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Home/ Questions/Q 266501
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T23:27:00+00:00 2026-05-11T23:27:00+00:00

This is a really esoteric question, but I’m genuinely curious. I’m using usort for

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This is a really esoteric question, but I’m genuinely curious. I’m using usort for the first time today in years, and I’m particularly interested in what exactly is going on. Suppose I’ve got the following array:

$myArray = array(1, 9, 18, 12, 56);

I could sort this with usort:

usort($myArray, function($a, $b){
  if ($a == $b) return 0;
  return ($a < $b) ? -1 : 1;
});

I’m not 100% clear about what is going on with the two parameters $a and $b. What are they, and what do they represent. I mean, I could assume that $a represents the current item in the array, but what exactly is this getting compared to? What is $b?

I could increase my array to include strings:

$myArray = array(
  array("Apples", 10),
  array("Oranges", 12),
  array("Strawberries", 3)
);

And run the following:

usort($myArray, function($a, $b){
  return strcmp($a[0], $b[0]);
});

And that would sort my child-arrays alphabetically based upon the [0] index value. But this doesn’t offer any clarity about what $a and $b are. I only know that the match the pattern that I’m seeking.

Can somebody offer some clarity about what is actually taking place?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-11T23:27:00+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 11:27 pm

    To sort anything you need a means to compare two items and figure out if one comes before the other. This is what you supply to usort. This function will be passed two items from your input array, and returns the order they should be in.

    Once you have a means to compare two elements, you can use sort-algorithm-of-your-choice.

    If you are unfamiliar, you might like to look at how a simple naive algorithm like bubblesort would use a comparison function.

    Behind the scenes, PHP is using a quicksort.

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