This section is not translated yet.
Please read it in English and consider helping us with translation.
0 follower

Sorting

When displaying multiple rows of data, it is often needed that the data be sorted according to some columns specified by end users. Yii uses a yii\data\Sort object to represent the information about a sorting schema. In particular,

  • attributes specifies the attributes by which the data can be sorted. An attribute can be as simple as a model attribute. It can also be a composite one by combining multiple model attributes or DB columns. More details will be given in the following.
  • attributeOrders gives the currently requested ordering directions for each attribute.
  • orders gives the ordering directions in terms of the low-level columns.

To use yii\data\Sort, first declare which attributes can be sorted. Then retrieve the currently requested ordering information from attributeOrders or orders and use them to customize the data query. For example,

use yii\data\Sort;

$sort = new Sort([
    'attributes' => [
        'age',
        'name' => [
            'asc' => ['first_name' => SORT_ASC, 'last_name' => SORT_ASC],
            'desc' => ['first_name' => SORT_DESC, 'last_name' => SORT_DESC],
            'default' => SORT_DESC,
            'label' => 'Name',
        ],
    ],
]);

$articles = Article::find()
    ->where(['status' => 1])
    ->orderBy($sort->orders)
    ->all();

In the above example, two attributes are declared for the Sort object: age and name.

The age attribute is a simple attribute corresponding to the age attribute of the Article Active Record class. It is equivalent to the following declaration:

'age' => [
    'asc' => ['age' => SORT_ASC],
    'desc' => ['age' => SORT_DESC],
    'default' => SORT_ASC,
    'label' => Inflector::camel2words('age'),
]

The name attribute is a composite attribute defined by first_name and last_name of Article. It is declared using the following array structure:

  • The asc and desc elements specify how to sort by the attribute in ascending and descending directions, respectively. Their values represent the actual columns and the directions by which the data should be sorted by. You can specify one or multiple columns to indicate simple ordering or composite ordering.
  • The default element specifies the direction by which the attribute should be sorted when initially requested. It defaults to ascending order, meaning if it is not sorted before and you request to sort by this attribute, the data will be sorted by this attribute in ascending order.
  • The label element specifies what label should be used when calling yii\data\Sort::link() to create a sort link. If not set, yii\helpers\Inflector::camel2words() will be called to generate a label from the attribute name. Note that it will not be HTML-encoded.

Info: You can directly feed the value of orders to the database query to build its ORDER BY clause. Do not use attributeOrders because some of the attributes may be composite and cannot be recognized by the database query.

You can call yii\data\Sort::link() to generate a hyperlink upon which end users can click to request sorting the data by the specified attribute. You may also call yii\data\Sort::createUrl() to create a sortable URL. For example,

// specifies the route that the URL to be created should use
// If you do not specify this, the currently requested route will be used
$sort->route = 'article/index';

// display links leading to sort by name and age, respectively
echo $sort->link('name') . ' | ' . $sort->link('age');

// displays: /index.php?r=article%2Findex&sort=age
echo $sort->createUrl('age');

yii\data\Sort checks the sort query parameter to determine which attributes are being requested for sorting. You may specify a default ordering via yii\data\Sort::$defaultOrder when the query parameter is not present. You may also customize the name of the query parameter by configuring the sortParam property.

Found a typo or you think this page needs improvement?
Edit it on github !