introvert Posted April 6, 2007 Share Posted April 6, 2007 Hi all I need some help sorting an array, same in structure as: Array ( [assoc1] => Array ( [key1] => value [key2] => value [key3] => value ) [assoc2] => Array ( [key1] => value [key2] => value [key3] => value ) ) What I want to do is sort the array by the value in say the key2 "column". Depending on input, the value to sort by may be key3 or some other key. I've looked at array_multisort(), but I'm not sure how I can specify what exact column I want to sort by, without affecting the rest. Can anyone offer any pointers? Regards Link to comment https://forums.phpfreaks.com/topic/45842-multi-dimensional-array-sorting-help/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
jitesh Posted April 6, 2007 Share Posted April 6, 2007 array_multisort (PHP 4, PHP 5) array_multisort -- Sort multiple or multi-dimensional arrays Description bool array_multisort ( array ar1 [, mixed arg [, mixed ... [, array ...]]] ) Returns TRUE on success or FALSE on failure. array_multisort() can be used to sort several arrays at once, or a multi-dimensional array by one or more dimensions. Associative (string) keys will be maintained, but numeric keys will be re-indexed. The input arrays are treated as columns of a table to be sorted by rows - this resembles the functionality of SQL ORDER BY clause. The first array is the primary one to sort by. The rows (values) in that array that compare the same are sorted by the next input array, and so on. The argument structure of this function is a bit unusual, but flexible. The first argument has to be an array. Subsequently, each argument can be either an array or a sorting flag from the following lists. Sorting order flags: SORT_ASC - Sort in ascending order SORT_DESC - Sort in descending order Sorting type flags: SORT_REGULAR - Compare items normally SORT_NUMERIC - Compare items numerically SORT_STRING - Compare items as strings No two sorting flags of the same type can be specified after each array. The sorting flags specified after an array argument apply only to that array - they are reset to default SORT_ASC and SORT_REGULAR before each new array argument. Example 1. Sorting multiple arrays <?php $ar1 = array("10", 100, 100, "a"); $ar2 = array(1, 3, "2", 1); array_multisort($ar1, $ar2); var_dump($ar1); var_dump($ar2); ?> In this example, after sorting, the first array will contain "10", "a", 100, 100. The second array will contain 1, 1, "2", 3. The entries in the second array corresponding to the identical entries in the first array (100 and 100) were sorted as well. array(4) { [0]=> string(2) "10" [1]=> string(1) "a" [2]=> int(100) [3]=> int(100) } array(4) { [0]=> int(1) [1]=> int(1) [2]=> string(1) "2" [3]=> int(3) } Example 2. Sorting multi-dimensional array <?php $ar = array( array("10", 11, 100, 100, "a"), array( 1, 2, "2", 3, 1) ); array_multisort($ar[0], SORT_ASC, SORT_STRING, $ar[1], SORT_NUMERIC, SORT_DESC); var_dump($ar); ?> In this example, after sorting, the first array will transform to "10", 100, 100, 11, "a" (it was sorted as strings in ascending order). The second will contain 1, 3, "2", 2, 1 (sorted as numbers, in descending order). array(2) { [0]=> array(5) { [0]=> string(2) "10" [1]=> int(100) [2]=> int(100) [3]=> int(11) [4]=> string(1) "a" } [1]=> array(5) { [0]=> int(1) [1]=> int(3) [2]=> string(1) "2" [3]=> int(2) [4]=> int(1) } } Example 3. Sorting database results For this example, each element in the data array represents one row in a table. This type of dataset is typical of database records. Example data: volume | edition -------+-------- 67 | 2 86 | 1 85 | 6 98 | 2 86 | 6 67 | 7 The data as an array, called data. This would usually, for example, be obtained by looping with mysql_fetch_assoc(). <?php $data[] = array('volume' => 67, 'edition' => 2); $data[] = array('volume' => 86, 'edition' => 1); $data[] = array('volume' => 85, 'edition' => 6); $data[] = array('volume' => 98, 'edition' => 2); $data[] = array('volume' => 86, 'edition' => 6); $data[] = array('volume' => 67, 'edition' => 7); ?> In this example, we will order by volume descending, edition ascending. We have an array of rows, but array_multisort() requires an array of columns, so we use the below code to obtain the columns, then perform the sorting. <?php // Obtain a list of columns foreach ($data as $key => $row) { $volume[$key] = $row['volume']; $edition[$key] = $row['edition']; } // Sort the data with volume descending, edition ascending // Add $data as the last parameter, to sort by the common key array_multisort($volume, SORT_DESC, $edition, SORT_ASC, $data); ?> The dataset is now sorted, and will look like this: volume | edition -------+-------- 98 | 2 86 | 1 86 | 6 85 | 6 67 | 2 67 | 7 Example 4. Case insensitive sorting Both SORT_STRING and SORT_REGULAR are case sensitive, strings starting with a capital letter will come before strings starting with a lowercase letter. To perform a case insensitive search, force the sorting order to be determined by a lowercase copy of the original array. <?php $array = array('Alpha', 'atomic', 'Beta', 'bank'); $array_lowercase = array_map('strtolower', $array); array_multisort($array_lowercase, SORT_ASC, SORT_STRING, $array); print_r($array); ?> The above example will output: Array ( [0] => Alpha [1] => atomic [2] => bank [3] => Beta ) Link to comment https://forums.phpfreaks.com/topic/45842-multi-dimensional-array-sorting-help/#findComment-222776 Share on other sites More sharing options...
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