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Tough to explain so here's an example:

$inventory = array(

   array("type"=>"fruit", "price"=>3.50),
   array("type"=>"milk", "price"=>2.90),
   array("type"=>"pork", "price"=>5.43),

);

I would like to sort inventory's element by price so I would like:

$inventory = array(

   array("type"=>"pork", "price"=>5.43),
   array("type"=>"fruit", "price"=>3.50),
   array("type"=>"milk", "price"=>2.90),

);

I'm nearly positive PHP has a function to do this (I'm pretty sure I did it a while ago), but I don't remember!

Thanks all, Matt Mueller

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7 Answers

up vote 43 down vote accepted

@Matt: you are right, the function you're looking for is array_multisort()

Here's an example taken straight from the manual and adapted to your case:

$price = array();
foreach ($inventory as $key => $row)
{
    $price[$key] = $row['price'];
}
array_multisort($price, SORT_DESC, $inventory);
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Yesssssss! Thank you that's it. – Matt Oct 22 '09 at 0:38
Though this is definitely more expensive than the alternatives. – Matt Oct 22 '09 at 0:39
More expensive? That's weird, on my machine (running PHP 5.3.1-dev) array_multisort() is a few percent faster on small arrays and up to 100 times faster on big arrays (100+ elements) – Josh Davis Oct 22 '09 at 2:49
Is there a way to make it work with numeric keys? – Dennis Jan 4 '12 at 12:30
It shouldn't require any change to work with numeric keys. If you're hitting a bug or weird behaviour related to numeric keys, post it as a new question. – Josh Davis Jan 5 '12 at 0:22

Since your array elements are arrays themselves with string keys, your best bet is to define a custom comparison function. It's pretty quick and easy to do. Try this:

function invenDescSort($item1,$item2)
{
    if ($item1['price'] == $item2['price']) return 0;
    return ($item1['price'] < $item2['price']) ? 1 : -1;
}
usort($inventory,'invenDescSort');
print_r($inventory);

Produces the following:

Array
(
    [0] => Array
        (
            [type] => pork
            [price] => 5.43
        )

    [1] => Array
        (
            [type] => fruit
            [price] => 3.5
        )

    [2] => Array
        (
            [type] => milk
            [price] => 2.9
        )

)
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$inventory = 
    array(array("type"=>"fruit", "price"=>3.50),
          array("type"=>"milk", "price"=>2.90),
          array("type"=>"pork", "price"=>5.43),
          );

function pricesort($a, $b) {
  $a = $a['price'];
  $b = $b['price'];
  if ($a == $b)
    return 0;
  return ($a > $b) ? -1 : 1;
}

usort($inventory, "pricesort");
// uksort($inventory, "pricesort");

print("first: ".$inventory[0]['type']."\n\n");
// for usort(): prints milk (item with lowest price)
// for uksort(): prints fruit (item with key 0 in the original $inventory)

// foreach prints the same for usort and uksort.
foreach($inventory as $i){
  print($i['type'].": ".$i['price']."\n");
}

outputs:

first: pork

pork: 5.43
fruit: 3.5
milk: 2.9
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Was tested on 100 000 records: Time in seconds(calculated by funciton microtime). Only for unique values on sorting key positions.

Solution of function of @Josh Davis: Spended time: 1.5768740177155

Mine solution: Spended time: 0.094044923782349

Solution:

function SortByKeyValue($data, $sortKey, $sort_flags=SORT_ASC)
{
    if (empty($data) or empty($sortKey)) return $data;

    $ordered = array();
    foreach ($data as $key => $value)
        $ordered[$value[$sortKey]] = $value;

    ksort($ordered, $sort_flags);

    return array_values($ordered); *// array_values() added for identical result with multisort*
}
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try this: asort($array_to_sort, SORT_NUMERIC);

for reference see this: http://php.net/manual/en/function.asort.php

see various sort flags here: http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.sort.php

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this won't work for multidimensional arrays, but just helped me out for another problem, thanks :) – schellmax Feb 3 '12 at 12:13

You might try to define your own comparison function and then use usort.

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Yes. I'll do that if I can't find a solution. I'm pretty sure there are some weird parameters you can add to one of the sorts to accomplish this. Thanks for your thoughts though! – Matt Oct 20 '09 at 22:58

I ended on this:

function sort_array_of_array(&$array, $subfield)
{
    $sortarray = array();
    foreach ($array as $key => $row)
    {
        $sortarray[$key] = $row[$subfield];
    }

    array_multisort($sortarray, SORT_ASC, $array);
}

Just call the function, passing the array and the name of the field of the second level array. Like: sort_array_of_array($inventory, 'price');

:)

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