# Sort array of objects by object fields

How can I sort this array of objects by one of its fields, like name or count ?

  Array
(
[0] => stdClass Object
(
[ID] => 1
[name] => Mary Jane
[count] => 420
)

[1] => stdClass Object
(
[ID] => 2
[name] => Johnny
[count] => 234
)

[2] => stdClass Object
(
[ID] => 3
[name] => Kathy
[count] => 4354
)

....


Use usort, here's an example adapted from the manual:

function cmp($a,$b)
{
return strcmp($a->name,$b->name);
}

usort($your_data, "cmp");  edits imported from comments: If you're sorting the array from inside the class and your sorting function cmp is also defined inside the class, then use this: usort($your_data, array($this, "cmp"))  • This is great, but if the sorting function is in the same class as the calling function, you should use: usort($your_data, array($this, "cmp")); – rmooney Sep 20 '13 at 20:53 • @rmooney Yes, but only if you're inside a class. – cambraca Sep 20 '13 at 22:37 • put the first comment by @rmooney in your answer – Mohammad Faisal Feb 18 '14 at 12:57 • Or if your compare function is in your model/object that you are comparing (which is a cleaner design in my opinion) you must include the full namespace to your model/object like this: uasort($members, array("Path\to\your\Model\Member", "compareByName")); – clauziere Apr 4 '14 at 19:04
• this dont return me nothing sorted, just the most big first, and all rest i unsort – Alberto Acuña Oct 22 '16 at 12:21

Heres a nicer way using closures

usort($your_data, function($a, $b) { return strcmp($a->name, $b->name); });  Please note this is not in PHP's documentation but if you using 5.3+ closures are supported where callable arguments can be provided. • I love this one better than the accepted answer since we can quickly define the compare function and can use in a class – Nam G VU May 1 '12 at 18:43 • @IamJohnGalt - Maybe this is relevant: look this comment on php.net – Bruno Belotti May 28 '13 at 22:39 • If you want to preserve the array keys use uasort() – gillytech May 1 '15 at 0:36 • For sort desc, -1 * strcmp($a->name, $b->name); – Wallace Maxters Jul 14 '15 at 13:59 • No need to multiply to sort desc. Just swap args: strcmp($b->name, $a->name) – zxcat Mar 19 '16 at 0:53 if you're using php oop you might need to change to: public static function cmp($a, $b) { return strcmp($a->name, $b->name); } //in this case FUNCTION_NAME would be cmp usort($your_data, array('YOUR_CLASS_NAME','FUNCTION_NAME'));

• Excelent !!!!!! – ramiromd Jun 5 '13 at 16:05
• Thanks for that example. I was having difficulty until I found this ! – Jeff Oct 10 '13 at 20:28
• Missing a parenthesis at the end of the usort line – mlantz Apr 23 '14 at 14:24
usort($array, 'my_sort_function'); var_dump($array);

function my_sort_function($a,$b)
{
return $a->name <$b->name;
}


The same code will be with the count field.

More details about usort: http://ru2.php.net/usort

Btw, where did you get that array from? I hope that not from database?

• Actually $result will contain TRUE if it's successful, and your comparison should be $a->name > $b->name. :) – cambraca Nov 26 '10 at 3:56 • @cambraca: oh, forgot it accepts array by reference. Btw, OP did not said which order he need to sort collection. – zerkms Nov 26 '10 at 3:57 • well yes, it's a database :) actually from a function that gets the data from the database – Alex Nov 26 '10 at 4:01 • @Alex: why don't you sort it in database then? ORDER BY count – zerkms Nov 26 '10 at 4:02 • it's more complicated, because that's a stadard function part of wordpress, and as I'm writing a plugin, I can't change wp files. I tried your example using create_function (because I'm using it inside a class and I don't know how to pass the function name to usort): create_function('$a,$b', "return$a->count < $b->count;") but I can't make it work :( I get a few notices and warning that usort expects parameter 2 to be a valid callback – Alex Nov 26 '10 at 4:11 If you want to sort integer values: // Desc sort usort($array,function($first,$second){
return $first->number <$second->number;
});

// Asc sort
usort($array,function($first,$second){ return$first->number > $second->number; });  UPDATED with the string don't forget to convert to the same register (upper or lower) // Desc sort usort($array,function($first,$second){
return strtolower($first->text) < strtolower($second->text);
});

// Asc sort
usort($array,function($first,$second){ return strtolower($first->text) > strtolower($second->text); });  • This worked better than the accepted answer for me. – Robin van Baalen Oct 10 '17 at 20:52 You can use this function (works in PHP Version >= 5.3): function sortArrayByKey(&$array,$key,$string = false,$asc = true){ if($string){
usort($array,function ($a, $b) use(&$key,&$asc) { if($asc)    return strcmp(strtolower($a{$key}), strtolower($b{$key}));
else        return strcmp(strtolower($b{$key}), strtolower($a{$key}));
});
}else{
usort($array,function ($a, $b) use(&$key,&$asc) { if($a[$key] ==$b{$key}){return 0;} if($asc) return ($a{$key} < $b{$key}) ? -1 : 1;
else     return ($a{$key} > $b{$key}) ? -1 : 1;

});
}
}


Example:

sortArrayByKey($yourArray,"name",true); //String sort (ascending order) sortArrayByKey($yourArray,"name",true,false); //String sort (descending order)
sortArrayByKey($yourArray,"id"); //number sort (ascending order) sortArrayByKey($yourArray,"count",false,false); //number sort (descending order)

• I used $a->{$key} and $b->{$key} rather than $a[$key] and $b[$key] as we are, strictly speaking, dealing with properties rather than array members, but this was still the answer I was looking for. – SteJ Nov 19 '16 at 15:19
• Please implement @SteJ's suggestion in the example code as the solution you give only works for simple objects but with SteJ's fix it works for all arrays of objects I have tried it on – user2993145 Jun 8 '17 at 15:22

You can use usort, like this:

usort($array,function($first,$second){ return strcmp($first->name, $second->name); });  Downside of all answers here is that they use static field names, so I wrote an adjusted version in OOP style. Assumed you are using getter methods you could directly use this Class and use the field name as parameter. Probably someone find it useful. class CustomSort{ public$field = '';

public function cmp($a,$b)
{
/**
* field for order is in a class variable $field * using getter function with naming convention getVariable() we set first letter to uppercase * we use variable variable names -$a->{'varName'} would directly access a field
*/
return strcmp($a->{'get'.ucfirst($this->field)}(), $b->{'get'.ucfirst($this->field)}());
}

public function sortObjectArrayByField($array,$field)
{
$this->field =$field;
usort($array, array("Your\Namespace\CustomSort", "cmp"));; return$array;
}
}


If everything fails here is another solution:

$names = array(); foreach ($my_array as $my_object) {$names[] = $my_object->name; //any object field } array_multisort($names, SORT_ASC, $my_array); return$my_array;


If you need local based string comparison, you can use strcoll instead of strcmp.

Remeber to first use setlocale with LC_COLLATE to set locale information if needed.

  usort($your_data,function($a,$b){ setlocale (LC_COLLATE, 'pl_PL.UTF-8'); // Example of Polish language collation return strcoll($a->name,$b->name); });  If you are using this inside Codeigniter, you can use the methods: usort($jobs, array($this->job_model, "sortJobs")); // function inside Model usort($jobs, array($this, "sortJobs")); // Written inside Controller.  @rmooney thank you for the suggestion. It really helps me. • How exactly is this Codeigniter specific? – ggdx Aug 10 at 11:37 Thanks for the inspirations, I also had to add an external$translator parameter

usort($listable_products, function($a, $b) { global$translator;
return strcmp($a->getFullTitle($translator), $b->getFullTitle($translator));
});


A simple alternative that allows you to determine dynamically the field on which the sorting is based:

$order_by = 'name'; usort($your_data, function ($a,$b) use ($order_by) { return strcmp($a->{$order_by},$b->{$order_by}); });  This is based on the Closure class, which allows anonymous functions. It is available since PHP 5.3. If you need to sort by only one field, then usort is a good choice. However, the solution quickly becomes messy if you need to sort by multiple fields. In this case, YaLinqo library* can be used, which implements SQL-like query syntax for arrays and objects. It has a pretty syntax for all cases: $sortedByName         = from($objects)->orderBy('$v->name');
$sortedByCount = from($objects)->orderBy('$v->count');$sortedByCountAndName = from($objects)->orderBy('$v->count')->thenBy('$v->name');  Here, '$v->count' is a shorthand for function ($v) { return$v->count; } (either can be used). These method chains return iterators, but you can get arrays by adding ->toArray() in the end if you need it.

* developed by me

You can use sorted function from Nspl:

use function \nspl\a\sorted;
use function \nspl\op\propertyGetter;
use function \nspl\op\methodCaller;

// Sort by property value
$sortedByCount = sorted($objects, propertyGetter('count'));

// Or sort by result of method call
$sortedByName = sorted($objects, methodCaller('getName'));

• Please explain why the OP would need a whole additional library to provide a facility seemingly resolved by built in functions – ggdx Aug 10 at 11:36

if you want to sort dates

   usort($threads,function($first,$second){ return strtotime($first->dateandtime) < strtotime($second->dateandtime); });  This is what I have for a utility class class Util { public static function sortArrayByName(&$arrayToSort, $meta) { usort($arrayToSort, function($a,$b) use ($meta) { return strcmp($a[$meta],$b[$meta]); }); } }  Call it: Util::sortArrayByName($array, "array_property_name");


## protected by JorgesysDec 17 '13 at 17:25

Thank you for your interest in this question. Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).