Yes, I have searched and tried many techniques, but nothing seems to work. Here is my array:
Array
(
[0] => stdClass Object
(
[id] => 119
[name] => Business3
[start_date] => 1338789600
[end_date] => 1354604400
)
[1] => stdClass Object
(
[id] => 153
[name] => Business1
[start_date] => 1338962400
[end_date] => 1370498400
)
[2] => stdClass Object
(
[id] => 135
[name] => Business2
[start_date] => 1339653600
[end_date] => 1356937200
)
)
I basically want to sort this by the name key, but every function I've tried on Stackoverflow doesn't seem to work, as in, I get a blank page with no error.
I tried this:
function array_sort_by_column(&$arr, $col, $dir = SORT_ASC) {
$sort_col = array();
foreach ($arr as $key=> $row) {
$sort_col[$key] = $row[$col];
}
array_multisort($sort_col, $dir, $arr);
}
array_sort_by_column(json_decode(json_encode($businesses), true), 'name');
But that didn't work.
Any ideas?
You're almost right, but $row[$col]
tries to access the objects like an array. You want something like $row->{$col}
instead. Here's a simpler, working example:
$db = array(
0 => (object) array('name' => 'Business3'),
1 => (object) array('name' => 'Business2'),
2 => (object) array('name' => 'Business1')
);
$col = 'name';
$sort = array();
foreach ($db as $i => $obj) {
$sort[$i] = $obj->{$col};
}
$sorted_db = array_multisort($sort, SORT_ASC, $db);
print_r($db);
Outputs:
Array
(
[0] => stdClass Object
(
[name] => Business1
)
[1] => stdClass Object
(
[name] => Business2
)
[2] => stdClass Object
(
[name] => Business3
)
)
usort($array, function($a, $b) {
return strcmp($a->name, $b->name);
});
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