0

I have the following array:

   $data=array(
   'Points'=>$points,'Name'=>$row['Name'], 'Phone'=>$row['phone']
    );

This resides in a for each loop in my Codeigniter controller index function:

public function index(){

    $query=$this->My_model->get_data();
    foreach ($query as $row)
    {
           $data=array(
           'Points'=>$points,'Name'=>$row['Name'], 'Phone'=>$row['phone']
            );

    }
}

Currently if I print_r on $data it would produce:

Array ( [Points] => 500 [Name] => Dave Laus ) 
Array ( [Points] => 1200 [Name] => John Smith ) 
Array ( [Points] => 700 [Name] => Jason Smithsonian ) 

However I would like to sort/order this so that the user with the highest points showing first like this:

Array ( [Points] => 1200 [Name] => John Smith ) 
Array ( [Points] => 700 [Name] => Jason Smithsonian ) 
Array ( [Points] => 500 [Name] => Dave Laus ) 

I want to sort the array by the "Points" key, so that the user with the highest points appear first. I want to re order the array to show from highest to lowest points.

I have tried usort and arsort and ksort. I haven't gotten it to work.

How do I do this?

I tried this in my controller, but it's doesn't work, errors instead:

public function index(){

    $query=$this->My_model->get_data();
    foreach ($query as $row)
    {
           $data=array(
           array('Points'=>$points,'Name'=>$row['Name'], 'Phone'=>$row['phone']),
            );

           function cmp ($a, $b) {
        return $a['Points'] < $b['Points'] ? 1 : -1;
        }

        usort($data, "cmp");

            print_r($data);


                //I also tried usort($leaders, array('home', 'cmp')); whcih gave no errors, but was the same result as before, not ordered


        }
    }
4
  • it shoud be $data[]= array... right ? otherwise you're rewriting the same array every time Jun 17, 2014 at 21:12
  • It would be much more helpful if you provided better data examples. You say you want to sort by Points key but you are showing us a one-dimensional array - with only one Points key. Show us an example of the data before sorting, and what you want it to look like after. Jun 17, 2014 at 21:14
  • @MarkM Please see edits
    – Tester
    Jun 17, 2014 at 21:19
  • Should also show the code of the usort/ksort that you have tried.
    – crowebird
    Jun 17, 2014 at 21:19

3 Answers 3

2

Try this:

function cmp ($a, $b) {
    return $a['Points'] < $b['Points'] ? 1 : -1;
}

usort($data, "cmp");

See Demo

6
  • Tried this, see code above in the OP, but I get errors. Thought the CodeIgniter tag would be fine, should have also stated it in the OP.
    – Tester
    Jun 17, 2014 at 23:26
  • I also tried using usort($leaders, array('home', 'cmp'));, no errors, but it produced the same unordered array.
    – Tester
    Jun 17, 2014 at 23:56
  • @Tester $cmp=$this->cmp($a,$b) is not gonna work. Put the cmp function directly in the index function and call it the way it is in my answer. Also, not sure where $leaders comes from... thought it was $data... Jun 18, 2014 at 2:47
  • I tried it that way (see the code edits above), it prints only the first item in the array "Array ( [0] => Array ( [Points] => 500 [Name] => Lerielle Cole ) ) ", and gives an error under the printed "Fatal error: Cannot redeclare cmp() (previously declared in.....", in my controller file where I put the code.
    – Tester
    Jun 18, 2014 at 3:09
  • Ok, I actually fixed it, was a minor error, now when I print or echo, I can see the list now ordered by points. However, the fatal error I described in the above comment still remains, so the page can't display results through the view, only when I print or echo throught he controller. ANy ideas on how to get rid of the fatal error? @Mark M
    – Tester
    Jun 18, 2014 at 3:28
0

I suggest you use the usort function. You have to create a callback function that will compare 2 elements of the array. You have examples of such callback functions used by sorting procedures in the link I provided.

0
0

Following function will allow you to sort the given array using specific field along with direction (asc or desc). It accepts parameters as

// $field = field / key for sorting
// $array = array to sort
// $direction = ascending or descending sort direction (default is ascending)


function sortBy($field, &$array, $direction = 'asc')
{
    usort($array, create_function(  '$a, $b', '
                                     $a = $a["' . $field . '"];
                                     $b = $b["' . $field . '"];
                                     if ($a == $b) {
                                         return 0;
                                     }

                                     return ($a ' . ($direction == 'desc' ? '>' : '<') .' $b) ? -1 : 1;'));

    return true;
}

Now use following code to actually sort the array

sortBy('Points', $data, 'desc'); // sorts in descending order for value of key Points
sortBy('Name', $data, 'asc'); // sorts in ascending order for value of key Name

I suggest you take a look at following link http://phpave.com/sorting-associative-array-specific-key/

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