Here's how to use usort() within a class using a static function as a callback (using the example above):
<?php
class MyObj {
var $name;
function SampleObj($name){
$this->name = $name;
usort($this->name, array(&$this, "compareValues"));
}
static function compareValues($a, $b){
$al = strtolower($a->name);
$bl = strtolower($b->name);
if ($al == $bl) {
return 0;
}
return ($al > $bl) ? +1 : -1;
}
}
?>
usort
(PHP 4, PHP 5)
usort — ユーザー定義の比較関数を使用して、配列を値でソートする
説明
この関数は、ユーザー定義の比較関数により配列をその値でソートします。 ソートしたい配列を複雑な基準でソートする必要がある場合、 この関数を使用するべきです。
注意: 二つのメンバーの比較結果が等しいとなった場合、 ソートされた配列の順番は定義されません。
注意: この関数は、 array パラメータの要素に対して新しいキーを割り当てます。 その際、単純にキーを並べ替える代わりに、 すでに割り当てられている既存のキーを削除してしまいます。
パラメータ
- array
-
入力の配列。
- cmp_function
-
比較関数は、最初の引数が 2 番目の引数より小さいか、等しいか、大きい場合に、 それぞれゼロ未満、ゼロに等しい、ゼロより大きい整数を返す 必要があります。
返り値
成功した場合に TRUE を、失敗した場合に FALSE を返します。
変更履歴
| バージョン | 説明 |
|---|---|
| 4.1.0 | 新しいソートアルゴリズムが導入されました。 cmp_function は、 要素の比較結果が等しい場合にもとの並び順を維持しません。 |
例
例1 usort() の例
<?php
function cmp($a, $b)
{
if ($a == $b) {
return 0;
}
return ($a < $b) ? -1 : 1;
}
$a = array(3, 2, 5, 6, 1);
usort($a, "cmp");
foreach ($a as $key => $value) {
echo "$key: $value\n";
}
?>
上の例の出力は以下となります。
0: 1 1: 2 2: 3 3: 5 4: 6
注意: もちろん、このような簡単な例では rsort() 関数の方がより適当です。
例2 多次元配列を使用する usort() の例
<?php
function cmp($a, $b)
{
return strcmp($a["fruit"], $b["fruit"]);
}
$fruits[0]["fruit"] = "lemons";
$fruits[1]["fruit"] = "apples";
$fruits[2]["fruit"] = "grapes";
usort($fruits, "cmp");
while (list($key, $value) = each($fruits)) {
echo "\$fruits[$key]: " . $value["fruit"] . "\n";
}
?>
多次元配列をソートする際には、$a と $b は配列の最初のインデックスへの参照を保持しています。
上の例の出力は以下となります。
$fruits[0]: apples $fruits[1]: grapes $fruits[2]: lemons
例3 usort() でオブジェクトのメンバ関数を使用する例
<?php
class TestObj {
var $name;
function TestObj($name)
{
$this->name = $name;
}
/* これは、比較用の静的関数です */
static function cmp_obj($a, $b)
{
$al = strtolower($a->name);
$bl = strtolower($b->name);
if ($al == $bl) {
return 0;
}
return ($al > $bl) ? +1 : -1;
}
}
$a[] = new TestObj("c");
$a[] = new TestObj("b");
$a[] = new TestObj("d");
usort($a, array("TestObj", "cmp_obj"));
foreach ($a as $item) {
echo $item->name . "\n";
}
?>
上の例の出力は以下となります。
b c d
usort
Ariz Jacinto
14-May-2008 02:50
14-May-2008 02:50
Anonymous
14-Mar-2008 09:37
14-Mar-2008 09:37
From the docs the user defined function looks as it could be arbitrary. This is not the case.
I needed a comparison that would send arbitrary values at the end of the array. Say '0' means invalid for example.
So here is a sample function.
function array_cmp($a, $b) {
if( $a == 0 ) {
return 99;
} elseif( $a > $b ) {
return 1;
} elseif( $a == $b ) {
return 0;
} elseif( $a < $b ) {
return -1;
}
}
usort($test_array, "array_cmp");
print '<pre>'; print_r( $test_array ); print '</pre>';
$test_array = array(
'a' => 8 ,
'b' => 0 ,
'c' => 1 ,
'd' => 0 ,
'e' => 3
);
Output:
Array
(
[0] => 0
[1] => 1
[2] => 8
[3] => 0
[4] => 3
)
This is beacause comparisons aren't applied to all possible pairs. So when the '0' is tested as $b strange things can occur...
This is solved simply adding an
} elseif( $b == 0) {
return -99;
}
statement.
Carefull of the pitfalls. If you alter the ordering in strange ways without knowledge in the underlying algorithm one could even trigger infinite loops. (if your testing for $a and $b for the same value give inconsistent results. )
Sid_M
06-Nov-2007 10:54
06-Nov-2007 10:54
The sample function for having the sort function be a class method has a comment identifying the sorting function as static, however the function does not have the static keyword. In PHP 5 (at least as configured on my server), usort will fail, identifying the method as non-static. Preceding the function keyword with the static keyword fixed the problem.
jc dot glombard at gmail dot com
09-Oct-2007 10:20
09-Oct-2007 10:20
To svenxy AT nospam gmx net AND rob at digital-crocus dot com
<?php
$zones =
array('192.168.11',
'192.169.12',
'192.168.13',
'192.167.14',
'192.168.15',
'122.168.16',
'192.168.17'
);
natsort($zones);
?>
lite
28-Apr-2007 08:09
28-Apr-2007 08:09
<?php
//
class __partial {
var $args;
var $fn;
function __partial($args) {
$this->fn = array_shift ($args);
$this->args = $args;
}
function right() {
$args = func_get_args ();
array_splice ($args, count($args), 0, $this->args);
return call_user_func_array ($this->fn, $args);
}
function left() {
$args = func_get_args ();
array_splice ($args, 0, 0, $this->args);
return call_user_func_array ($this->fn, $args);
}
}
function rcurry () {
$closure = &new __partial (func_get_args ());
return array ($closure, 'right');
}
function lcurry () {
$closure = &new __partial (func_get_args ());
return array ($closure, 'left');
}
function compare($a, $b, $key) {
if ($a[$key] == $b[$key]) {
return 0;
}
return ($a[$key] > $b[$key]) ? +1 : -1;
}
function sortOn ($array, $key) {
usort ($array, rcurry('compare', $key));
return $array;
}
$array = array (array ('key' => 1), array ('key' => 5), array ('key' => 3));
print_r (sortOn ($array, 'key'));
?>
15-Mar-2007 10:12
A simple way of having reversed sort order from usort() function without using array_reverse() is to change "greater than" to "lesser that" sign (or vice versa) in the compare function.
rob at digital-crocus dot com
31-Jan-2007 12:44
31-Jan-2007 12:44
To svenxy AT nospam gmx net
A faster and clearer way of sorting IP addresses:
<?php
$zones =
array('192.168.11',
'192.169.12',
'192.168.13',
'192.167.14',
'192.168.15',
'122.168.16',
'192.168.17'
);
function sort_subnets_ip2long($a, $b) {
return sprintf("%u", ip2long($a)) - sprintf("%u", ip2long($b));
}
usort($zones, "sort_subnets_ip2long");
?>
Simple testing shows this version is just under twice as fast.
MySQLers: No need to sort this stuff in PHP! Use MySQL's INET_ATON() family of functions to save cycles.
var_dump($zones);
Tim
13-Nov-2006 08:43
13-Nov-2006 08:43
If you want to sort an array of strings by the length of its values, you can write a better cmp-function than manually comparing string lengths with if-statements. Unfortunately, I see this bad technique in other people's code. I prefer using this:
<?php
function length_cmp( $a, $b ) {
return strlen($a)-strlen($b) ;
}
?>
This function sorts the array in ascending order. If you want to sort descending, simply swap $a and $b either in the parameters or in the subtraction.
-Tim
svenxy AT nospam gmx net
16-Oct-2006 05:58
16-Oct-2006 05:58
This will sort subnets correctly:
<?php
$zones =
array('192.168.11',
'192.169.12',
'192.168.13',
'192.167.14',
'192.168.15',
'122.168.16',
'192.168.17'
);
function sort_subnets ($a, $b) {
$a_arr = explode('.', $a);
$b_arr = explode('.', $b);
foreach (range(0,3) as $i) {
if ( $a_arr[$i] < $b_arr[$i] ) {
return -1;
}
elseif ( $a_arr[$i] > $b_arr[$i] ) {
return 1;
}
}
return -1;
}
usort($zones, 'sort_subnets');
print '<pre>';
print_r($zones);
print '</pre>';
?>
oscahie at gmx dot net
21-Sep-2006 07:51
21-Sep-2006 07:51
To markus:
your function can be simplified to:
function SortByName($a, $b) {
return strcasecmp($a['name'], $b['name']);
}
usort($test, 'SortByName');
Replace strcasecmp for strcmp if you want case sensitive comparition.
g8z at yahoo dot com
07-Jul-2006 07:53
07-Jul-2006 07:53
<?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 $arr;
}
?>
Number type ???
17-May-2006 10:13
17-May-2006 10:13
function arfsort($a,$fl){
$GLOBALS['__ARFSORT_LIST__'] = $fl;
usort($a,'arfsort_func');
return $a;
}
function arfsort_func($a,$b) {
foreach ($GLOBALS['__ARFSORT_LIST__'] as $f) {
switch ($f[1]) { // switch on ascending or descending value
case "d":
## Add number type sort
if (is_numeric($a[$f[0]])) {
if ($b[$f[0]] < $a[$f[0]]) $strc = -1;
else if ($b[$f[0]] > $a[$f[0]]) $strc = 1;
else $strc = 0;
} else {
$strc = strcmp($b[$f[0]],$a[$f[0]]);
}
if ( $strc != 0 ){
return $strc;
}
break;
default:
if (is_numeric($a[$f[0]])) {
if ($b[$f[0]] > $a[$f[0]]) $strc = -1;
else if ($b[$f[0]] < $a[$f[0]]) $strc = 1;
else $strc = 0;
} else {
$strc = strcmp($a[$f[0]],$b[$f[0]]);
}
if ($strc != 0){
return $strc;
}
break;
}
}
return 0;
}
martin # classaxe com <><
17-May-2006 05:07
17-May-2006 05:07
Refinement of arfsort to allow per-field sort direction setting:
<?
function arfsort( $a, $fl ){
$GLOBALS['__ARFSORT_LIST__'] = $fl;
usort( $a, 'arfsort_func' );
return $a;
}
// extended to allow sort direction per field sorted against
function arfsort_func( $a, $b ){
foreach( $GLOBALS['__ARFSORT_LIST__'] as $f ) {
switch ($f[1]) { // switch on ascending or descending value
case "d":
$strc = strcmp( strtolower($b[$f[0]]), strtolower($a[$f[0]]) );
if ( $strc != 0 ){
return $strc;
}
break;
default:
$strc = strcmp( strtolower($a[$f[0]]), strtolower($b[$f[0]]) );
if ( $strc != 0 ){
return $strc;
}
break;
}
}
return 0;
}
// Just prints out record contents
function show($test) {
foreach ($test as $key=>$row) {
print "<li>($key) ".$row['fruit']." is ".$row['type']." at ".$row['time']." on ".$row['date']."</li>\n";
}
print "<hr>";
}
// Example usage
$test = array(
array( 'fruit' => 'Lemon', 'type' => 'sour', 'date' => '2006-05-16', 'time' => '12:36'),
array( 'fruit' => 'Banana','type' => 'sweet','date' => '2006-05-17','time' => '12:35'),
array( 'fruit' => 'Apple', 'type' => 'sweet','date' => '2006-05-17','time' => '12:35'),
array( 'fruit' => 'green apple', 'type' => 'sour', 'date' => '2006-05-16', 'time' => '12:37')
);
show($test);
$order_arr =
array(
array('date','d'), // d means decending - swap for 'a' to see effect
array('time','a'),
array('fruit','a')
);
$sorted = arfsort( $test, $order_arr);
show($sorted);
?>
stephen in koto
06-Apr-2006 02:28
06-Apr-2006 02:28
For using usort inside a method in an object, where the callback sort method is in the same object, this works:
usort($arr_to_sort, array($this, "sort_terms_by_criteria"));
If you wish to keep elements in their original or reverse order if they are the same length, just don't return zero for items that compare the same. Return a 1 or -1, as appropriate.
sydney at totoche dot org
16-Jan-2006 06:44
16-Jan-2006 06:44
Instead of doing :
$strc = strcmp( strtolower($a[$f]), strtolower($b[$f]) );
you could do this :
$strc = strcasecmp( $a[$f], $b[$f] );
which is more efficient and is does case insensitive comparison according to the current locale.
sean at NOSPAM dot orwd dot com
24-Sep-2005 06:46
24-Sep-2005 06:46
In order to get a proper text sorting I have changed the arfsort() function submitted by jonathan(at)inetz(dot)com.
The one line I have changed is:
<?php
$strc = strcmp( $a[$f], $b[$f] );
?>
to
<?php
$strc = strcmp( strtolower($a[$f]), strtolower($b[$f]) );
?>
It can now sort correctly for alphabetization. Capital letters where getting in the way.
Sean
Tim
22-Sep-2005 11:25
22-Sep-2005 11:25
A couple examples here advocate the use of 'create_function' for sorting, which is tempting to use because of the limitations of usort. But beware this method -- the function created will NOT be freed at the end of the sorting routine, which creates a memory leak. For this reason, this method should probably never be used.
If you need multi-key or other complex sorting, the fundamental problem is passing in parameters into the comparison routine. I suggest creating a global variable (_array_key_multisort_parameters or something long), and controlling the comparison routine in that way.
markus dot meier at udo dot edu
16-Sep-2005 04:00
16-Sep-2005 04:00
@Jeremy Swinborne:
The same can be achieved by usort and will be much faster, too:
<?php
function SortByName($a, $b) {
if ($a['name'] == $b['name']) return 0;
return return ($a['name'] < $b['name']) ? -1 : 1;
}
usort($test, 'SortByName');
?>
markus dot meier at udo dot edu
16-Sep-2005 03:53
16-Sep-2005 03:53
gk at lka dot hu:
I've removed a few errors and moved both functions into one. The line with the prefix-check did'nt work right.
<?php
function CompareUmlaut($astring, $bstring) {
$ALP = "Aa��BbCcDdEe��FfGgHhIi�iJjKkLlMmNnOo������PpQqRrSs" .
"TtUu������VvWwXxYyZz0123456789!?.()[]=%+-"
// find first differing char
$aLen = strlen($astring); $bLen = strlen($bstring);
for ($i=0; $i<$aLen && $i<$bLen && $astring[$i]==$bstring[$i]; $i++);
// if one string is the prefix of the other one, the shorter wins
if ($i == $aLen || $i == $bLen) return (strlen($astring) < strlen($bstring)) ? -1 : 1;
// otherwise depends on the first different char
$ALPL = strlen($ALP);
$ap = $bp = -1;
$j = 0;
while (($j < $ALPL) && (($ap == -1) || ($bp == -1))) {
if ($ALP[$j] == $astring[$i]) $ap = $j;
if ($ALP[$j] == $bstring[$i]) $bp = $j;
$j++;
}
return($ap < $bp) ? -1 : 1;
?>
jasper at bryant-greene dot name
11-Sep-2005 01:33
11-Sep-2005 01:33
reinhard at ess dot co dot at: you need to look at the natsort() function.
rpmPUBLI at iespana dot es
04-Sep-2005 04:48
04-Sep-2005 04:48
(I've browsed the docummented notes and I haven't found this note, so there I go):
Please note that, when sorting associative arrays (i.e. non-numeric indexes), these will be lost and replaced by a regular numeric index starting at 0.
reinhard at ess dot co dot at
08-Aug-2005 10:34
08-Aug-2005 10:34
maybe someone can use this.
with that compare-function you can get this order:
string1, string2, ..., string10, string11, ...string22...
else the functions make something like
string10,string11,...string1,string20....
or
string1,string10,string11,string2,string20...
it's not the best solution, but works for my purpose...
<?
function cmp($a,$b){
list($a)=explode(".",$a);
list($b)=explode(".",$b);
$s=0;
for($i=0;$i<=strlen($a);++$i){
if(is_numeric($a[$i])&&is_numeric($b[$i])){
$n=1;
$anum=$bnum=0;
while((is_numeric($a[$i])||is_numeric($b[$i]))&&
(strlen($a)>=$i||strlen($b)>=$i)){
if(is_numeric($a[$i])&&$i<=strlen($a)) $anum=$a[$i]+$anum*$n;
if(is_numeric($b[$i])&&$i<=strlen($b)) $bnum=$b[$i]+$bnum*$n;
$n*=10;
++$i;
}
if($n>1) --$i;
if($anum!=$bnum) return $anum<$bnum?-1:1;
}elseif($a[$i]!=$b[$i]) return $a[$i]<$b[$i]?-1:1;
}
}
?>
use it like this:
<?
usort($array,"cmp");
?>
Jeremy Swinborne
21-Jul-2005 05:56
21-Jul-2005 05:56
When I query a DB I usually put my record set inside of a multi-dimentional array. I finally wrote a program that will allow you to sort your record set by column after you put it in an array.
<?php
$test = array();
$test[0]['name'] = 'jeremy';
$test[0]['email'] = 'lala@fishies.com';
$test[0]['phone'] = '123-123-1234';
$test[0]['trick'] = 'mezopia';
$test[1]['name'] = 'Amanda';
$test[1]['email'] = 'hot@hotmail.com';
$test[1]['phone'] = '123-123-1235';
$test[1]['trick'] = 'youarecool';
$test[2]['name'] = 'john';
$test[2]['email'] = 'wowee@yahoo.com';
$test[2]['phone'] = '123-123-3333';
$test[2]['trick'] = 'goneinanhour';
print_r(columnSort($test, 'name'));
function columnSort($unsorted, $column) {
$sorted = $unsorted;
for ($i=0; $i < sizeof($sorted)-1; $i++) {
for ($j=0; $j<sizeof($sorted)-1-$i; $j++)
if ($sorted[$j][$column] > $sorted[$j+1][$column]) {
$tmp = $sorted[$j];
$sorted[$j] = $sorted[$j+1];
$sorted[$j+1] = $tmp;
}
}
return $sorted;
}
?>
dmhouse at gmail dot com
19-Jul-2005 06:09
19-Jul-2005 06:09
The easiest way to compare two integers is just to take the second away from the first. For example, say you wanted to sort by an integer property of an object. Your comparison function would look like this:
<?php
function compare_counts($a, $b) {
return $a->count - $b->count;
}
?>
This works because you don't necessarily have to return -1, 0 or 1, the manual states any integer less than, equal to or greater than 0 is OK.
16-Jun-2005 06:10
Case insensitive sort with foreign letters.
<?php
$orig[] = "Abba";
$orig[] = "pappa";
$orig[] = "�iorhkl";
$orig[] = "������1";
$orig[] = "������1";
function cmp($a, $b)
{
$a=html_entity_decode(strtolower(htmlentities($a)));
$b=html_entity_decode(strtolower(htmlentities($b)));
if ( $a == $b ) {
return 0;
}
return ($a < $b) ? -1 : 1;
}
usort($orig,"cmp");
/*
returns:
Array
(
[0] => Abba
[1] => pappa
[2] => �iorhkl
[3] => ������1
[4] => ������1
)
*/
?>
steve at tracorp dot com
13-Apr-2005 08:57
13-Apr-2005 08:57
When sorting a large multi-dimensional array, I ran into an issue where the array was not being sorted either ascending or descending, even when it started in sorted order. It turns out that the above note about the callback function returning an integer is true. My comparison function was just a subtraction between two floating point numbers, and the result being a float produced very unpredictable results.
guenther dot stadler at gmx dot net
30-Mar-2005 07:25
30-Mar-2005 07:25
Just something i stumbled about right now:
If the array consists of just one elemtent, the user-function is not called at all.
Although this surely makes sense, think of it if you want to use your order-function for adding extra data to your arrays...
ulrichUNDERSCOREalexis at yahoo dot com
05-Mar-2005 12:03
05-Mar-2005 12:03
Please note that:
- the HTML entities should be replaced by their accented counterparts;
- the $patterns arrays have been split for display convenience.
<?php
/* returns the collated string (with no accent or with the matching string
* replacement) in lower case according to that language rule.
* The aim is to alphabetically sort lists of strings with characters from
* other languages but using collation rules of that given language
* (ISO 639-1 code).
* Latin-derived alphabets are supported (currently English, French and
* German)
* rules source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latin_alphabet
*/
function collatedLower($string, $lang=null) {
switch ($lang) {
case 'de':
// German
$patterns = array(
"/á|à|â|ã|å|
Á|À|Â|Ã|Å/",
"/ä|æ|Ä|Æ/",
"/ç|Ç/",
"/é|è|ê|ë|
É|È|Ê|Ë/",
"/ì|í|î|ï|
Ì|Í|Î|Ï/",
"/ñ|Ñ/",
"/ò|ó|ô|õ|ø|
Ò|Ó|Ô|Õ|Ø/",
"/ö|œ|Ö|Œ/",
"/ß/",
"/ù|ú|û|
Ù|Ú|Û/",
"/ü|Ü/",
"/ý|ÿ|Ý/");
$replace = array('a', 'ae', 'c', 'e', 'i', 'n', 'o', 'oe', 'ss', 'u', 'ue', 'y');
break;
default:
// 'en' (English), 'fr' (French)
$patterns = array(
"/á|à|â|ã|ä|å|
Á|À|Â|Ã|Ä|Å/",
"/æ|Æ/",
"/ç|Ç/",
"/é|è|ê|ë|
É|È|Ê|Ë/",
"/ì|í|î|ï|
Ì|Í|Î|Ï/",
"/ñ|Ñ/",
"/ò|ó|ô|õ|ö|ø|
Ò|Ó|Ô|Õ|Ö|Ø/",
"/œ|Œ/",
"/ß/",
"/ù|ú|û|ü|
Ù|Ú|Û|Ü/",
"/ý|ÿ|Ý/");
$replace = array('a', 'ae', 'c', 'e', 'i', 'n', 'o', 'oe', 'ss', 'u', 'y');
break;
}
return preg_replace($patterns,$replace,$string);
}
// English
function compareAccents_en($a, $b) {
return compareAccents($a, $b, 'en');
}
// French
function compareAccents_fr($a, $b) {
return compareAccents($a, $b, 'fr');
}
// German
function compareAccents_de($a, $b) {
return compareAccents($a, $b, 'de');
}
/*
* comparison function to group together accented letters with
* their lower-case non-accented counterparts
* the $lang parameter enables sorting rules for that language
* (ISO 639-1 code)
*/
function compareAccents($a, $b, $lang=null) {
$anew = strtolower(collatedLower($a,$lang));
$bnew = strtolower(collatedLower($b,$lang));
if ($anew < $bnew) return -1;
if ($anew > $bnew) return 1;
return 0;
}
// usage:
usort($myList,'compareAccents_fr');
// to be compared to:
setlocale(LC_COLLATE,'fr');
usort($myList, 'strcoll');
?>
ulrichUNDERSCOREalexis at yahoo dot com
04-Mar-2005 09:31
04-Mar-2005 09:31
<?php
/* returns the collated string (with no accent or with the matching string
* replacement) in lower case according to that language rule.
* The aim is to alphabetically sort lists of strings with characters from
* other languages but using collation rules of that given language
* (ISO 639-1 code).
* Latin-derived alphabets are supported (currently English, French and
* German)
* rules source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latin_alphabet
*/
function collatedLower($string, $lang=null) {
switch ($lang) {
case 'de':
// German
/*
* In German, letters with umlaut (�, �, �) are treated generally
* just like their non-umlauted versions; � is always sorted as ss.
* This makes the alphabetic order Arg, �rgerlich, Arm, Assistent,
* A�lar, Assoziation.
* For phone directories and similar lists of names, the umlauts are
* to be collated like the letter combinations "ae", "oe", "ue".
* This makes the alphabetic order Udet, �belacker, Uell, �lle, Ueve,
* �xk�ll, Uffenbach.
* The ligatures �, �, and the symbol �, when used in English, French,
* or German, are normally not counted as separate alphabetic letters
* but as variants of AE, OE, and ss, respectively.
*/
$patterns = array("/�|�|�|�|�|�|�|�|�|�/",
"/�|�|�|�/",
"/�|�/",
"/�|�|�|�|�|�|�|�/",
"/�|�|�|�|�|�|�|�/",
"/�|�/",
"/�|�|�|�|�|�|�|�|�|�/",
"/�|�|�|�/",
"/�/",
"/�|�|�|�|�|�/",
"/�|�/",
"/�|�|�/");
$replace = array('a', 'ae', 'c', 'e', 'i', 'n', 'o', 'oe', 'ss', 'u', 'ue', 'y');
break;
default:
// 'en' (English), 'fr' (French)
/*
* In French and English, characters with diaeresis (�, �, �, �, �, �)
* are usually treated just like their un-accented versions.
* The ligatures �, �, and the symbol �, when used in English, French,
* or German, are normally not counted as separate alphabetic letters
* but as variants of AE, OE, and ss, respectively.
*
* NB: In French, accent differences are sorted from the end of the
* word, so the ordering of "p�che" and "p�ch�" changes from the
* English ordering.
* English ordering: cote, cot�, c�te, c�t�
* French ordering: cote, c�te, cot�, c�t�
* => this is currently not supported
*/
$patterns = array("/�|�|�|�|�|�|�|�|�|�|�|�/",
"/�|�/",
"/�|�/",
"/�|�|�|�|�|�|�|�/",
"/�|�|�|�|�|�|�|�/",
"/�|�/",
"/�|�|�|�|�|�|�|�|�|�|�|�/",
"/�|�/",
"/�/",
"/�|�|�|�|�|�|�|�/",
"/�|�|�/");
$replace = array('a', 'ae', 'c', 'e', 'i', 'n', 'o', 'oe', 'ss', 'u', 'y');
break;
}
return preg_replace($patterns,$replace,$string);
}
// English
function compareAccents_en($a, $b) {
return compareAccents($a, $b, 'en');
}
// French
function compareAccents_fr($a, $b) {
return compareAccents($a, $b, 'fr');
}
// German
function compareAccents_de($a, $b) {
return compareAccents($a, $b, 'de');
}
/*
* comparison function to group together accented letters with their lower-case
* non-accented counterparts
* the $lang parameter enables sorting rules for that language (ISO 639-1 code)
*/
function compareAccents($a, $b, $lang=null) {
$anew = strtolower(collatedLower($a,$lang));
$bnew = strtolower(collatedLower($b,$lang));
if ($anew < $bnew) return -1;
if ($anew > $bnew) return 1;
return 0;
}
// usage:
usort($myList,'compareAccents_fr');
// to be compared to:
setlocale(LC_COLLATE,'fr');
usort($myList, 'strcoll');
?>
Raveler at telenet dot be
21-May-2004 02:02
21-May-2004 02:02
The array_alternate_multisort function written by robert below doesn't work. There are several bugs in the code and it doesn't work when sorting by multiple keys because the order of the first key isn't taken into account when sorting by the second key and so on. Also, because robert uses strcasecmp the algorithm doesn't work properly with floats or other variable types. Here's the improved version:
<?php
function SortArray() {
$arguments = func_get_args();
$array = $arguments[0];
$code = '';
for ($c = 1; $c < count($arguments); $c += 2) {
if (in_array($arguments[$c + 1], array("ASC", "DESC"))) {
$code .= 'if ($a["'.$arguments[$c].'"] != $b["'.$arguments[$c].'"]) {';
if ($arguments[$c + 1] == "ASC") {
$code .= 'return ($a["'.$arguments[$c].'"] < $b["'.$arguments[$c].'"] ? -1 : 1); }';
}
else {
$code .= 'return ($a["'.$arguments[$c].'"] < $b["'.$arguments[$c].'"] ? 1 : -1); }';
}
}
}
$code .= 'return 0;';
$compare = create_function('$a,$b', $code);
usort($array, $compare);
return $array;
}
?>
robert at sargant dot com
11-Mar-2004 06:40
11-Mar-2004 06:40
This is an extension to Todor's function below - it will sort a multidimensional array by a primary key, secondary key and so on. It uses the same method of passing arguments as array_multisort, including sort order flags (but not sort type flags - arrays are sorted as case-insensitive strings.)
<?php
function array_alternate_multisort()
{
$arguments = func_get_args();
$arrays = $arguments[0];
for ($c = (count($arguments)-1); $c > 0; $c--)
{
if (in_array($arguments[$c], array(SORT_ASC , SORT_DESC)))
{
continue;
}
$compare = create_function('$a,$b','return strcasecmp($a["'.$arguments[$c].'"], $b["'.$arguments[$c].'"]);');
usort($arrays, $compare);
if ($arguments[$c+1] == SORT_DESC)
{
$arrays = array_reverse($arrays);
}
}
return $arrays ;
}
?>
To demonstrate:
<?php
$dir_contents[] = array("is_dir" => 0, "name" => "b.jpg");
$dir_contents[] = array("is_dir" => 1, "name" => "e");
$dir_contents[] = array("is_dir" => 1, "name" => "a");
$dir_contents[] = array("is_dir" => 0, "name" => "d.png");
$dir_contents[] = array("is_dir" => 0, "name" => "c.png");
$dir_sorted = array_alternate_multisort($dir_contents, "is_dir", SORT_DESC, "name", SORT_ASC);
print_r($dir_sorted);
?>
Produces the output:
Array
(
[0] => Array
(
[is_dir] => 1
[name] => a
)
[1] => Array
(
[is_dir] => 1
[name] => e
)
[2] => Array
(
[is_dir] => 0
[name] => b.jpg
)
[3] => Array
(
[is_dir] => 0
[name] => c.png
)
[4] => Array
(
[is_dir] => 0
[name] => d.png
)
)
todor at todor dot net
08-Mar-2004 09:39
08-Mar-2004 09:39
To sort multidimentional arrays .... by one key.
function multi_sort($tab,$key){
$compare = create_function('$a,$b','if ($a["'.$key.'"] == $b["'.$key.'"]) {return 0;}else {return ($a["'.$key.'"] > $b["'.$key.'"]) ? -1 : 1;}');
usort($tab,$compare) ;
return $tab ;
}
arjini at mac dot com
27-Jan-2004 03:05
27-Jan-2004 03:05
<?php
/*
This is a class I built to sort parent/child relationships of array elements.
I post this here, because thanks to usort, you can also assign an explicit order
to the elements.
I first built this to sort categories and subcategories.
My database has four fields. category_id, parent_id, category_name, category_position
$rows is an associative array from the database with my categories.
*/
$rows = array( 0=>array('category_id'=>1,'parent_id' =>3,'category_name' =>'Second Child','category_position'=>2),
1=>array('category_id' =>2,'parent_id' =>0,'category_name' =>'Second Parent','category_position'=>2),
2=>array('category_id' =>3,'parent_id' =>0,'category_name' =>'First Parent','category_position'=>1),
3=>array('category_id' =>4,'parent_id' =>0,'category_name' =>'Third Parent','category_position'=>3),
4=>array('category_id' =>5,'parent_id' =>3,'category_name' =>'First Child','category_position'=>1),
5=>array('category_id' =>6,'parent_id' =>5,'category_name'=>'Second Sub-Child','category_position'=>2),
6=>array('category_id' =>7,'parent_id' =>5,'category_name' =>'First Sub-Child','category_position'=>1)
);
$ordered = chain('category_id', 'parent_id', 'category_position', $rows);
foreach($ordered as $item)
{
echo str_repeat('------', $item['indent']).$item['category_name'].'<br>';
}
/*
Output
First Parent
------First Child
------------First Sub-Child
------------Second Sub-Child
------Second Child
Second Parent
Third Parent
You can have it only return a certain "branch" if you specify a root_id.
Aditionally, you can keep it by going to deep by specifying max-level.
Hope someone finds this useful, I sure would have liked to see this here a week ago.
Ah yes... and the code that runs it.
*/
function chain($primary_field, $parent_field, $sort_field, $rows, $root_id=0, $maxlevel=25)
{
$c = new chain($primary_field, $parent_field, $sort_field, $rows, $root_id, $maxlevel);
return $c->chain_table;
}
class chain
{
var $table;
var $rows;
var $chain_table;
var $primary_field;
var $parent_field;
var $sort_field;
function chain($primary_field, $parent_field, $sort_field, $rows, $root_id, $maxlevel)
{
$this->rows = $rows;
$this->primary_field = $primary_field;
$this->parent_field = $parent_field;
$this->sort_field = $sort_field;
$this->buildChain($root_id,$maxlevel);
}
function buildChain($rootcatid,$maxlevel)
{
foreach($this->rows as $row)
{
$this->table[$row[$this->parent_field]][ $row[$this->primary_field]] = $row;
}
$this->makeBranch($rootcatid,0,$maxlevel);
}
function makeBranch($parent_id,$level,$maxlevel)
{
$rows=$this->table[$parent_id];
foreach($rows as $key=>$value)
{
$rows[$key]['key'] = $this->sort_field;
}
usort($rows,'chainCMP');
foreach($rows as $item)
{
$item['indent'] = $level;
$this->chain_table[] = $item;
if((isset($this->table[$item[$this->primary_field]])) && (($maxlevel>$level+1) || ($maxlevel==0)))
{
$this->makeBranch($item[$this->primary_field], $level+1, $maxlevel);
}
}
}
}
function chainCMP($a,$b)
{
if($a[$a['key']] == $b[$b['key']])
{
return 0;
}
return($a[$a['key']]<$b[$b['key']])?-1:1;
}
?>
sreid at sea-to-sky dot net
08-Jan-2004 01:22
08-Jan-2004 01:22
As the manual says, "If two members compare as equal, their order in the sorted array is undefined." This means that the sort used is not "stable" and may change the order of elements that compare equal.
Sometimes you really do need a stable sort. For example, if you sort a list by one field, then sort it again by another field, but don't want to lose the ordering from the previous field. In that case it is better to use usort with a comparison function that takes both fields into account, but if you can't do that then use the function below. It is a merge sort, which is guaranteed O(n*log(n)) complexity, which means it stays reasonably fast even when you use larger lists (unlike bubblesort and insertion sort, which are O(n^2)).
function mergesort(&$array, $cmp_function = 'strcmp') {
// Arrays of size < 2 require no action.
if (count($array) < 2) return;
// Split the array in half
$halfway = count($array) / 2;
$array1 = array_slice($array, 0, $halfway);
$array2 = array_slice($array, $halfway);
// Recurse to sort the two halves
mergesort($array1, $cmp_function);
mergesort($array2, $cmp_function);
// If all of $array1 is <= all of $array2, just append them.
if (call_user_func($cmp_function, end($array1), $array2[0]) < 1) {
$array = array_merge($array1, $array2);
return;
}
// Merge the two sorted arrays into a single sorted array
$array = array();
$ptr1 = $ptr2 = 0;
while ($ptr1 < count($array1) && $ptr2 < count($array2)) {
if (call_user_func($cmp_function, $array1[$ptr1], $array2[$ptr2]) < 1) {
$array[] = $array1[$ptr1++];
}
else {
$array[] = $array2[$ptr2++];
}
}
// Merge the remainder
while ($ptr1 < count($array1)) $array[] = $array1[$ptr1++];
while ($ptr2 < count($array2)) $array[] = $array2[$ptr2++];
return;
}
webmaster at zeroweb dot org
20-Dec-2003 08:05
20-Dec-2003 08:05
Needed a quick, fairly uncluttered way of sorting an array of objects by a certain object attribute, so here's what I came up with. Uses one global array and usort(). Also accepts an optional sort direction argument (CSORT_ASC = sort ascending, CSORT_DESC = sort descending). Use it like this:
(assuming $myarray is your array, "index" is the attribute you want to sort by, and you want to sort in descending order)
csort($myarray, "index", CSORT_DESC);
Hope this is of use to someone. Probably a better way to pull this off, but this works alright.
define("CSORT_ASC", 1);
define("CSORT_DESC", -1);
function csort_cmp(&$a, &$b)
{
global $csort_cmp;
if ($a->$csort_cmp['key'] > $b->$csort_cmp['key'])
return $csort_cmp['direction'];
if ($a->$csort_cmp['key'] < $b->$csort_cmp['key'])
return -1 * $csort_cmp['direction'];
return 0;
}
function csort(&$a, $k, $sort_direction=CSORT_ASC)
{
global $csort_cmp;
$csort_cmp = array(
'key' => $k,
'direction' => $sort_direction
);
usort($a, "csort_cmp");
unset($csort_cmp);
}
kristen at ccshoreline dot org
22-Nov-2003 05:39
22-Nov-2003 05:39
I have a class with a bunch of functions that work with an SQL database. I am working with calendar dates that occur more than once (like once a week for 2 months), so I have to generate the date in php after the SQL. But I wanted to sort the events based on the date, so I tried using usort, but was unable to get it to work, because it didn't think that my sorting function was defined (even though it was in the same class). I have a separate class to store the data, that has a variable called Start which is a PHP date object.
So here is how I got it to work. First I created a temporary function, that returned the value of a string comparison of the timestamps for the dates. Then I used that temporary function for the usort. Enjoy.
$tempfunction = create_function('$event1,$event2',
'return strcmp($event1->Start[0],$event2->Start[0]);');
usort($data,$tempfunction);
me_islandnet_com
09-Oct-2003 10:45
09-Oct-2003 10:45
First off just let me say thanks to skrebbel at operamail dot com for his excellent Banana class. I've expanded it so that you can specify an ordering sequence (ASC, DESC) on each of the fields.
<?php
class mdasort {
var $aData;//the array we want to sort.
var $aSortkeys;//the order in which we want the array to be sorted.
function _sortcmp($a, $b, $i=0) {
$r = strnatcmp($a[$this->aSortkeys[$i][0]],$b[$this->aSortkeys[$i][0]]);
if ($this->aSortkeys[$i][1] == "DESC") $r = $r * -1;
if($r==0) {
$i++;
if ($this->aSortkeys[$i]) $r = $this->_sortcmp($a, $b, $i);
}
return $r;
}
function sort() {
if(count($this->aSortkeys)) {
usort($this->aData,array($this,"_sortcmp"));
}
}
}
$B = new mdasort;
$B->aData = array(
array("name" => "hank", "headsize" => "small", "age" => 32),
array("name" => "sade", "headsize" => "petit", "age" => 36),
array("name" => "hank", "headsize" => "large", "age" => 33),
array("name" => "sade", "headsize" => "large", "age" => 32),
array("name" => "john", "headsize" => "large", "age" => 32),
array("name" => "hank", "headsize" => "small", "age" => 36),
array("name" => "hank", "headsize" => "small", "age" => 40)
);
$B->aSortkeys = array(
array('name','ASC'),
array('headsize','DESC'),
array('age','ASC'),
);
$B->sort();
foreach ( $B->aData as $display_row )
{
echo $display_row['name'] . ', ';
echo $display_row['headsize'] . ', ';
echo $display_row['age'];
echo '<br>';
}
?>
skrebbel at operamail dot com
28-Mar-2003 06:59
28-Mar-2003 06:59
here's another recursive multisort, however a clean and fast one that is class-based (but works as well outside classes) and does not uglify your global namespace at all. note that strnatcmp is used, but one could use something else of course.
btw, for arrays in which the rows/columns are 'swapped', use array_multisort().
class Banana {
var $aData;//the array we want to sort.
var $aSortkeys;//the order in which we want the array to be sorted.
function _sortcmp($a, $b, $i=0) {
$r = strnatcmp($a[$this->aSortkeys[$i]],$b[$this->aSortkeys[$i]]);
if($r==0) {
$i++;
if ($this->aSortkeys[$i]) $r = $this->_sortcmp($a, $b, $i+1);
}
return $r;
}
function sort() {
if(count($this->aSortkeys)) {
usort($this->aData,array($this,"_sortcmp"));
}
}
}
$B = new Banana;
$B->aData = array(
array("name" => "hank", "headsize" => "big", "age" => 32),
array("name" => "frank", "headsize" => "huge", "age" => 36)
);
$B->aSortkeys = array("age","name");
$B->sort();
sorry for the ugly indenting, but i couldn't get it any better in this note adder thingo.
steveNO_SPAM at AXE_MEcontentwatch dot com
01-Jan-2003 07:11
01-Jan-2003 07:11
The sort functions do nothing if identical keys exist. Of course, you shouldn't have identical keys anyway, but this just might save someone else the oodles of time it took me to figure out while using multi-dimentional arrays:
class myArticleList {
// ... //
function &getList () {
// works
$a = array (
"articleList1" => array ( "2", "3" ),
"articleList2" => array ( "3" , "4")
);
usort( $a, array( $this, "compareByTitle") );
// doesn't work
$b = array (
"articleList" => array ( "2", "3" ),
"articleList" => array ( "3" , "4")
);
usort( $b, array( $this, "compareByTitle") );
}
function compareByTitle( $a, $b ) {
// ... //
}
}
mharrodine AT blue yonder DOT co-uk
12-Dec-2002 09:46
12-Dec-2002 09:46
Thankyou to franky at iname dot com for his solution to my problem although i'd like to clarify something because the use for this isn't entirely obvious at first glance. I like to define my arrays to look like tables in a database or spreadsheet as follows (it looks tidy is the only reason!):
Row(s) Column(s) ------------->
| $array[0] = array("1", "2","3");
| $array[1] = array("1", "2","3");
\/ $array[2] = array("1", "2","3");
This "array of arrays" seems to behave differently to normal associative or multi-dimension arrays when sorting but using franky's routine....
function cmp ($a, $b)
{
global $w_o;
if ($a[$w_o] == $b[$w_o]) return 0;
return ($a[$w_o] < $b[$w_o]) ? -1 : 1;
}
...you simply specify the column you want to sort by defining $w_o and call "usort($my_array,"cmp");". This might seem obvious to some people but wasn't to me and I hope this helps others in the same situation. Thanks....
jfren484 AT hotmail DOT com
25-Oct-2002 08:37
25-Oct-2002 08:37
If you've used ADO before, you may have used the Sort property on a recordset. It's very powerful - you can add a nice ORDER BY clause after getting the recordset from the database. It's especially helpful if you want to show a list on a web page and make the column headings links that cause the list to resort on that column.
I wanted to do the same thing with mysql recordsets, but it looks like you have to have the ORDER BY in your query. I re-worked the example from johan_land at yahoo dot com above for sorting multidimensional arrays. When I get a mysql recordset, I create an array with all of the records like this:
$aaRows[] = array();
if (mysql_num_rows($rsRows) > 0)
while ($aRow = mysql_fetch_array($rsRows, MYSQL_ASSOC))
$aaRows[] = $aRow;
At this point $aaRows is an array of arrays - it's a numeric-indexed array containing records from the recordset, which themselves are associative arrays. The following code takes the array of records as the first parameter, and an array of fields to sort - each field is an associative array, where 'name' is the db field name, and 'dir' is the direction to sort. If dir is 'DESC' (case-insensitive), it will sort descending. Any other value (including not setting one) will cause it to sort ascending.
function sortRows(&$a_aaRows, $a_aaSortCriteria)
{
GLOBAL $g_aaSortArray;
function compare($a_aRow1, $a_aRow2, $a_lField = 0)
{
GLOBAL $g_aaSortArray;
$lCompareVal = 0;
if ($a_lField < count($g_aaSortArray))
{
$sSortFieldName = $g_aaSortArray[$a_lField]['name'];
$sSortFieldDir = $g_aaSortArray[$a_lField]['dir'];
$vValue1 = eval('return $a_aRow1[' . $sSortFieldName . '];');
$vValue2 = eval('return $a_aRow2[' . $sSortFieldName . '];');
if ($vValue1 == $vValue2)
$lCompareVal = compare($a_aRow1, $a_aRow2, $a_lField + 1);
else
{
$lCompareVal = $vValue1 > $vValue2 ? 1 : -1;
if (strtolower(substr($sSortFieldDir, 0, 4)) == 'desc')
$lCompareVal = -$lCompareVal;
}
}
return $lCompareVal;
}
$g_aaSortArray = $a_aaSortCriteria;
usort($a_aaRows, 'compare');
}
When I call it it looks something like this:
sortRows($aaRows, array(array('name' => 'STATE', 'dir' => 'ASC'), array('name' => 'CITY', 'dir' => 'DESC')));
mkr at binarywerks dot dk
21-Sep-2002 01:29
21-Sep-2002 01:29
If you want to sort an array according to another array acting as a priority list, you can use this function.
function listcmp($a, $b)
{
global $order;
foreach($order as $key => $value)
{
if($a==$value)
{
return 0;
break;
}
if($b==$value)
{
return 1;
break;
}
}
}
$order[0] = "first";
$order[1] = "second";
$order[2] = "third";
$array[0] = "second";
$array[1] = "first";
$array[2] = "third";
$array[3] = "fourth";
$array[4] = "second";
$array[5] = "first";
$array[6] = "second";
usort($array, "listcmp");
print_r($array);
simen at NO_SPAM_AT_ALLbleed dot no
07-Aug-2002 05:16
07-Aug-2002 05:16
To sort a list of objects either ascending (a) or descending (d) using key use the function below for comparison.
function property_sort($oa, $ob) {
global $sort_key;
global $sort_dir;
$a = strtolower($oa->$sort_key);
$b = strtolower($ob->$sort_key);
if ($a == $b) {
return 0;
} else if (($a > $b && $sort_dir == "a") || ($a < $b && $sort_dir == "d")) {
return 1;
} else {
return -1;
}
}
prozac at iguanasoft dot com
15-Jul-2002 09:55
15-Jul-2002 09:55
Here is a simple example of converting a timestamp date("U") into a date. This sorts by that day and then by string value alphabetically.
I hope it saves someone some time... Happy PHP'in!
//data to sort
$shared[0]["page_id"] = "2025731470";
$shared[1]["page_id"] = "2025731450";
$shared[2]["page_id"] = "1025731456";
$shared[3]["page_id"] = "1025731460";
$shared[0]["username"] = "larry";
$shared[1]["username"] = "alvin";
$shared[2]["username"] = "garth";
$shared[3]["username"] = "harvy";
//function to convert timestamp to date
function convert_timestamp($timestamp){
$limit=date("U");
$limiting=$timestamp-$limit;
return date ("Ymd", mktime (0,0,$limiting));
}
//comparison function
function cmp ($a, $b) {
$l=convert_timestamp($a["page_id"]);
$k=convert_timestamp($b["page_id"]);
if($k==$l){
return strcmp($a["username"], $b["username"]);
}else{
return strcmp($k, $l);
}
}
//sort array
usort($shared, "cmp");
//display sorted info
while (list ($key, $value) = each ($shared)) {
echo "\$shared[$key]: ";
echo $value["page_id"];
echo " username: ";
echo $value["username"];
echo "<break_tag>";
}
//This will output:
$shared[0]: 2025731450 username: alvin
$shared[1]: 2025731470 username: larry
$shared[2]: 1025731456 username: garth
$shared[3]: 1025731460 username: harvy
alex at netflex dot nl
02-Jul-2002 08:10
02-Jul-2002 08:10
This function will sort on more then one values, test and have fun
<pre>
<?php
$array[0]['name'] = "a";
$array[0]['id'] = 3;
$array[1]['name'] = "a";
$array[1]['id'] = 2;
$array[2]['name'] = "a";
$array[2]['id'] = 5;
$array[3]['name'] = "b";
$array[3]['id'] = 8;
$array[4]['name'] = "b";
$array[4]['id'] = 1;
$array[5]['name'] = "b";
$array[5]['id'] = 0;
$array[6]['name'] = "c";
$array[6]['id'] = 5;
$array[7]['name'] = "c";
$array[7]['id'] = 7;
$array[8]['name'] = "c";
$array[8]['id'] = 3;
print_r($array);
$sort_array[0]['name'] = "name";
$sort_array[0]['sort'] = "ASC";
$sort_array[0]['case'] = TRUE;
$sort_array[1]['name'] = "id";
$sort_array[1]['case'] = FALSE;
sortx($array, $sort_array);
print_r($array);
function sortx(&$array, $sort = array()) {
$function = '';
while (list($key) = each($sort)) {
if (isset($sort[$key]['case'])&&($sort[$key]['case'] == TRUE)) {
$function .= 'if (strtolower($a["' . $sort[$key]['name'] . '"])<>strtolower($b["' . $sort[$key]['name'] . '"])) { return (strtolower($a["' . $sort[$key]['name'] . '"]) ';
} else {
$function .= 'if ($a["' . $sort[$key]['name'] . '"]<>$b["' . $sort[$key]['name'] . '"]) { return ($a["' . $sort[$key]['name'] . '"] ';
}
if (isset($sort[$key]['sort'])&&($sort[$key]['sort'] == "DESC")) {
$function .= '<';
} else {
$function .= '>';
}
if (isset($sort[$key]['case'])&&($sort[$key]['case'] == TRUE)) {
$function .= ' strtolower($b["' . $sort[$key]['name'] . '"])) ? 1 : -1; } else';
} else {
$function .= ' $b["' . $sort[$key]['name'] . '"]) ? 1 : -1; } else';
}
}
$function .= ' { return 0; }';
usort($array, create_function('$a, $b', $function));
}
?>
</pre>
graham at irwin dot org
16-Jan-2002 01:28
16-Jan-2002 01:28
Example 3 above does not work with 4.0.4pl1, unless you write the uasort line as follows:
uasort($a, array ($a[0], "cmp_obj"));
(I assume any instance of the object: a[0] or a[1] or a[2] would work as well)
It does not work at all with associative arrays of objects.
jonathan at inetz dot com
15-Nov-2001 05:48
15-Nov-2001 05:48
Here's a variation on the multi-dimensional sorts above, but with more flexibility and speed. Note that this version only leverages strcmp() to compare array values, which is sufficient for most cases.
/**
* arfsort() - (AR)ray (F)ield Sort.
* Sort a multi-dimensional array according
* to a list of fields.
* @param $a The array to sort
* @param $fl Field list (in order of importance)
*/
function arfsort( $a, $fl )
{
$GLOBALS['__ARFSORT_LIST__'] = $fl;
usort( $a, 'arfsort_func' );
return $a;
}
/**
* Internal sorting function for arfsort()
*/
function arfsort_func( $a, $b )
{
foreach( $GLOBALS['__ARFSORT_LIST__'] as $f )
{
$strc = strcmp( $a[$f], $b[$f] );
if ( $strc != 0 )
{
return $strc;
}
}
return 0;
}
// Example usage
$test = array(
array(
'fruit' => 'apple',
'type' => 'sweet'
),
array(
'fruit' => 'green apple',
'type' => 'sour'
),
array(
'fruit' => 'lemon',
'type' => 'sour'
)
);
$sorted = arfsort( $test, array( 'type', 'fruit' ) );
// Returned array should be sorted
// with the green apple data first, then the
// lemon, then the apple.
Awesome for sorting SQL result sets.
xnoguer at rezebra dot com
26-Sep-2001 03:48
26-Sep-2001 03:48
just for debugging purposes, usort does not complain if its argument function is not defined, i.e.:
usort($my_array,"non existant function");
will not do anything...
josh at wintelcom dot net
25-Aug-2001 10:58
25-Aug-2001 10:58
This lets you sort an associative multi-dimensional array by multiple key/field names. Much similiar to the SQL clause ORDER BY. Enjoy.
function cmp ($a, $b) {
// Populate this array with your values...
// Below is the SQL equivalent of
// select * from blah ORDER BY date desc, type asc, name asc
$vals = array(
'date' => 'd',
'type' => 'a',
'name' => 'a'
);
while(list($key, $val) = each($vals)) {
if($val == "d") {
if ($a["$key"] > $b["$key"]) {
return -1;
}
if ($a["$key"] < $b["$key"]) {
return 1;
}
}
if($val == "a") {
if ($a["$key"] < $b["$key"]) {
return -1;
}
if($a["$key"] > $b["$key"]) {
return 1;
}
}
}
}
franky at iname dot com
18-Jul-2001 07:08
18-Jul-2001 07:08
For sort multi-array by specific index
function cmp ($a, $b)
{
global $w_o;
if ($a[$w_o] == $b[$w_o]) return 0;
return ($a[$w_o] < $b[$w_o]) ? -1 : 1;
}
# the index is the second element of
# each row
$w_o =1;
usort($my_arry_info,"cmp");
johan_land at yahoo dot com
29-Jun-2001 09:23
29-Jun-2001 09:23
These functions will sort an array by more than one element. The elements to sort by is specified in $sortArr. If you eg. want to sort by $destArr[]["sortBy2"][0] you add '["sortBy2"][0]' to $sortArr. Use it as much as you want!! If you modify it, please let me know...
//The functions
function compare($a, $b) {
return cmpRec(0, $a, $b);
}
function cmpRec($i, $a, $b) {
global $sortArr;
if($i == sizeof($sortArr)) {
return 0;
}
$avalue = '$avalue = $a'.$sortArr[$i].';';
$bvalue = '$bvalue = $b'.$sortArr[$i].';';
eval($avalue);
eval($bvalue);
if($avalue == $bvalue) {
return cmpRec($i+1, $a, $b);
} else {
return ($avalue > $bvalue) ? (1) : (-1);
}
}
//For testing the functions
$destArr = array( array( "sortBy1" => 2, "sortBy2" => array( "Fish", "eat seafood" )), array( "sortBy1" => 1, "sortBy2" => array( "Lions", "eat everything" )), array( "sortBy1" => 1, "sortBy2" => array( "Bird", "eat birdfood" )) );
$sortArr = array( '["sortBy1"]', '["sortBy2"][0]' );
print_r($destArr);
usort($destArr, "compare");
reset($destArr);
print_r($destArr);
06-Apr-2001 08:37
RE comparator functions within classes:
On PHP4.04, I found that the comparator was completely ignored within the class even when using the usort($myArray, "\$this->sortFunction"); method above. The usort( $myArray, array($this,"sortFunction")) worked. Haven't tested on PHP3.
bo at erichsen dot com
20-Mar-2001 10:16
20-Mar-2001 10:16
when using usort to refer to a function inside a class i have succesfully used:
usort($myarray,array($this,"cmp"));
derek at luddite dot net
19-Sep-2000 03:35
19-Sep-2000 03:35
Needed a date sort and I didn't know if one was available so I wrote one. Maybe it'll help someone:
function DateSort($a,$b,$d="-") {
if ($a == $b)
{ return 0; }
else { //Convert into dates and compare
list($am,$ad,$ay)=split($d,$a);
list($bm,$bd,$by)=split($d,$b);
if (mktime(0,0,0,$am,$ad,$ay) < mktime(0,0,0,$bm,$bd,$by))
{ return -1; }
else { return 1; }
}
}
$d is the delimeter
gfaron at integretechpub dot com
29-Feb-2000 05:56
29-Feb-2000 05:56
As a correction to the piece of code donated by ccunning@math.ohio-state.edu above, this function will randomize an array passed by reference. The previous version decreased the length of the array by one.
Greg
<?php
function myshuffle($array)
{
mt_srand((double) microtime() * 1000000);
$num = count($array);
for ($i = 0; $i < $num; $i ++)
{
$n = mt_rand(0, $num - 1);
// Swap the data.
$temp = $array[$n];
$array[$n] = $array[$i];
$array[$i] = $temp;
} // ends for
} // ends function myshuffle(&array)
// Test the results.
$array = array(1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10);
myshuffle(&$array);
while (list(,$var)=each($array))
echo $var . " ";
?>