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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers linux sort command produces strange output Post 302546408 by cero on Thursday 11th of August 2011 06:41:13 AM
Old 08-11-2011
There are some environemntvariables that influence sorting, LANG and LC_ALL beeing the ones that are used most often.
Code:
$ cat mytext.txt
.a
ba
.b
bb
.c
bc
$ unset LC_ALL
$ sort mytext.txt
.a
.b
ba
bb
bc
.c
$ export LC_ALL=C
$ sort mytext.txt
.a
.b
.c
ba
bb
bc

 

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SORT(3) 								 1								   SORT(3)

sort - Sort an array

SYNOPSIS
bool sort (array &$array, [int $sort_flags = SORT_REGULAR]) DESCRIPTION
This function sorts an array. Elements will be arranged from lowest to highest when this function has completed. PARAMETERS
o $array - The input array. o $sort_flags - The optional second parameter $sort_flags may be used to modify the sorting behavior using these values: Sorting type flags: o SORT_REGULAR - compare items normally (don't change types) o SORT_NUMERIC - compare items numerically o SORT_STRING - compare items as strings o SORT_LOCALE_STRING - compare items as strings, based on the current locale. It uses the locale, which can be changed using setlocale(3) o SORT_NATURAL - compare items as strings using "natural ordering" like natsort(3) o SORT_FLAG_CASE - can be combined (bitwise OR) with SORT_STRING or SORT_NATURAL to sort strings case-insensitively RETURN VALUES
Returns TRUE on success or FALSE on failure. CHANGELOG
+--------+---------------------------------------------------+ |Version | | | | | | | Description | | | | +--------+---------------------------------------------------+ | 5.4.0 | | | | | | | Added support for SORT_NATURAL and | | | SORT_FLAG_CASE as $sort_flags | | | | | 5.0.2 | | | | | | | Added SORT_LOCALE_STRING | | | | +--------+---------------------------------------------------+ EXAMPLES
Example #1 sort(3) example <?php $fruits = array("lemon", "orange", "banana", "apple"); sort($fruits); foreach ($fruits as $key => $val) { echo "fruits[" . $key . "] = " . $val . " "; } ?> The above example will output: fruits[0] = apple fruits[1] = banana fruits[2] = lemon fruits[3] = orange The fruits have been sorted in alphabetical order. Example #2 sort(3) example using case-insensitive natural ordering <?php $fruits = array( "Orange1", "orange2", "Orange3", "orange20" ); sort($fruits, SORT_NATURAL | SORT_FLAG_CASE); foreach ($fruits as $key => $val) { echo "fruits[" . $key . "] = " . $val . " "; } ?> The above example will output: fruits[0] = Orange1 fruits[1] = orange2 fruits[2] = Orange3 fruits[3] = orange20 The fruits have been sorted like natcasesort(3). NOTES
Note This function assigns new keys to the elements in $array. It will remove any existing keys that may have been assigned, rather than just reordering the keys. Note Like most PHP sorting functions, sort(3) uses an implementation of Quicksort. The pivot is chosen in the middle of the partition resulting in an optimal time for already sorted arrays. This is however an implementation detail you shouldn't rely on. Warning Be careful when sorting arrays with mixed types values because sort(3) can produce unpredictable results. SEE ALSO
asort(3), The comparison of array sorting functions. PHP Documentation Group SORT(3)
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