A cleaner (I think) way to sort a list of files into reversed order based on their modification date.
<?php
$path = $_SERVER[DOCUMENT_ROOT]."/files/";
$dh = @opendir($path);
while (false !== ($file=readdir($dh)))
{
if (substr($file,0,1)!=".")
$files[]=array(filemtime($path.$file),$file); #2-D array
}
closedir($dh);
if ($files)
{
rsort($files); #sorts by filemtime
#done! Show the files sorted by modification date
foreach ($files as $file)
echo "$file[0] $file[1]<br>\n"; #file[0]=Unix timestamp; file[1]=filename
}
?>
rsort
(PHP 4, PHP 5)
rsort — 역순으로 배열 정렬
설명
bool rsort
( array &$array
[, int $sort_flags
] )
이 함수는 역순으로 배열을 정렬한다 (높은 것에서 낮은 것으로).
반환값
성공할 경우 TRUE를, 실패할 경우 FALSE를 반환합니다.
예제
Example #1 rsort() 예제
<?php
$fruits = array("lemon", "orange", "banana", "apple");
rsort($fruits);
foreach ($fruits as $key => $val) {
echo "$key = $val\n";
}
?>
위 예제의 출력:
0 = orange 1 = lemon 2 = banana 3 = apple
fruits는 알파벳 역순으로 정렬되었다.
주의
Note: 이 함수는 array 에 새로운 키를 할당합니다. 이 작업은 단순히 키를 재배열할 뿐만 아니라, 이미 할당되어 있는 키를 제거할 수 있습니다.
rsort
Alex M
28-Jun-2005 11:39
28-Jun-2005 11:39
pshirkey at boosthardware dot com
14-Jan-2005 06:06
14-Jan-2005 06:06
I needed a function that would sort a list of files into reversed order based on their modification date.
Here's what I came up with:
function display_content($dir,$ext){
$f = array();
if (is_dir($dir)) {
if ($dh = opendir($dir)) {
while (($folder = readdir($dh)) !== false) {
if (preg_match("/\s*$ext$/", $folder)) {
$fullpath = "$dir/$folder";
$mtime = filemtime ($fullpath);
$ff = array($mtime => $fullpath);
$f = array_merge($f, $ff);
}
}
rsort($f, SORT_NUMERIC);
while (list($key, $val) = each($f)) {
$fcontents = file($val, "r");
while (list($key, $val) = each($fcontents))
echo "$val\n";
}
}
}
closedir($dh);
}
Call it like so:
display_content("folder","extension");
ray at non-aol dot com
03-Nov-2004 12:49
03-Nov-2004 12:49
Like sort(), rsort() assigns new keys for the elements in array. It will remove any existing keys you may have assigned, rather than just reordering the keys. This means that it will destroy associative keys.
$animals = array("dog"=>"large", "cat"=>"medium", "mouse"=>"small");
print_r($animals);
//Array ( [dog] => large [cat] => medium [mouse] => small )
rsort($animals);
print_r($animals);
//Array ( [0] => small [1] => medium [2] => large )
Use KSORT() or KRSORT() to preserve associative keys.
rnk-php at kleckner dot net
17-Jun-2003 04:37
17-Jun-2003 04:37
Apparently rsort does not put arrays with one value back to zero. If you have an array like: $tmp = array(9 => 'asdf') and then rsort it, $tmp[0] is empty and $tmp[9] stays as is.
slevy1 at pipeline dot com
13-Jun-2001 03:15
13-Jun-2001 03:15
I thought rsort was working successfully or on a multi-dimensional array of strings that had first been sorted with usort(). But, I noticed today that the array was only partially in descending order. I tried array_reverse on it and that seems to have solved things.
