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NAME
    Data::Sorting - Multi-key sort using function results

ABSTRACT
    Data::Sorting provides functions to sort the contents of arrays based on
    a collection of extraction and comparison rules. Extraction rules are
    used to identify the attributes of array elements on which the ordering
    is based; comparison rules specify how those values should be ordered.

    Index strings may be used to retrieve values from array elements, or
    function references may be passed in to call on each element. Comparison
    rules are provided for numeric, bytewise, and case-insensitive orders,
    as well as a 'natural' comparison that places numbers first, in numeric
    order, followed by the remaining items in case-insensitive textual
    order.

SYNOPSIS
      use Data::Sorting qw( :basics :arrays :extras );
  
      # Sorting functions default to simple string comparisons 
      @names = qw( Bob Alice Ellen Charlie David );
      @ordered = sorted_by( undef, @names );
  
      # Various options can be passed before the list values
      @ordered = sorted_by( [ -order=>'reverse' ], @names );

      # You can also generate a sorting function and then apply it
      $function = sort_function(); 
      @ordered = $function->( @names );  # or &{$function}(@names)
      @ordered = sort_function( -order=>'reverse' )->( @names );
  
      # The :array functions are prototyped to take the array first
      @ordered = sorted_array( @names );
      @ordered = sorted_arrayref( \@names );

      # You can also sort an array in place, changing its internal order
      sort_array( @names );
      sort_arrayref( \@names );
  
      # There are several sorting options, such as -compare => 'natural'
      @movies = ( 'The Matrix', 'Plan 9', '2001', 'Terminator 2' );
      @ordered = sort_function( -compare => 'natural' )->( @movies );
      # @ ordered now contains '2001', 'The Matrix', 'Plan 9', 'Terminator 2'
  
      # To sort numbers, pass the -compare => 'numeric' option
      @numbers = ( 18, 5, 23, 42, 156, 91, 64 );
      @ordered = sorted_by( [ -compare => 'numeric' ], @numbers );
      @ordered = sort_function( -compare => 'numeric' )->( @numbers );
      @ordered = sorted_array( @numbers, -compare => 'numeric' );
      sort_array( @numbers, -compare => 'numeric' );
  
      # You can sort by the results of a function to be called on each item
      sort_array( @numbers, -compare => 'numeric', sub { $_[0] % 16 } );
      # @numbers now contains 64, 18, 5, 23, 42, 91, 156
  
      # For arrays of datastructures, pass in keys to extract for sorting
      @records = ( 
        { 'rec_id'=>3, 'name'=>{'first'=>'Bob', 'last'=>'Macy'} },
        { 'rec_id'=>1, 'name'=>{'first'=>'Sue', 'last'=>'Jones'} },
        { 'rec_id'=>2, 'name'=>{'first'=>'Al',  'last'=>'Jones' } },
      );
      @ordered = sorted_array( @records, 'rec_id' );

      # For nested data structures, pass an array of keys to fetch
      @ordered = sorted_array( @records, ['name','first'] );

      # Pass multiple sort keys for multiple-level sorts
      @ordered = sorted_array( @records, ['name','last'], ['name','first'] );
  
      # Any selected sort options are applied to all subsequent sort keys
      @ordered = sorted_array( @records, 
                    -order => 'reverse', ['name','last'], ['name','first'] );
  
      # Options specified within a hash-ref apply only to that key
      @ordered = sorted_array( @records, 
                    { order=>'reverse', sortkey=>['name','last'] }, 
                    ['name','first'] );
  
      # Locale support is available if you have Perl 5.004 or later and POSIX
      POSIX::setlocale( POSIX::LC_COLLATE(), 'en_US' );
      POSIX::setlocale( POSIX::LC_CTYPE(), 'en_US' );
      @ordered = sorted_array( @records, 
                     -compare=>'locale', ['name','last'], ['name','first'] );

STATUS AND SUPPORT
    This release of Data::Sorting is intended for public review and
    feedback.

      Name            DSLIP  Description
      --------------  -----  ---------------------------------------------
      Data::
      ::Sorting       bdpfp  Multi-key sort using function results

    Further information and support for this module is available at
    www.evoscript.org.

    Please report bugs or other problems to <bugs@evoscript.com>.

BUGS AND TO DO
    The following issues have been noted for future improvements:

    Convert more types of comparisons to packed-default sorts for speed.

    Further investigate the current status of the Sort::Records module.

    Add a comparator function for an alpha-numeric-spans sorting model like
    Sort::Naturally.

    Interface to Sort::PolySort for alternate comparator styles, like "name"
    and "usdate".

    For non-scalar values, compare referents along the lines of
    Ref::cmpref().

    Provide better handling for nested sorts; perhaps throw an exception
    from the inner instance to the outer, catch and set $PreCalculate, then
    go back into the loop?

    Replace dynamic scoping with object instances for thread safety. May not
    be necessary given changes in threading models.

CREDITS AND COPYRIGHT
  Developed By

      M. Simon Cavalletto, simonm@cavalletto.org
      Evolution Softworks, www.evoscript.org

  Copyright

    Copyright 2003 Matthew Cavalletto.

    Portions copyright 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999 Evolution Online Systems, Inc.

  License

    You may use, modify, and distribute this software under the same terms
    as Perl.