archive: http://www.tufat.com
**/
define( 'ASC_AZ', 1000 );
define( 'DESC_AZ', 1001 );
define( 'ASC_NUM', 1002 );
define( 'DESC_NUM', 1003 );
function stickysort( $arr, $field, $sort_type, $sticky_fields = array() ) {
$i = 0;
foreach ($arr as $value) {
$is_contiguous = true;
if(!empty($grouped_arr)) {
$last_value = end($grouped_arr[$i]);
if(!($sticky_fields == array())) {
foreach ($sticky_fields as $sticky_field) {
if ($value[$sticky_field] <> $last_value[$sticky_field]) {
$is_contiguous = false;
break;
}
}
}
}
if ($is_contiguous)
$grouped_arr[$i][] = $value;
else
$grouped_arr[++$i][] = $value;
}
$code = '';
switch($sort_type) {
case ASC_AZ:
$code .= 'return strcasecmp($a["'.$field.'"], $b["'.$field.'"]);';
break;
case DESC_AZ:
$code .= 'return (-1*strcasecmp($a["'.$field.'"], $b["'.$field.'"]));';
break;
case ASC_NUM:
$code .= 'return ($a["'.$field.'"] - $b["'.$field.'"]);';
break;
case DESC_NUM:
$code .= 'return ($b["'.$field.'"] - $a["'.$field.'"]);';
break;
}
$compare = create_function('$a, $b', $code);
foreach($grouped_arr as $grouped_arr_key=>$grouped_arr_value)
usort ( $grouped_arr[$grouped_arr_key], $compare );
$arr = array();
foreach($grouped_arr as $grouped_arr_key=>$grouped_arr_value)
foreach($grouped_arr[$grouped_arr_key] as $grouped_arr_arr_key=>$grouped_arr_arr_value)
$arr[] = $grouped_arr[$grouped_arr_key][$grouped_arr_arr_key];
return $arr;
}
?>
<?php
/**
This sort function allows you to sort an associative array while "sticking" some fields.
$sticky_fields = an array of fields that should not be re-sorted. This is a method of achieving sub-sorts within contiguous groups of records that have common data in some fields.
For example:
$a = array();
$a []= array(
'name' => 'Sam',
'age' => 23,
'hire_date' => '2004-01-01'
);
$a []= array(
'name' => 'Sam',
'age' => 44,
'hire_date' => '2003-03-23'
);
$a []= array(
'name' => 'Jenny',
'age' => 20,
'hire_date' => '2000-12-31'
);
$a []= array(
'name' => 'Samantha',
'age' => 50,
'hire_date' => '2000-12-14'
);
$sticky_fields = array( 'name' );
print_r( stickysort( $a, 'age', DESC_NUM, $sticky_fields ) );
OUTPUT:
Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[name] => Sam
[age] => 44
[hire_date] => 2003-03-23
)
[1] => Array
(
[name] => Sam
[age] => 23
[hire_date] => 2004-01-01
)
[2] => Array
(
[name] => Jenny
[age] => 20
[hire_date] => 2000-12-31
)
[3] => Array
(
[name] => Samantha
[age] => 50
[hire_date] => 2000-12-14
)
)
Here's why this is the correct output - the "name" field is sticky, so it cannot change its sort order. Thus, the "age" field is only sorted as a sub-sort within records where "name" is identical. Thus, the "Sam" records are reversed, because 44 > 23, but Samantha remains at the bottom, even though her age is 50. This is a way of achieving "sub-sorts" and "sub-sub-sorts" (and so on) within records of identical data for specific fields.
Courtesy of the $5 Script Archive: http://www.tufat.com
**/
define( 'ASC_AZ', 1000 );
define( 'DESC_AZ', 1001 );
define( 'ASC_NUM', 1002 );
define( 'DESC_NUM', 1003 );
function stickysort( $arr, $field, $sort_type, $sticky_fields = array() ) {
$i = 0;
foreach ($arr as $value) {
$is_contiguous = true;
if(!empty($grouped_arr)) {
$last_value = end($grouped_arr[$i]);
if(!($sticky_fields == array())) {
foreach ($sticky_fields as $sticky_field) {
if ($value[$sticky_field] <> $last_value[$sticky_field]) {
$is_contiguous = false;
break;
}
}
}
}
if ($is_contiguous)
$grouped_arr[$i][] = $value;
else
$grouped_arr[++$i][] = $value;
}
$code = '';
switch($sort_type) {
case ASC_AZ:
$code .= 'return strcasecmp($a["'.$field.'"], $b["'.$field.'"]);';
break;
case DESC_AZ:
$code .= 'return (-1*strcasecmp($a["'.$field.'"], $b["'.$field.'"]));';
break;
case ASC_NUM:
$code .= 'return ($a["'.$field.'"] - $b["'.$field.'"]);';
break;
case DESC_NUM:
$code .= 'return ($b["'.$field.'"] - $a["'.$field.'"]);';
break;
}
$compare = create_function('$a, $b', $code);
foreach($grouped_arr as $grouped_arr_key=>$grouped_arr_value)
usort ( $grouped_arr[$grouped_arr_key], $compare );
$arr = array();
foreach($grouped_arr as $grouped_arr_key=>$grouped_arr_value)
foreach($grouped_arr[$grouped_arr_key] as $grouped_arr_arr_key=>$grouped_arr_arr_value)
$arr[] = $grouped_arr[$grouped_arr_key][$grouped_arr_arr_key];
return $arr;
}
?>
Sorting of an array by a method of inserts.
<?
function sortByField($multArray,$sortField,$desc=true){
$tmpKey='';
$ResArray=array();
$maIndex=array_keys($multArray);
$maSize=count($multArray)-1;
for($i=0; $i < $maSize ; $i++) {
$minElement=$i;
$tempMin=$multArray[$maIndex[$i]][$sortField];
$tmpKey=$maIndex[$i];
for($j=$i+1; $j <= $maSize; $j++)
if($multArray[$maIndex[$j]][$sortField] < $tempMin ) {
$minElement=$j;
$tmpKey=$maIndex[$j];
$tempMin=$multArray[$maIndex[$j]][$sortField];
}
$maIndex[$minElement]=$maIndex[$i];
$maIndex[$i]=$tmpKey;
}
if($desc)
for($j=0;$j<=$maSize;$j++)
$ResArray[$maIndex[$j]]=$multArray[$maIndex[$j]];
else
for($j=$maSize;$j>=0;$j--)
$ResArray[$maIndex[$j]]=$multArray[$maIndex[$j]];
return $ResArray;
}
// make array
$array['aaa']=array("name"=>"vasia","order"=>1);
$array['bbb']=array("name"=>"petia","order"=>2);
$array['ccc']=array("name"=>"kolia","order"=>3);
$array['ddd']=array("name"=>"zenia","order"=>4);
// set sort
$SortOrder=0; // desc by default , 1- asc
var_dump(sortByField($array,'order',$SortOrder));
array
'ddd' =>
array
'name' => 'zenia' (length=5)
'order' => 4
'aaa' =>
array
'name' => 'vasia' (length=5)
'order' => 1
'bbb' =>
array
'name' => 'petia' (length=5)
'order' => 2
'ccc' =>
array
'name' => 'kolia' (length=5)
'order' => 3
?>
Commenting on note function.sort#62311 :
Sorting an array of objects will not always yield the results you desire.
As pointed out correctly in the note above, sort() sorts the array by value of the first member variable. However, you can not always assume the order of your member variables! You must take into account your class hierarchy!
By default, PHP places the inherited member variables on top, meaning your first member variable is NOT the first variable in your class definition!
However, if you use code analyzers or a compile cache, things can be very different. E.g., in eAccelerator, the inherited member variables are at the end, meaning you get different sort results with caching on or off.
Conclusion:
Never use sort on arrays with values of a type other than scalar or array.
I had a multidimensional array, which needed to be sorted by one of the keys. This is what I came up with...
<?php
function msort($array, $id="id") {
$temp_array = array();
while(count($array)>0) {
$lowest_id = 0;
$index=0;
foreach ($array as $item) {
if ($item[$id]<$array[$lowest_id][$id]) {
$lowest_id = $index;
}
$index++;
}
$temp_array[] = $array[$lowest_id];
$array = array_merge(array_slice($array, 0,$lowest_id), array_slice($array, $lowest_id+1));
}
return $temp_array;
}
?>
Ex:
<?php
//oh no, this is not in the ordered by id!!
$data[] = array("item"=>"item 4", "id"=>4);
$data[] = array("item"=>"item 1", "id"=>1);
$data[] = array("item"=>"item 3", "id"=>3);
$data[] = array("item"=>"item 2", "id"=>2);
var_dump( msort($data) ); //just msort it!
/* outputs
array
0 =>
array
'item' => 'item 1' (length=6)
'id' => 1
1 =>
array
'item' => 'item 2' (length=6)
'id' => 2
2 =>
array
'item' => 'item 3' (length=6)
'id' => 3
3 =>
array
'item' => 'item 4' (length=6)
'id' => 4
*/
?>
here is little script which will merge arrays, remove duplicates and sort it by alphabetical order:
<?php
$array1 = array('apple', 'banana','pear');
$array2 = array('grape', 'pear','orange');
function array_unique_merge_sort($array1, $array2){
$array = array_unique(array_merge($array1, $array2));
sort($array);
foreach ($array as $key => $value) {
$new[$key] = $value;
}
return $new;
}
print_r (array_unique_merge_sort($array1, $array2));
?>
this will print out:
Array ( [0] => apple [1] => banana [2] => grape [3] => orange [4] => pear )
This function will sort entity letters eg:é
I hope that help someone
function sort_entity($array) {
$total = count($array);
for ($i=0;$i<$total;$i++) {
if ($array[$i]{0} == '&') {
$array[$i] = $array[$i]{1}.$array[$i];
} else {
$array[$i] = $array[$i]{0}.$array[$i];
}
}
sort($array);
for ($i=0;$i<$total;$i++) {
$array[$i] = substr($array[$i],1);
}
return $array;
}
To sort an array of multiple text fields alphabetically you have to make the text lowercase before sorting the array. Otherwise PHP puts acronyms before words. You can see this in my example code. Simply store the original text field at the end of the array line and call it later from there. You can safely ignore the lowercase version which is added to the start of the array line.
<?php
echo '<pre>ORIGINAL DATA:
<br />';
$data = array(
'Saturn|7|8|9|0||',
'Hello|0|1|2|3||',
'SFX|5|3|2|4||',
'HP|9|0|5|6||'
);
print_r($data);
sort($data);
reset($data);
echo '<br />RAW SORT:
<br />';
print_r($data);
for ($c = 0; $c < count($data); $c++) {
list ($letter,$g1,$g2,$g3,$g4,$end) = explode ('|', $data[$c]);
$lowercase = strtolower($letter);
$data2[$c] = array($lowercase,$g1,$g2,$g3,$g4,$letter);
}
sort($data2);
reset($data2);
echo '<br />LOWERCASE SORT:
<br />';
print_r($data2);
echo '</pre>';
?>
A little shorter way to sort an array of objects; with a callback function.
<?php
function objSort(&$objArray,$indexFunction,$sort_flags=0) {
$indices = array();
foreach($objArray as $obj) {
$indeces[] = $indexFunction($obj);
}
return array_multisort($indeces,$objArray,$sort_flags);
}
function getIndex($obj) {
return $obj->getPosition();
}
objSort($objArray,'getIndex');
?>
sort() used with strings doesn't sort just alphabetically. It sorts all upper-case strings alphabetically first and then sorts lower-case strings alphabetically second.
Just in case anyone was as confused as I was and I've never seen this mentioned anywhere.
Here is a function to sort an array by the key of his sub-array with keep key in top level.
<?php
function sksort(&$array, $subkey="id", $sort_descending=false, $keep_keys_in_sub = false) {
$temp_array = $array;
foreach ($temp_array as $key => &$value) {
$sort = array();
foreach ($value as $index => $val) {
$sort[$index] = $val[$subkey];
}
asort($sort);
$keys = array_keys($sort);
$newValue = array();
foreach ($keys as $index) {
if($keep_keys_in_sub)
$newValue[$index] = $value[$index];
else
$newValue[] = $value[$index];
}
if($sort_descending)
$value = array_reverse($newValue, $keep_keys_in_sub);
else
$value = $newValue;
}
$array = $temp_array;
}
?>
<?php
/**
* function: array_columns
* author: Brecht Cloetens
* params: $a = array() // original array
* $c = int() // number of columns
*/
function array_columns(&$a, $c=2)
{
$m = ceil(count($a)/$c);
$j = 0;
for($i=0; $i<$m; $i++) {
for($k=0; $k<$c; $k++) {
$key = $i+($m*$k);
settype($key,'integer');
if(array_key_exists($key,$a)) {
$b[$j] = $a[$key];
$j++;
}
}
}
$a = $b;
}
$arr = range('a','z');
array_columns($arr,4);
print_r($arr);
?>
Example:
array(1,2,3,4,5) will be converted to array(1,4,2,5,3);
This can be easy if you want to display an array into a specified number of columns.
<table>
<tr>
<td>$arr[0] => 1</td>
<td>$arr[1] => 4</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>$arr[2] => 2</td>
<td>$arr[3] => 5</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>$arr[4] => 3</td>
<td></td>
</tr>
</table>
If you need to sort an array containing some equivalent values and you want the equivalents to end up next to each other in the overall order (similar to a MySQL's ORDER BY output), rather than breaking the function, do this:
<?php
sort($array, ksort($array))
?>
-When the sort() function finds two equivalents, it will sort them arbitrarily by their key #'s as a second parameter.
-Dirk
Simple function to sort an array by a specific key. Maintains index association.
<?php
function array_sort($array, $on, $order=SORT_ASC)
{
$new_array = array();
$sortable_array = array();
if (count($array) > 0) {
foreach ($array as $k => $v) {
if (is_array($v)) {
foreach ($v as $k2 => $v2) {
if ($k2 == $on) {
$sortable_array[$k] = $v2;
}
}
} else {
$sortable_array[$k] = $v;
}
}
switch ($order) {
case SORT_ASC:
asort($sortable_array);
break;
case SORT_DESC:
arsort($sortable_array);
break;
}
foreach ($sortable_array as $k => $v) {
$new_array[$k] = $array[$k];
}
}
return $new_array;
}
$people = array(
12345 => array(
'id' => 12345,
'first_name' => 'Joe',
'surname' => 'Bloggs',
'age' => 23,
'sex' => 'm'
),
12346 => array(
'id' => 12346,
'first_name' => 'Adam',
'surname' => 'Smith',
'age' => 18,
'sex' => 'm'
),
12347 => array(
'id' => 12347,
'first_name' => 'Amy',
'surname' => 'Jones',
'age' => 21,
'sex' => 'f'
)
);
print_r(array_sort($people, 'age', SORT_DESC)); // Sort by oldest first
print_r(array_sort($people, 'surname', SORT_ASC)); // Sort by surname
/*
Array
(
[12345] => Array
(
[id] => 12345
[first_name] => Joe
[surname] => Bloggs
[age] => 23
[sex] => m
)
[12347] => Array
(
[id] => 12347
[first_name] => Amy
[surname] => Jones
[age] => 21
[sex] => f
)
[12346] => Array
(
[id] => 12346
[first_name] => Adam
[surname] => Smith
[age] => 18
[sex] => m
)
)
Array
(
[12345] => Array
(
[id] => 12345
[first_name] => Joe
[surname] => Bloggs
[age] => 23
[sex] => m
)
[12347] => Array
(
[id] => 12347
[first_name] => Amy
[surname] => Jones
[age] => 21
[sex] => f
)
[12346] => Array
(
[id] => 12346
[first_name] => Adam
[surname] => Smith
[age] => 18
[sex] => m
)
)
*/
?>
if you are not interested in high or low case sort
<?php
//where
$sortable_array[$k] = $v2;
//put
$sortable_array[$k] = strtolower($v2);
//and where
$sortable_array[$k] = $v;
//put
$sortable_array[$k] = strtolower($v);
?>
sort from textfile by coloumn
example name||date||time||comments
if you want to sort by date
$column = 2
<?php
function array_sort($array,$column){
$column = $column-1;
foreach($array as $line){
$bits = explode("||",$line);
$bits ="$bits[$column]**$line";
$array1[]=$bits;
}
asort($array1);
foreach($array1 as $line){
$bit = explode("**",$line);
$bit ="$bit[1]";
$array2[]=$bit;
}
return$array2;
}
?>
I read up on various problems re: sort() and German Umlaut chars and my head was soon spinning - bug in sort() or not, solution via locale or not, etc. ... (a total newbie here).
The obvious solution for me was quick and dirty: transform the Umlaut chars (present as HTML codes in my case) to their normal equivalent ('ä' = 'ae', 'ö' = 'oe', 'ü' = 'ue', 'ß' = 'ss' etc.), sort the array, then transform back. However there are cases in which a 'Mueller' is really that and does NOT need to be transformed into 'Müller' afterwards. Hence I for example replace the Umlaut itself with it's normal equivalent plus a char not used in the string otherwise (e.g. '_') so that the transfer back to Umlaut would only take place on certain combinations.
Of course any other char instead of '_' can be used as additional char (influencing the sort result). I know that my solution is rough at the edges and may cause other sort problems but it was sufficient for my purpose.
The array '$dat' in this example was filled with German town names (I actually worked with a multiple array ('$dat[][]') but stripped the code down to this as it's easier to understand):
<?php
// START Pre-sorting (Umlaut -> normal letters)
$max = count($dat);
for($totcnt = 0; $totcnt < $max; $totcnt++){
$dat[$totcnt]=str_replace('ß','ss_',$dat[$totcnt]);
$dat[$totcnt]=str_replace('Ä','Ae_',$dat[$totcnt]);
$dat[$totcnt]=str_replace('ä','ae_',$dat[$totcnt]);
$dat[$totcnt]=str_replace('Ö','Oe_',$dat[$totcnt]);
$dat[$totcnt]=str_replace('ö','oe_',$dat[$totcnt]);
$dat[$totcnt]=str_replace('Ü','Ue_',$dat[$totcnt]);
$dat[$totcnt]=str_replace('ü','ue_',$dat[$totcnt]);
}
// END Pre-sorting (Umlaut -> normal letters)
// START Sorting //
function compare_towns($a, $b)
{
return strnatcmp($a, $b);
}
usort($dat, 'compare_towns');
// END Sorting //
// START Post-sorting (normal letters -> Umlaut)
for($totcnt = 0; $totcnt < $max; $totcnt++){
$dat[$totcnt]=str_replace('ss_','ß',$dat[$totcnt]);
$dat[$totcnt]=str_replace('Ae_','Ä',$dat[$totcnt]);
$dat[$totcnt]=str_replace('ae_','ä',$dat[$totcnt]);
$dat[$totcnt]=str_replace('Oe_','Ö',$dat[$totcnt]);
$dat[$totcnt]=str_replace('oe_','ö',$dat[$totcnt]);
$dat[$totcnt]=str_replace('Ue_','Ü',$dat[$totcnt]);
$dat[$totcnt]=str_replace('ue_','ü',$dat[$totcnt]);
}
// END Post-sorting (normal letters -> Umlaut)
?>
As some people have mentioned before sorting a multidimentional array can be a bit tricky. it took me quite a while to get it going but it works as a charm:
<?php
//$order has to be either asc or desc
function sortmulti ($array, $index, $order, $natsort=FALSE, $case_sensitive=FALSE) {
if(is_array($array) && count($array)>0) {
foreach(array_keys($array) as $key)
$temp[$key]=$array[$key][$index];
if(!$natsort) {
if ($order=='asc')
asort($temp);
else
arsort($temp);
}
else
{
if ($case_sensitive===true)
natsort($temp);
else
natcasesort($temp);
if($order!='asc')
$temp=array_reverse($temp,TRUE);
}
foreach(array_keys($temp) as $key)
if (is_numeric($key))
$sorted[]=$array[$key];
else
$sorted[$key]=$array[$key];
return $sorted;
}
return $sorted;
}
?>
This took me longer than it should have to figure out, but if you want the behavior of sort($array, SORT_STRING) (that is, re-indexing the array unlike natcasesort) in a case-insensitive manner, it is a simple matter of doing usort($array, strcasecmp).
unless you specify the second argument, "regular" comparisons will be used. I quote from the page on comparison operators:
"If you compare a number with a string or the comparison involves numerical strings, then each string is converted to a number and the comparison performed numerically."
What this means is that "10" < "1a", and "1a" < "2", but "10" > "2". In other words, regular PHP string comparisons are not transitive.
This implies that the output of sort() can in rare cases depend on the order of the input array:
<?php
function echo_sorted($a)
{
echo "{$a[0]} {$a[1]} {$a[2]}";
sort($a);
echo " => {$a[0]} {$a[1]} {$a[2]}\n";
}
// on PHP 5.2.6:
echo_sorted(array( "10", "1a", "2")); // => 10 1a 2
echo_sorted(array( "10", "2", "1a")); // => 1a 2 10
echo_sorted(array( "1a", "10", "2")); // => 2 10 1a
echo_sorted(array( "1a", "2", "10")); // => 1a 2 10
echo_sorted(array( "2", "10", "1a")); // => 2 10 1a
echo_sorted(array( "2", "1a", "10")); // => 10 1a 2
?>
Sorting the keys, but keep the values in order is not possible by just ordering, because it would result in a new array. This is also the solution: Create a new array
<?php
$a = array(9=>"a",8=>"c",5=>"d");
$keys = array_keys($a);
sort($keys);
$result = array_combine($keys, array_values($a));
//Result : array(5=>"a",8=>"c",9=>"d");
?>
In order to make some multidimensional quick sort implementation, take advantage of this stuff
<?php
function quickSortMultiDimensional($array, $chave) {
if( count( $array ) < 2 ) {
return $array;
}
$left = $right = array( );
reset( $array );
$pivot_key = key( $array );
$pivot = array_shift( $array );
foreach( $array as $k => $v ) {
if( $v[$chave] < $pivot[$chave] )
$left[$k][$chave] = $v[$chave];
else
$right[$k][$chave] = $v[$chave];
}
return array_merge(
quickSortMultiDimensional($left, $chave),
array($pivot_key => $pivot),
quickSortMultiDimensional($right, $chave)
);
}
?>
I make it using the idea from pageconfig dot com
tks for viewing
/*
* Name : Aditya Mehrotra
* Email: aditycse@gmail.com
*/
//Example for sorting by values for an alphanumeric array also having case-sensitive data
$exampleArray1 = $exampleArray2 = array(
0 => 'example1',
1 => 'Example10',
2 => 'example12',
3 => 'Example2',
4 => 'example3',
5 => 'EXAMPLE10',
6 => 'example10'
);
//default sorting
asort($exampleArray1);
// alphanumeric with case-sensitive data sorting by values
asort($exampleArray2, SORT_STRING | SORT_FLAG_CASE | SORT_NATURAL);
//output of defaut sorting
print_r($exampleArray1);
/*
* output of default sorting
Array
(
[5] => EXAMPLE10
[1] => Example10
[3] => Example2
[0] => example1
[6] => example10
[2] => example12
[4] => example3
)
*/
print_r($exampleArray2);
/*
* output of alphanumeric with case-sensitive data sorting by values
Array
(
[0] => example1
[3] => Example2
[4] => example3
[5] => EXAMPLE10
[1] => Example10
[6] => example10
[2] => example12
)
*/
EDIT: To the original note by "phpdotnet at m4tt dot co dot uk"
Use array_push instead of $new_array[$k] for some reason it was
giving me string indexes.
Simple function to sort an array by a specific key. Maintains index association.
<?php
function array_sort($array, $on, $order=SORT_ASC)
{
$new_array = array();
$sortable_array = array();
if (count($array) > 0) {
foreach ($array as $k => $v) {
if (is_array($v)) {
foreach ($v as $k2 => $v2) {
if ($k2 == $on) {
$sortable_array[$k] = $v2;
}
}
} else {
$sortable_array[$k] = $v;
}
}
switch ($order) {
case SORT_ASC:
asort($sortable_array);
break;
case SORT_DESC:
arsort($sortable_array);
break;
}
foreach ($sortable_array as $k => $v) {
array_push($new_array, $array[$k]);
}
}
return $new_array;
}
$people = array(
12345 => array(
'id' => 12345,
'first_name' => 'Joe',
'surname' => 'Bloggs',
'age' => 23,
'sex' => 'm'
),
12346 => array(
'id' => 12346,
'first_name' => 'Adam',
'surname' => 'Smith',
'age' => 18,
'sex' => 'm'
),
12347 => array(
'id' => 12347,
'first_name' => 'Amy',
'surname' => 'Jones',
'age' => 21,
'sex' => 'f'
)
);
print_r(array_sort($people, 'age', SORT_DESC)); // Sort by oldest first
print_r(array_sort($people, 'surname', SORT_ASC)); // Sort by surname
/*
Array
(
[12345] => Array
(
[id] => 12345
[first_name] => Joe
[surname] => Bloggs
[age] => 23
[sex] => m
)
[12347] => Array
(
[id] => 12347
[first_name] => Amy
[surname] => Jones
[age] => 21
[sex] => f
)
[12346] => Array
(
[id] => 12346
[first_name] => Adam
[surname] => Smith
[age] => 18
[sex] => m
)
)
Array
(
[12345] => Array
(
[id] => 12345
[first_name] => Joe
[surname] => Bloggs
[age] => 23
[sex] => m
)
[12347] => Array
(
[id] => 12347
[first_name] => Amy
[surname] => Jones
[age] => 21
[sex] => f
)
[12346] => Array
(
[id] => 12346
[first_name] => Adam
[surname] => Smith
[age] => 18
[sex] => m
)
)
*/
?>
Here is no word about sorting UTF-8 strings by any collation. This should not be so uncommon?
<?php
/*
As I found the sort() function normally works as ascending order based on the following priority :
1. NULL
2. Empty
3. Boolean FALSE
4. String
5. Float
6. Int
7. Array
8. Object
Consider the following array:
*/
$a = ['fruit'=> 'apple', 'A' => 10, 20, 5, 2.5, 5=>'A new value', 'last' => 'value', TRUE, NULL, "", FALSE, array(), new StdClass];
sort($a);
var_dump($a);
#The output is:
array(13) {
[0]=>NULL
[1]=> string(0) ""
[2]=>bool(false)
[3]=>string(11) "A new value"
[4]=>string(5) "apple"
[5]=>string(5) "value"
[6]=> float(2.5)
[7]=> int(5)
[8]=>int(10)
[9]=>int(20)
[10]=>array(0) { }
[11]=> bool(true)
[12]=>object(stdClass)#1 (0) {}
}
//Hope it will remove your confusion when you're sorting an array with mix type data.
?>
Let's say we have a list of names, and it is not sorted.
<?php
$names = array('Amin', 'amir', 'sarah', 'Somayeh', 'armita', 'Armin');
sort($names); // simple alphabetical sort
print_r($names);
?>
Result is :
Array
(
[0] => Amin
[1] => Armin
[2] => Somayeh // actually it's not sort alphabetically from here!
[3] => amir // comparison is based on ASCII values.
[4] => armita
[5] => sarah
)
If you want to sort alphabeticaly no matter it is upper or lower case:
<?php
sort($names, SORT_STRING | SORT_FLAG_CASE);
print_r($names);
?>
Result is:
Array
(
[0] => Amin
[1] => amir
[2] => Armin
[3] => armita
[4] => sarah
[5] => Somayeh
)