4.17.1 Problem
4.17.2 Solution
$states = array('Delaware', 'Pennsylvania', 'New Jersey');
sort($states);
$scores = array(1, 10, 2, 20); sort($scores, SORT_NUMERIC);
This resorts the numbers in ascending order (1, 2, 10,
20) instead of lexicographical order (1, 10, 2, 20).
4.17.3 Discussion
The sort( ) function doesn't preserve the key/value association between
elements; instead, entries are reindexed starting at 0 and going
upward. (The one exception to this rule is a one-element array; its lone element
doesn't have its index reset to 0. This is fixed as of PHP 4.2.3.)
To preserve the key/value links, use asort( ). The
asort( ) function is normally used for associative arrays, but it can
also be useful when the indexes of the entries are meaningful:
$states = array(1 => 'Delaware', 'Pennsylvania', 'New Jersey');
asort($states);
while (list($rank, $state) = each($states)) {
print "$state was the #$rank state to join the United States\n";
}
Use natsort( ) to sort the
array using a natural sorting algorithm. Under natural sorting, you can mix
strings and numbers inside your elements and still get the right answer.
$tests = array('test1.php', 'test10.php', 'test11.php', 'test2.php');
natsort($tests);
The elements are now ordered: 'test1.php',
'test2.php', 'test10.php', and 'test11.php'. With
natural sorting, the number 10 comes after the number 2; the
opposite occurs under traditional sorting. For case-insensitive natural sorting,
use natcasesort( ).