ID:               19795
 Updated by:       [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Reported By:      [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-Status:           Feedback
+Status:           No Feedback
 Bug Type:         Strings related
 Operating System: FreeBSD 4.6
 PHP Version:      4.2.2
 New Comment:

No feedback was provided. The bug is being suspended because
we assume that you are no longer experiencing the problem.
If this is not the case and you are able to provide the
information that was requested earlier, please do so and
change the status of the bug back to "Open". Thank you.




Previous Comments:
------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2002-10-27 19:12:50] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Please try using this CVS snapshot:

  http://snaps.php.net/php4-latest.tar.gz
 
For Windows:
 
  http://snaps.php.net/win32/php4-win32-latest.zip



------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2002-10-07 06:00:21] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

I am quite sure I did that yes. I set locale for LC_ALL and strftime is
working as it should.

If I understand the documentation correctly, this function should work
as strcmp except for the fact that numbers are sorted in a natural
order. And strcmp does sort as I expect.

usort using strcmp:

array(11) {
  [0]=>
  string(1) "1"
  [1]=>
  int(1)
  [2]=>
  string(2) "12"
  [3]=>
  string(1) "2"
  [4]=>
  string(1) "a"
  [5]=>
  string(1) "z"
  [6]=>
  string(1) "€"
  [7]=>
  string(1) "‰"
  [8]=>
  string(1) "å"
  [9]=>
  string(1) "æ"
  [10]=>
  string(1) "ø"
}



using strnatcmp:

array(11) {
  [0]=>
  string(1) "€"
  [1]=>
  string(1) "‰"
  [2]=>
  string(1) "å"
  [3]=>
  string(1) "æ"
  [4]=>
  string(1) "ø"
  [5]=>
  string(1) "1"
  [6]=>
  int(1)
  [7]=>
  string(1) "2"
  [8]=>
  string(2) "12"
  [9]=>
  string(1) "a"
  [10]=>
  string(1) "z"
}

------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2002-10-07 03:58:36] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Did you set-up your locales correctly?

Derick

------------------------------------------------------------------------

[2002-10-07 03:51:15] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Characters with an ASCII value above 127 is considered to be the lower
value. This is a bit unfortunate if you use a language with special
characters (like the 3 danish letters after z in the list below).

  $list = array('a', 1, '2', '12', '1', 'z', 'æ', 'ø', 'å', chr(137),
chr(128));   
  usort($list, 'strnatcmp'); 
  var_dump($list);

The values above 127 are sorted correctly, they should just be
considered higher than A-z.

I believe I have seen this bug on a Solaris Unix as well. But that was
a while ago and I can not provide any detailed information on that
situation.


------------------------------------------------------------------------


-- 
Edit this bug report at http://bugs.php.net/?id=19795&edit=1

Reply via email to