142

I have the following array structure:

Array
        (
            [0] => Array
                (
                    [configuration_id] => 10
                    [id] => 1
                    [optionNumber] => 3
                    [optionActive] => 1
                    [lastUpdated] => 2010-03-17 15:44:12
                )

            [1] => Array
                (
                    [configuration_id] => 9
                    [id] => 1
                    [optionNumber] => 2
                    [optionActive] => 1
                    [lastUpdated] => 2010-03-17 15:44:12
                )

            [2] => Array
                (
                    [configuration_id] => 8
                    [id] => 1
                    [optionNumber] => 1
                    [optionActive] => 1
                    [lastUpdated] => 2010-03-17 15:44:12
                )
    )

What is the best way to order the array in an incremental way, based on the optionNumber?

So the results look like:

Array
        (
            [0] => Array
                (
                    [configuration_id] => 8
                    [id] => 1
                    [optionNumber] => 1
                    [optionActive] => 1
                    [lastUpdated] => 2010-03-17 15:44:12
                )

            [1] => Array
                (
                    [configuration_id] => 9
                    [id] => 1
                    [optionNumber] => 2
                    [optionActive] => 1
                    [lastUpdated] => 2010-03-17 15:44:12
                )

            [2] => Array
                (
                    [configuration_id] => 10
                    [id] => 1
                    [optionNumber] => 3
                    [optionActive] => 1
                    [lastUpdated] => 2010-03-17 15:44:12
                )
    )

8 Answers 8

253

Use usort.

function cmp_by_optionNumber($a, $b) {
  return $a["optionNumber"] - $b["optionNumber"];
}

...

usort($array, "cmp_by_optionNumber");

In PHP ≥5.3, you should use an anonymous function instead:

usort($array, function ($a, $b) {
    return $a['optionNumber'] - $b['optionNumber'];
});

Note that both code above assume $a['optionNumber'] is an integer. Use @St. John Johnson's solution if they are strings.


In PHP ≥7.0, use the spaceship operator <=> instead of subtraction to prevent overflow/truncation problems.

usort($array, function ($a, $b) {
    return $a['optionNumber'] <=> $b['optionNumber'];
});
13
  • 2
    That doesn't really helpe me as usort requires I provide it a function to use - which is the difficult bit I can't get my head round
    – Sjwdavies
    Mar 19, 2010 at 13:15
  • 20
    Well he just gave you the function to use. And you're going to have to accept that there's not always a built-in function to do what you want, you have to write it yourself. Comparison functions just require a return of 1, 0, or -1 indicating the sort order for two elements.
    – Tesserex
    Mar 19, 2010 at 13:19
  • 1
    I looked further into usort and it is actually quite cool. I wrote a simple comparison function to the one above, however missed out the '=='. Thanks for the help guys
    – Sjwdavies
    Mar 19, 2010 at 13:38
  • 3
    Now also as closure:-- usort($array, function($a,$b){ return $b["optionNumber"] - $a["optionNumber"]; });
    – Joeri
    Dec 3, 2014 at 20:34
  • 1
    @KiloumapL'artélon If the result is < 0, it tells the sort function that a should appear before b. If it is > 0 then b should appear before a.
    – kennytm
    Apr 10, 2018 at 16:19
67

Use usort

 usort($array, 'sortByOption');
 function sortByOption($a, $b) {
   return strcmp($a['optionNumber'], $b['optionNumber']);
 }
3
  • 9
    @BenSinclair, that's because Kenny's solution is for numbers, this solution is for strings. They are both correct :-) +1 for this alternative.
    – kubilay
    Jan 29, 2013 at 19:34
  • For case insensitive sort use strcasecmp instead of strcmp
    – user570605
    Mar 2, 2018 at 14:57
  • can we define key for second order in array means we do first sorting with optionNumber then sorting with lastUpdated. How can do this thing? Jan 10, 2019 at 15:06
20

Using array_multisort(), array_map()

array_multisort(array_map(function($element) {
      return $element['optionNumber'];
  }, $array), SORT_ASC, $array);

print_r($array);

DEMO

4
  • 3
    This just works very easily. Thank you. All I had to do was change my column name and it worked. Oct 14, 2019 at 23:27
  • 4
    This also preserves keys for the parent array
    – JonnyS
    Jan 2, 2020 at 1:07
  • I know this question is a bit old by now, but I have a question: I saw that it does work, but how does it work? I've read the array_multisort docs at php.net and this still doesn't make much sense to me. Feb 25, 2021 at 12:54
  • 1
    this is best answer that don't affect on buffet output by ob_start. thanks. Mar 7, 2023 at 5:19
19

I used both solutions by KennyTM and AJ Quick and came up with a function that can help in this issue for many cases like using ASC or DESC sorting or preserving keys or if you have objects as children of array.

Here is this function (works for PHP7 and higher because of spaceship operator):

/**
 * @param array $array
 * @param string $value
 * @param bool $asc - ASC (true) or DESC (false) sorting
 * @param bool $preserveKeys
 * @return array
 * */
function sortBySubValue($array, $value, $asc = true, $preserveKeys = false)
{
    if ($preserveKeys) {
        $c = [];
        if (is_object(reset($array))) {
            foreach ($array as $k => $v) {
                $b[$k] = strtolower($v->$value);
            }
        } else {
            foreach ($array as $k => $v) {
                $b[$k] = strtolower($v[$value]);
            }
        }
        $asc ? asort($b) : arsort($b);
        foreach ($b as $k => $v) {
            $c[$k] = $array[$k];
        }
        $array = $c;
    } else {
        if (is_object(reset($array))) {
            usort($array, function ($a, $b) use ($value, $asc) {
                return $a->{$value} == $b->{$value} ? 0 : ($a->{$value} <=> $b->{$value}) * ($asc ? 1 : -1);
            });
        } else {
            usort($array, function ($a, $b) use ($value, $asc) {
                return $a[$value] == $b[$value] ? 0 : ($a[$value] <=> $b[$value]) * ($asc ? 1 : -1);
            });
        }
    }

    return $array;
}

Usage:

sortBySubValue($array, 'optionNumber', true, false);

Edit

The first part can be rewritten using uasort() and the function will be shorter (works for PHP7 and higher because of spaceship operator):

/**
 * @param array $array
 * @param string $value
 * @param bool $asc - ASC (true) or DESC (false) sorting
 * @param bool $preserveKeys
 * @return array
 * */
function sortBySubValue($array, $value, $asc = true, $preserveKeys = false)
{
    if (is_object(reset($array))) {
        $preserveKeys ? uasort($array, function ($a, $b) use ($value, $asc) {
            return $a->{$value} == $b->{$value} ? 0 : ($a->{$value} <=> $b->{$value}) * ($asc ? 1 : -1);
        }) : usort($array, function ($a, $b) use ($value, $asc) {
            return $a->{$value} == $b->{$value} ? 0 : ($a->{$value} <=> $b->{$value}) * ($asc ? 1 : -1);
        });
    } else {
        $preserveKeys ? uasort($array, function ($a, $b) use ($value, $asc) {
            return $a[$value] == $b[$value] ? 0 : ($a[$value] <=> $b[$value]) * ($asc ? 1 : -1);
        }) : usort($array, function ($a, $b) use ($value, $asc) {
            return $a[$value] == $b[$value] ? 0 : ($a[$value] <=> $b[$value]) * ($asc ? 1 : -1);
        });
    }
    return $array;
}
3
  • 1
    To make this work for me, I had to use > (greater than) instead of - (minus) when comparing $a and $b values since I was comparing strings. Still works though.
    – James
    Nov 13, 2015 at 15:19
  • 1
    @James you are right. I changed the answer and added the use of spaceship operator (<=>). Now it should work just fine. Sep 19, 2018 at 10:04
  • Is there a way to make this case insensitive?
    – loeffel
    Nov 4, 2019 at 11:53
4

The keys are removed when using a function like the ones above. If the keys are important, the following function would maintain it... but foreach loops are pretty inefficient.

function subval_sort($a,$subkey) {
    foreach($a as $k=>$v) {
        $b[$k] = strtolower($v[$subkey]);
    }
    asort($b);
    foreach($b as $key=>$val) {
        $c[$key] = $a[$key];
    }
    return $c;
}
$array = subval_sort($array,'optionNumber');

Use arsort instead of asort if you want from high to low.

Code credit: http://www.firsttube.com/read/sorting-a-multi-dimensional-array-with-php/

4

The two most modern, most concise approaches are:

  1. usort() with arrow function syntax and a spaceship (3-way comparison) operator. (Demo)

    usort($array, fn($a, $b) =>
        $a['optionNumber'] <=> $b['optionNumber']
    );
    

    $a <=> $b gives ascending sorting; $b <=> $a gives descending sorting.

  2. array_multisort() with an array_column() call to isolate the value to compare. (Demo)

    array_multisort(
        array_column($array, 'optionNumber'),
        $array
    );
    

    It is not necessary to include the sorting direction flag because ascending is the default/implied direction when omitted.


Both approaches above require the targeted array column to exist in all rows, or the approach will fail/break/error.

3

PHP 5.3+

usort($array, function($a,$b){ return $a['optionNumber']-$b['optionNumber'];} );
0

A one-line solution using array_multisort and array_column.

//your array
$yourarray = Array
          (
           "0" => Array
                  (
                    "configuration_id" => 10,
                    "id" => 1,
                    "optionNumber" => 3,
                    "optionActive" => 1,
                    "lastUpdated" => "2010-03-17 15:44:12"
                  ),
           "1" => Array
                  (
                    "configuration_id" => 9,
                    "id" => 1,
                    "optionNumber" => 2,
                    "optionActive" => 1,
                    "lastUpdated" => "2010-03-17 15:44:12"
                  ),
           "2" => Array
                  (
                    "configuration_id" => 8,
                    "id" => 1,
                    "optionNumber" => 1,
                    "optionActive" => 1,
                    "lastUpdated" => "2010-03-17 15:44:12"
                  )
);

//access optionNumber in the child arrays using array_column
array_multisort(array_column($yourarray, 'optionNumber'), SORT_ASC, $yourarray);

//print out preformatted
echo "<pre>"; print_r($images); echo "</pre>";

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