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 Posted by Big Moxy on 12/23/07 23:23 
On Dec 23, 2:59 pm, Big Moxy <bigm...@gmail.com> wrote: 
> On Dec 23, 2:18 pm, My Pet Programmer <anth...@mypetprogrammer.com> 
> wrote: 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> > Big Moxy said: 
> 
> > > On Dec 23, 1:09 pm, My Pet Programmer <anth...@mypetprogrammer.com> 
> > > wrote: 
> > >> Big Moxy said: 
> 
> > >>> On Dec 23, 11:17 am, My Pet Programmer <anth...@mypetprogrammer.com> 
> > >>> wrote: 
> > >>>> Big Moxy said: 
> > >>>>> I have a routine to extract the name and mtime files in a directory. 
> > >>>>> PHP by default sorts the array key. I looked at other sort functions 
> > >>>>> but don't understand how to sort on a different field. 
> > >>>>> Can someone please show me how to sort by the filemtime field instead 
> > >>>>> of the filename? 
> > >>>>> Thank you! 
> > >>>>> Tim 
> > >>>>> <TABLE ALIGN=CENTER BGCOLOR=#ffffff CELLPADDING=4 CELLSPACING=0 
> > >>>>> border=2> 
> > >>>>> <tr><TH>File</TH><TH>Date</TH></TR> 
> > >>>>> <?php 
> > >>>>>   $dir="./"; 
> > >>>>>   if (is_dir($dir)) { 
> > >>>>>     $dh = @opendir($dir); 
> > >>>>>     if($dh) { 
> > >>>>>       while (($file = @readdir($dh)) == true) { 
> > >>>>>            $pos = strpos($file, '.'); 
> > >>>>>            if (!$pos === false) { 
> > >>>>>            if ($file != "." && $file != "..") { 
> > >>>>>                    $file_array[] = $file; 
> > >>>>>            } 
> > >>>>>            } 
> > >>>>>       } 
> > >>>>>     } 
> > >>>>>     sort($file_array); 
> > >>>>>     reset($file_array); 
> > >>>>>     for($i=0;$i<count($file_array);$i++) { 
> > >>>>>            $name=$file_array[$i]; 
> > >>>>>         $date = date("Y-m-d H:i", filemtime($name)); 
> > >>>>>         if (!is_dir($name)) { 
> > >>>>>            print("<tr><TD>$name</TD><TD>$date</TD></TR>\n"); 
> > >>>>>         } 
> > >>>>>     } 
> > >>>>>   } 
> > >>>>> ?> 
> > >>>>> </TABLE> 
> > >>>>http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.asort.php 
> > >>>> RTM 
> > >>>> ~A!- Hide quoted text - 
> > >>>> - Show quoted text - 
> > >>> The manual may be easy for you to understand but for me the 
> > >>> documentation and subsequent discussion is anything but intuitive. It 
> > >>> also doesn't help that all of the code samples are not commented. 
> > >>> Is there someone who can respond with the understanding that I may not 
> > >>> be an expert PHP programmer? 
> > >> My apologies. You are correct in that I assumed you were much more into 
> > >> PHP than you are. Comes from spending too much time in the code, I 
> > >> think. Ok, so here you go, then: 
> 
> > >> When you run asort on an array, it sorts the array by value, instead of 
> > >> by key. Since you have an array of filenames you want sorted ascending 
> > >> (A-Z), you can run this line of code to sort then appropriately: 
> 
> > >> asort($file_array); 
> 
> > >> And you don't need to reset the array, your loop looks at them in order, 
> > >> so you don't need to worry about the internal array pointer. 
> 
> > >> Sorry for the mix up. 
> 
> > >> ~A!- Hide quoted text - 
> 
> > >> - Show quoted text - 
> 
> > > Thank you. I have enough general coding experience to understand a lot 
> > > of code however I was lost without any comments in the manual 
> > > examples. My original code contained sort($file_array) which yielded 
> > > ascending results by file name. I want to sort by filemtime (date/time 
> > > last modified). It seems to me that I have to create a new array and 
> > > load name and filemtime a two-dimensional array. Is that correct? 
> 
> > > That leads me to a new question. How do I create and load the new 
> > > array? I tried this: 
> 
> > >         // do I explicitly define the new $file_results array? if so, 
> > > how? 
> > >         // 
> > >    for($i=0;$i<count($file_array);$i++) { 
> > >            $name=$file_array[$i]; 
> > >         $date = date("Y-m-d H:i", filemtime($name)); 
> > >         if (!is_dir($name)) { 
> > >                    $file_results[$i]['date'] = $date; 
> > >                    $file_results[$i]['name'] = $name; 
> > >            } 
> > >     } 
> 
> > > which produces: 
> 
> > >        Date        File 
> > > Array['date'] Array['name'] 
> > > Array['date'] Array['name'] 
> > > Array['date'] Array['name'] 
> > > Array['date'] Array['name'] 
> > > Array['date'] Array['name'] 
> 
> > > Thanks, 
> > > Tim 
> 
> > I thought you would be keying on the name and sorting by date, so I was 
> > thinking you could: 
> 
> > for(....) { 
> >    $file_array[$name] = $date; 
> 
> > } 
> 
> > asort($file_array); 
> 
> > foreach ($file_array as $name=>$date) { 
> >   print $name." -- ".$date; 
> 
> > } 
> 
> > ~A!- Hide quoted text - 
> 
> > - Show quoted text - 
> 
> We're almost there!! url -http://projects.missioninternet.com/proweb/clients/dirlist.php 
> 
> I used arsort and you can see the file dates are sorted in descending 
> order. My question is how do I get rid of the other array elements? 
> 
>         for($i=0;$i<count($file_array);$i++) { 
>         $name=$file_array[$i]; 
>         $date = date("Y-m-d H:i", filemtime($name)); 
>         if (!is_dir($name)) { 
>                         $file_array[$name] = $date; 
>                 } 
>     } 
>     arsort($file_array); 
>         foreach ($file_array as $name=>$date) { 
>         print("<tr><TD>".$date."</TD><TD>".$name."</TD></TR>\n"); 
>     }- Hide quoted text - 
> 
> - Show quoted text - 
 
~A! 
 
I added a dirty edit based on my test data: 
 
	foreach ($file_array as $name=>$date) { 
		if ((is_numeric(substr($date,0,4))) && (substr($date,0,4) != 
'1969')) { 
	       	print("<tr><TD>".$date."</TD><TD>".$name."</TD></TR>\n"); 
		} 
    } 
 
If there is a better way please let me know! 
 
Thanks for your help! 
Tim
 
  
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