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Possible to pass a closure to usort in PHP?

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-03-04 23:16 出处:网络
I have an array sorting function as follows: public function sortAscending($accounts) { function ascending($accountA, $accountB) {

I have an array sorting function as follows:

public function sortAscending($accounts)
{
    function ascending($accountA, $accountB) {
        if ($accountA['AmountUntilNextTarget'] == $accountB['AmountUntilNextTarget']) {
            return 0;
        }
        return ($accountA['AmountUntilNextTarget'] < $accountB['AmountUntilNextTarget']) ? -1 : 1;
    }
    usort($accounts, $ascending);

    return $accounts;
}

Clearly this is not ideal as it is hard-coding the key to search for. I thought I would make this generic by passing the key as a param to outside function, however this is then out-of-scope in the inner function. I tried to get around this by using a closure, which would have access to the param, instead of an inner function as follows:

public function sortAscending($accounts, $key)
{
    $ascending = function($accountA, $accountB) {
        if ($accountsA[$key] == $accountB[$key]) {
            return 0;
        }
        return ($accountA[$key] < $accountB[$key]) ? -1 : 1;
    }
    usort($accounts, $ascending);

    return $accounts;
}

However usort() only accepts a function name, so this doesn't work. Can anyone开发者_开发技巧 see a (better?) way of achieving this?


  • When defining closures, you can use the use keyword to let the function "see" a certain variable (or variables). See also the PHP documentation about Anonymous functions.

Closures may also inherit variables from the parent scope. Any such variables must be declared in the function header. Inheriting variables from the parent scope is not the same as using global variables. Global variables exist in the global scope, which is the same no matter what function is executing. The parent scope of a closure is the function in which the closure was declared (not necessarily the function it was called from).

  • Please also note that defining a closure and assigning it to a variable is a normal assignment operation, so you will need the ; after the closing } of the closure.

After making these changes your code would look like this (and should work fine):

public function sortAscending($accounts, $key)
{
    $ascending = function($accountA, $accountB) use ($key) {
        if ($accountsA[$key] == $accountB[$key]) {
            return 0;
        }
        return ($accountA[$key] < $accountB[$key]) ? -1 : 1;
    };
    usort($accounts, $ascending);

    return $accounts;
}


To clarify this - and code it like a closure - and use the PHP7 spaceship operator - and correct a typo in line 4 of the first answer, skip the $ascending variable:

public function sortAscending($accounts, $key)
{
    usort($accounts, function($accA, $accB) use ($key) {
        return $accA[$key] <=> $accB[$key];
    });
    return $accounts;
}
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