Naturally
Natural ("version number") sorting with support for legal document numbering, college course codes, and Unicode.
See Jeff Atwood's Sorting for Humans: Natural Sort Order and the Public.Law post Counting to 10 in Californian.
Installation
$ gem install naturally
Usage
require 'naturally'
Naturally.sort(["336", "335a", "335", "335.1"])
Naturally.sort(["13.10", "13.04", "10.10", "10.04.4"])
Usually the library is used to sort an array of objects:
UbuntuVersion = Struct.new(:name, :version)
releases = [
UbuntuVersion.new('Saucy Salamander', '13.10'),
UbuntuVersion.new('Raring Ringtail', '13.04'),
UbuntuVersion.new('Precise Pangolin', '12.04.4'),
UbuntuVersion.new('Maverick Meerkat', '10.10'),
UbuntuVersion.new('Quantal Quetzal', '12.10'),
UbuntuVersion.new('Lucid Lynx', '10.04.4')
]
sorted = Naturally.sort releases, by: :version
expect(sorted.map(&:name)).to eq [
'Lucid Lynx',
'Maverick Meerkat',
'Precise Pangolin',
'Quantal Quetzal',
'Raring Ringtail',
'Saucy Salamander'
]
More examples are in the specs.
Implementation Notes
The algorithm capitalizes on Ruby's array comparison behavior:
Since each dotted number actually represents a hierarchical
identifier, array comparison
is a natural fit:
Arrays are compared in an “element-wise” manner; the first element of ary is compared with the first one of other_ary using the <=> operator, then each of the second elements, etc… As soon as the result of any such comparison is non zero (i.e. the two corresponding elements are not equal), that result is returned for the whole array comparison.
And so, when given input such as,
['1.9', '1.9a', '1.10']
...this module sorts the segmented numbers
by comparing them in their array forms:
[['1', '9'], ['1', '9a'], ['1', '10']]
Finally, upon actual sort comparison, each of these strings is
converted to an array of typed objects. This is to determine the
sort order between heterogenous (yet ordered) segments such as
'9a'
and '9'
.
The final nested comparison structure looks like this:
[
[
[1], [9]
],
[
[1], [9, 'a']
],
[
[1], [10]
]
]
Related Work
Contributing
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request