bash already supports associative arrays, so IMO the need for linked lists may not be all that critical. Chubler XL gave a really good take on it.
Associative arrays require bash v4
Last edited by jim mcnamara; 03-29-2017 at 10:56 PM..
These 3 Users Gave Thanks to jim mcnamara For This Post:
Hello Everyone,
Over the last few months I have begun to expand my programing skills from windows, Java and SQL / PL-SQL programing into the wonderful world of shell scripting. With little training budget my only options for training are books, Internet and this site (BTY... (1 Reply)
i have a linked list set up like
typedef struct client_list {
char *client_name;
int client_socket_fd;
struct client_list *next;
} client;
client *client_list=NULL;
before adding to the list i check if it already exists, only if it does not then i add
if (client_list==NULL... (1 Reply)
Hi, I am programming in kernel, and I want to use a double linked list that holds infos that every process could access and modify THIS list. So, I suppose it is a 'global' variable since every process(thread) can reach it, I am wondering where to put it? by changing some of the kernel files? (1 Reply)
Program to reverse a linked list by traversing only once. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: VSSajjan
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT PHP
collator_asort
COLLATOR_ASORT(3) 1 COLLATOR_ASORT(3)Collator::asort - Sort array maintaining index association
Object oriented style
SYNOPSIS
public bool Collator::asort (array &$arr, [int $sort_flag])
DESCRIPTION
Procedural style
bool collator_asort (Collator $coll, array &$arr, [int $sort_flag])
This function sorts an array such that array indices maintain their correlation with the array elements they are associated with. This is
used mainly when sorting associative arrays where the actual element order is significant. Array elements will have sort order according to
current locale rules.
Equivalent to standard PHP asort(3).
PARAMETERS
o $coll
-Collator object.
o $arr
-Array of strings to sort.
o $sort_flag
- Optional sorting type, one of the following:
o Collator::SORT_REGULAR - compare items normally (don't change types)
o Collator::SORT_NUMERIC - compare items numerically
o Collator::SORT_STRING - compare items as strings
Default $sort_flag value is Collator::SORT_REGULAR. It is also used if an invalid $sort_flag value has been specified.
RETURN VALUES
Returns TRUE on success or FALSE on failure.
EXAMPLES
Example #1
collator_asort(3)example
<?php
$coll = collator_create( 'en_US' );
$arr = array(
'a' => '100',
'b' => '50',
'c' => '7'
);
collator_asort( $coll, $arr, Collator::SORT_NUMERIC );
var_export( $arr );
collator_asort( $coll, $arr, Collator::SORT_STRING );
var_export( $arr );
?>
The above example will output:
array (
'c' => '7',
'b' => '50',
'a' => '100',
)array (
'a' => '100',
'b' => '50',
'c' => '7',
)
SEE ALSO
Collator constants, collator_sort(3), collator_sort_with_sort_keys(3).
PHP Documentation Group COLLATOR_ASORT(3)