While this may seem obvious, user-defined array sorting functions ( uksort(), uasort(), usort() ) will *not* be called if the array does not have *at least two values in it*.
The following code:
<?php
function usortTest($a, $b) {
var_dump($a);
var_dump($b);
return -1;
}
$test = array('val1');
usort($test, "usortTest");
$test2 = array('val2', 'val3');
usort($test2, "usortTest");
?>
Will output:
string(4) "val3"
string(4) "val2"
The first array doesn't get sent to the function.
Please, under no circumstance, place any logic that modifies values, or applies non-sorting business logic in these functions as they will not always be executed.Sorting Arrays
PHP has several functions that deal with sorting arrays, and this document exists to help sort it all out.
The main differences are:
-
Some sort based on the array keys, whereas others by
the values:
$array['key'] = 'value'; - Whether or not the correlation between the keys and values are maintained after the sort, which may mean the keys are reset numerically (0,1,2 ...)
- The order of the sort: alphabetical, ascending (low to high), descending (high to low), natural, random, or user defined
- Note: All of these sort functions act directly on the array variable itself, as opposed to returning a new sorted array
- If any of these sort functions evaluates two members as equal then they retain their original order. Prior to PHP 8.0.0, their order were undefined (the sorting was not stable).
| Function name | Sorts by | Maintains key association | Order of sort | Related functions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| array_multisort() | value | string keys yes, int keys no | first array or sort options | array_walk() |
| asort() | value | yes | ascending | arsort() |
| arsort() | value | yes | descending | asort() |
| krsort() | key | yes | descending | ksort() |
| ksort() | key | yes | ascending | krsort() |
| natcasesort() | value | yes | natural, case insensitive | natsort() |
| natsort() | value | yes | natural | natcasesort() |
| rsort() | value | no | descending | sort() |
| shuffle() | value | no | random | array_rand() |
| sort() | value | no | ascending | rsort() |
| uasort() | value | yes | user defined | uksort() |
| uksort() | key | yes | user defined | uasort() |
| usort() | value | no | user defined | uasort() |
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User Contributed Notes 2 notes
"Matthew Rice" ¶
13 years ago
oculiz at gmail dot com ¶
15 years ago
Another way to do a case case-insensitive sort by key would simply be:
<?php
uksort($array, 'strcasecmp');
?>
Since strcasecmp is already predefined in php it saves you the trouble to actually write the comparison function yourself.