When displaying lots of data, we often need to sort the data. Yii uses an yii\data\Sort object to represent a sorting schema.
To show sorting in action, we need data.
Preparing the DB
Step 1 − Create a new database. Database can be prepared in the following two ways.
- In the terminal run mysql -u root –p
- Create a new database via CREATE DATABASE helloworld CHARACTER SET utf8 COLLATE utf8_general_ci;
Step 2 − Configure the database connection in the config/db.php file. The following configuration is for the system used currently.
<?php return [ 'class' => 'yii\db\Connection', 'dsn' => 'mysql:host=localhost;dbname=helloworld', 'username' => 'vladimir', 'password' => '12345', 'charset' => 'utf8', ]; ?>
Step 3 − Inside the root folder run ./yii migrate/create test_table. This command will create a database migration for managing our DB. The migration file should appear in the migrations folder of the project root.
Step 4 − Modify the migration file (m160106_163154_test_table.php in this case) this way.
<?php use yii\db\Schema; use yii\db\Migration; class m160106_163154_test_table extends Migration { public function safeUp() { $this->createTable("user", [ "id" => Schema::TYPE_PK, "name" => Schema::TYPE_STRING, "email" => Schema::TYPE_STRING, ]); $this->batchInsert("user", ["name", "email"], [ ["User1", "user1@gmail.com"], ["User2", "user2@gmail.com"], ["User3", "user3@gmail.com"], ["User4", "user4@gmail.com"], ["User5", "user5@gmail.com"], ["User6", "user6@gmail.com"], ["User7", "user7@gmail.com"], ["User8", "user8@gmail.com"], ["User9", "user9@gmail.com"], ["User10", "user10@gmail.com"], ["User11", "user11@gmail.com"], ]); } public function safeDown() { $this->dropTable('user'); } } ?>
The above migration creates a user table with these fields: id, name, and email. It also adds a few demo users.
Step 5 − Inside the project root run ./yii migrate to apply the migration to the database.
Step 6 − Now, we need to create a model for our user table. For the sake of simplicity, we are going to use the Gii code generation tool. Open up this url: http://localhost:8080/index.php?r=gii. Then, click the “Start” button under the “Model generator” header. Fill in the Table Name (“user”) and the Model Class(“MyUser”), click the “Preview” button and finally, click the “Generate” button.
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The MyUser model should appear in the models directory.
Sorting in Action
Step 1 − Add an actionSorting method to the SiteController.
public function actionSorting() { //declaring the sort object $sort = new Sort([ 'attributes' => ['id', 'name', 'email'], ]); //retrieving all users $models = MyUser::find() ->orderBy($sort->orders) ->all(); return $this->render('sorting', [ 'models' => $models, 'sort' => $sort, ]); }
Step 2 − Create a View file called sorting inside the views/site folder.
<?php // display links leading to sort actions echo $sort->link('id') . ' | ' . $sort->link('name') . ' | ' . $sort->link('email'); ?><br/> <?php foreach ($models as $model): ?> <?= $model->id; ?> <?= $model->name; ?> <?= $model->email; ?> <br/> <?php endforeach; ?>
Step 3 − Now, if you type http://localhost:8080/index.php?r=site/sorting in the web browser, you can see that the id, name, and email fields is sortable as shown in the following image.
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