I have an array of JavaScript objects:
var objs = [
{ first_nom: 'Lazslo', last_nom: 'Jamf' },
{ first_nom: 'Pig', last_nom: 'Bodine' },
{ first_nom: 'Pirate', last_nom: 'Prentice' }
];
How can I sort them by the value of last_nom
in JavaScript?
I know about sort(a,b)
, but that only seems to work on strings and numbers. Do I need to add a toString()
method to my objects?
It's easy enough to write your own comparison function:
function compare( a, b ) {
if ( a.last_nom < b.last_nom ){
return -1;
}
if ( a.last_nom > b.last_nom ){
return 1;
}
return 0;
}
objs.sort( compare );
Or inline (c/o Marco Demaio):
objs.sort((a,b) => (a.last_nom > b.last_nom) ? 1 : ((b.last_nom > a.last_nom) ? -1 : 0))
Or simplified for numeric (c/o Andre Figueiredo):
objs.sort((a,b) => a.last_nom - b.last_nom); // b - a for reverse sort
You can also create a dynamic sort function that sorts objects by their value that you pass:
function dynamicSort(property) {
var sortOrder = 1;
if(property[0] === "-") {
sortOrder = -1;
property = property.substr(1);
}
return function (a,b) {
/* next line works with strings and numbers,
* and you may want to customize it to your needs
*/
var result = (a[property] < b[property]) ? -1 : (a[property] > b[property]) ? 1 : 0;
return result * sortOrder;
}
}
So you can have an array of objects like this:
var People = [
{Name: "Name", Surname: "Surname"},
{Name:"AAA", Surname:"ZZZ"},
{Name: "Name", Surname: "AAA"}
];
...and it will work when you do:
People.sort(dynamicSort("Name"));
People.sort(dynamicSort("Surname"));
People.sort(dynamicSort("-Surname"));
Actually this already answers the question. Below part is written because many people contacted me, complaining that it doesn't work with multiple parameters.
Multiple Parameters
You can use the function below to generate sort functions with multiple sort parameters.
function dynamicSortMultiple() {
/*
* save the arguments object as it will be overwritten
* note that arguments object is an array-like object
* consisting of the names of the properties to sort by
*/
var props = arguments;
return function (obj1, obj2) {
var i = 0, result = 0, numberOfProperties = props.length;
/* try getting a different result from 0 (equal)
* as long as we have extra properties to compare
*/
while(result === 0 && i < numberOfProperties) {
result = dynamicSort(props[i])(obj1, obj2);
i++;
}
return result;
}
}
Which would enable you to do something like this:
People.sort(dynamicSortMultiple("Name", "-Surname"));
Subclassing Array
For the lucky among us who can use ES6, which allows extending the native objects:
class MyArray extends Array {
sortBy(...args) {
return this.sort(dynamicSortMultiple(...args));
}
}
That would enable this:
MyArray.from(People).sortBy("Name", "-Surname");
In ES6/ES2015 or later you can do this way:
objs.sort((a, b) => a.last_nom.localeCompare(b.last_nom));
Prior to ES6/ES2015
objs.sort(function(a, b) {
return a.last_nom.localeCompare(b.last_nom)
});
localeCompare
. You can use the standard >
operator - like mentioned in the answer by @muasif80 - stackoverflow.com/a/67992215/6908282
use underscore, its small and awesome...
sortBy_.sortBy(list, iterator, [context]) Returns a sorted copy of list, ranked in ascending order by the results of running each value through iterator. Iterator may also be the string name of the property to sort by (eg. length).
var objs = [
{ first_nom: 'Lazslo',last_nom: 'Jamf' },
{ first_nom: 'Pig', last_nom: 'Bodine' },
{ first_nom: 'Pirate', last_nom: 'Prentice' }
];
var sortedObjs = _.sortBy( objs, 'first_nom' );
var sortedObjs = _.sortBy( objs, 'first_nom' );
. objs
will not be sorted itself as a result of this. The function will return a sorted array. That would make it more explicit.
var reverseSortedObjs = _.sortBy( objs, 'first_nom' ).reverse();
<script src="http://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/underscore.js/1.8.3/underscore-min.js"> </script>
Lodash
for the ones who prefer that one
var sortedObjs = _.sortBy( objs, 'first_nom' );
or if you want it in a different order: var sortedObjs = _.orderBy( objs, ['first_nom'],['dsc'] );
Case sensitive
arr.sort((a, b) => a.name > b.name ? 1 : -1);
Case Insensitive
arr.sort((a, b) => a.name.toLowerCase() > b.name.toLowerCase() ? 1 : -1);
Useful Note
If no change in order (in case of the same strings) then the condition >
will fail and -1
will be returned. But if strings are same then returning 1 or -1 will result in correct output
The other option could be to use >=
operator instead of >
var objs = [ { first_nom: 'Lazslo', last_nom: 'Jamf' }, { first_nom: 'Pig', last_nom: 'Bodine' }, { first_nom: 'Pirate', last_nom: 'Prentice' } ]; // Define a couple of sorting callback functions, one with hardcoded sort key and the other with an argument sort key const sorter1 = (a, b) => a.last_nom.toLowerCase() > b.last_nom.toLowerCase() ? 1 : -1; const sorter2 = (sortBy) => (a, b) => a[sortBy].toLowerCase() > b[sortBy].toLowerCase() ? 1 : -1; objs.sort(sorter1); console.log("Using sorter1 - Hardcoded sort property last_name", objs); objs.sort(sorter2('first_nom')); console.log("Using sorter2 - passed param sortBy='first_nom'", objs); objs.sort(sorter2('last_nom')); console.log("Using sorter2 - passed param sortBy='last_nom'", objs);
-1
and 1
for eg: from 1 : -1
to -1 : 1
(a, b) to (b, a)
:)
1
& -1
more straight forward and logical.
If you have duplicate last names you might sort those by first name-
obj.sort(function(a,b){
if(a.last_nom< b.last_nom) return -1;
if(a.last_nom >b.last_nom) return 1;
if(a.first_nom< b.first_nom) return -1;
if(a.first_nom >b.first_nom) return 1;
return 0;
});
b
should come after a
in the array. If a positive number is returned, it means a
should come after b
. If 0
is returned, it means they are considered equal. You can always read the documentation: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…
1, 0, -1
before I asked this here. I just wasn't finding the info I needed.
As of 2018 there is a much shorter and elegant solution. Just use. Array.prototype.sort().
Example:
var items = [
{ name: 'Edward', value: 21 },
{ name: 'Sharpe', value: 37 },
{ name: 'And', value: 45 },
{ name: 'The', value: -12 },
{ name: 'Magnetic', value: 13 },
{ name: 'Zeros', value: 37 }
];
// sort by value
items.sort(function (a, b) {
return a.value - b.value;
});
a.value - b.value
used to compare the object's attributes (numbers in this case) can be adopted for the various times of data. For example, regex can be used to compare each pair of the neighboring strings.
Simple and quick solution to this problem using prototype inheritance:
Array.prototype.sortBy = function(p) {
return this.slice(0).sort(function(a,b) {
return (a[p] > b[p]) ? 1 : (a[p] < b[p]) ? -1 : 0;
});
}
Example / Usage
objs = [{age:44,name:'vinay'},{age:24,name:'deepak'},{age:74,name:'suresh'}];
objs.sortBy('age');
// Returns
// [{"age":24,"name":"deepak"},{"age":44,"name":"vinay"},{"age":74,"name":"suresh"}]
objs.sortBy('name');
// Returns
// [{"age":24,"name":"deepak"},{"age":74,"name":"suresh"},{"age":44,"name":"vinay"}]
Update: No longer modifies original array.
Old answer that is not correct:
arr.sort((a, b) => a.name > b.name)
UPDATE
From Beauchamp's comment:
arr.sort((a, b) => a.name < b.name ? -1 : (a.name > b.name ? 1 : 0))
More readable format:
arr.sort((a, b) => {
if (a.name < b.name) return -1
return a.name > b.name ? 1 : 0
})
Without nested ternaries:
arr.sort((a, b) => a.name < b.name ? - 1 : Number(a.name > b.name))
Explanation: Number()
will cast true
to 1
and false
to 0
.
arr.sort((a, b) => a.name < b.name ? -1 : (a.name > b.name ? 1 : 0))
arr.sort((a, b) => a.name > b.name ? 1 : -1
will not work? For Strings i have tested this works great. If you want case insensitive then use a.name.toLowerCase()
and b.name.toLowerCase()
Lodash.js (superset of Underscore.js)
It's good not to add a framework for every simple piece of logic, but relying on well tested utility frameworks can speed up development and reduce the amount of bugs.
Lodash produces very clean code and promotes a more functional programming style. In one glimpse it becomes clear what the intent of the code is.
OP's issue can simply be solved as:
const sortedObjs = _.sortBy(objs, 'last_nom');
More info? E.g. we have following nested object:
const users = [
{ 'user': {'name':'fred', 'age': 48}},
{ 'user': {'name':'barney', 'age': 36 }},
{ 'user': {'name':'wilma'}},
{ 'user': {'name':'betty', 'age': 32}}
];
We now can use the _.property shorthand user.age
to specify the path to the property that should be matched. We will sort the user objects by the nested age property. Yes, it allows for nested property matching!
const sortedObjs = _.sortBy(users, ['user.age']);
Want it reversed? No problem. Use _.reverse.
const sortedObjs = _.reverse(_.sortBy(users, ['user.age']));
Want to combine both using chain?
const { chain } = require('lodash');
const sortedObjs = chain(users).sortBy('user.age').reverse().value();
Or when do you prefer flow over chain
const { flow, reverse, sortBy } = require('lodash/fp');
const sortedObjs = flow([sortBy('user.age'), reverse])(users);
You can use Easiest Way: Lodash
(https://lodash.com/docs/4.17.10#orderBy)
This method is like _.sortBy
except that it allows specifying the sort orders of the iteratees to sort by. If orders is unspecified, all values are sorted in ascending order. Otherwise, specify an order of "desc" for descending or "asc" for ascending sort order of corresponding values.
Arguments
collection (Array|Object): The collection to iterate over. [iteratees=[_.identity]] (Array[]|Function[]|Object[]|string[]): The iteratees to sort by. [orders] (string[]): The sort orders of iteratees.
Returns
(Array): Returns the new sorted array.
var _ = require('lodash');
var homes = [
{"h_id":"3",
"city":"Dallas",
"state":"TX",
"zip":"75201",
"price":"162500"},
{"h_id":"4",
"city":"Bevery Hills",
"state":"CA",
"zip":"90210",
"price":"319250"},
{"h_id":"6",
"city":"Dallas",
"state":"TX",
"zip":"75000",
"price":"556699"},
{"h_id":"5",
"city":"New York",
"state":"NY",
"zip":"00010",
"price":"962500"}
];
_.orderBy(homes, ['city', 'state', 'zip'], ['asc', 'desc', 'asc']);
I haven't seen this particular approach suggested, so here's a terse comparison method I like to use that works for both string
and number
types:
const objs = [ { first_nom: 'Lazslo', last_nom: 'Jamf' }, { first_nom: 'Pig', last_nom: 'Bodine' }, { first_nom: 'Pirate', last_nom: 'Prentice' } ]; const sortBy = fn => { const cmp = (a, b) => -(a < b) || +(a > b); return (a, b) => cmp(fn(a), fn(b)); }; const getLastName = o => o.last_nom; const sortByLastName = sortBy(getLastName); objs.sort(sortByLastName); console.log(objs.map(getLastName));
Explanation of sortBy()
sortBy()
accepts a fn
that selects a value from an object to use in comparison, and returns a function that can be passed to Array.prototype.sort()
. In this example, we're comparing o.last_nom
. Whenever we receive two objects such as
a = { first_nom: 'Lazslo', last_nom: 'Jamf' }
b = { first_nom: 'Pig', last_nom: 'Bodine' }
we compare them with (a, b) => cmp(fn(a), fn(b))
. Given that
fn = o => o.last_nom
we can expand the comparison function to (a, b) => cmp(a.last_nom, b.last_nom)
. Because of the way logical OR (||
) works in JavaScript, cmp(a.last_nom, b.last_nom)
is equivalent to
if (a.last_nom < b.last_nom) return -1;
if (a.last_nom > b.last_nom) return 1;
return 0;
Incidentally, this is called the three-way comparison "spaceship" (<=>
) operator in other languages.
Finally, here's the ES5-compatible syntax without using arrow functions:
var objs = [ { first_nom: 'Lazslo', last_nom: 'Jamf' }, { first_nom: 'Pig', last_nom: 'Bodine' }, { first_nom: 'Pirate', last_nom: 'Prentice' } ]; function sortBy(fn) { function cmp(a, b) { return -(a < b) || +(a > b); } return function (a, b) { return cmp(fn(a), fn(b)); }; } function getLastName(o) { return o.last_nom; } var sortByLastName = sortBy(getLastName); objs.sort(sortByLastName); console.log(objs.map(getLastName));
-(fa < fb) || +(fa > fb)
is a mistake here. That's multiple statements being condensed into one line of code. The alternative, written with an if
statement, would be much more readable whilst still being fairly concise. I think it's a mistake to sacrifice readability for prettiness.
fa <=> fb
.
const cmp = (a, b) => -(a < b) || +(a > b);
) Think of ["ä", "a", "c", "b"].sort(cmp)
=> ["a", "b", "c", "ä"]
, where ä
is pushed to the end. Instead you should probably update the comparison function to: const cmp = (a, b) => a.localeCompare(b);
=> ["a", "ä", "b", "c"]
Cheers and thanks for the answer ;-)
localeCompare
removes the ability to sort numbers, and is also significantly slower.
Instead of using a custom comparison function, you could also create an object type with custom toString()
method (which is invoked by the default comparison function):
function Person(firstName, lastName) {
this.firtName = firstName;
this.lastName = lastName;
}
Person.prototype.toString = function() {
return this.lastName + ', ' + this.firstName;
}
var persons = [ new Person('Lazslo', 'Jamf'), ...]
persons.sort();
There are many good answers here, but I would like to point out that they can be extended very simply to achieve a lot more complex sorting. The only thing you have to do is to use the OR operator to chain comparision functions like this:
objs.sort((a,b)=> fn1(a,b) || fn2(a,b) || fn3(a,b) )
Where fn1
, fn2
, ... are the sort functions which return [-1,0,1]. This results in "sorting by fn1", "sorting by fn2" which is pretty much equal to ORDER BY in SQL.
This solution is based on the behaviour of ||
operator which evaluates to the first evaluated expression which can be converted to true.
The simplest form has only one inlined function like this:
// ORDER BY last_nom
objs.sort((a,b)=> a.last_nom.localeCompare(b.last_nom) )
Having two steps with last_nom
,first_nom
sort order would look like this:
// ORDER_BY last_nom, first_nom
objs.sort((a,b)=> a.last_nom.localeCompare(b.last_nom) ||
a.first_nom.localeCompare(b.first_nom) )
A generic comparision function could be something like this:
// ORDER BY <n>
let cmp = (a,b,n)=>a[n].localeCompare(b[n])
This function could be extended to support numeric fields, case sensitity, arbitary datatypes etc.
You can them use it with chaining them by sort priority:
// ORDER_BY last_nom, first_nom
objs.sort((a,b)=> cmp(a,b, "last_nom") || cmp(a,b, "first_nom") )
// ORDER_BY last_nom, first_nom DESC
objs.sort((a,b)=> cmp(a,b, "last_nom") || -cmp(a,b, "first_nom") )
// ORDER_BY last_nom DESC, first_nom DESC
objs.sort((a,b)=> -cmp(a,b, "last_nom") || -cmp(a,b, "first_nom") )
The point here is that pure JavaScript with functional approach can take you a long way without external libraries or complex code. It is also very effective, since no string parsing have to be done
Try this,
UPTO ES5
//Ascending Sort
items.sort(function (a, b) {
return a.value - b.value;
});
//Descending Sort
items.sort(function (a, b) {
return b.value - a.value;
});
IN ES6 & above:
// Ascending sort
items.sort((a, b) => a.value - b.value);
// Descending Sort
items.sort((a, b) => b.value - a.value);
Example Usage:
objs.sort(sortBy('last_nom'));
Script:
/**
* @description
* Returns a function which will sort an
* array of objects by the given key.
*
* @param {String} key
* @param {Boolean} reverse
* @return {Function}
*/
const sortBy = (key, reverse) => {
// Move smaller items towards the front
// or back of the array depending on if
// we want to sort the array in reverse
// order or not.
const moveSmaller = reverse ? 1 : -1;
// Move larger items towards the front
// or back of the array depending on if
// we want to sort the array in reverse
// order or not.
const moveLarger = reverse ? -1 : 1;
/**
* @param {*} a
* @param {*} b
* @return {Number}
*/
return (a, b) => {
if (a[key] < b[key]) {
return moveSmaller;
}
if (a[key] > b[key]) {
return moveLarger;
}
return 0;
};
};
1, 0, -1
are used for sort ordering. Even with your explanation above, which looks very good-- I'm still not quite understanding it. I always think of -1
as when using array length property, i.e.: arr.length = -1
means that the item isn't found. I'm probably mixing things up here, but could you help me understand why digits 1, 0, -1
are used to determine order? Thanks.
a
and b
, if a
is greater than b
add 1 to the index of a
and place it behind b
, if a
is less than b
, subtract 1 from a
and place it in front of b
. If a
and b
are the same, add 0 to a
and leave it where it is.
I know this question is too old, but I didn't see any implementation similar to mine.
This version is based on the Schwartzian transform idiom.
function sortByAttribute(array, ...attrs) {
// generate an array of predicate-objects contains
// property getter, and descending indicator
let predicates = attrs.map(pred => {
let descending = pred.charAt(0) === '-' ? -1 : 1;
pred = pred.replace(/^-/, '');
return {
getter: o => o[pred],
descend: descending
};
});
// schwartzian transform idiom implementation. aka: "decorate-sort-undecorate"
return array.map(item => {
return {
src: item,
compareValues: predicates.map(predicate => predicate.getter(item))
};
})
.sort((o1, o2) => {
let i = -1, result = 0;
while (++i < predicates.length) {
if (o1.compareValues[i] < o2.compareValues[i]) result = -1;
if (o1.compareValues[i] > o2.compareValues[i]) result = 1;
if (result *= predicates[i].descend) break;
}
return result;
})
.map(item => item.src);
}
Here's an example how to use it:
let games = [
{ name: 'Mashraki', rating: 4.21 },
{ name: 'Hill Climb Racing', rating: 3.88 },
{ name: 'Angry Birds Space', rating: 3.88 },
{ name: 'Badland', rating: 4.33 }
];
// sort by one attribute
console.log(sortByAttribute(games, 'name'));
// sort by mupltiple attributes
console.log(sortByAttribute(games, '-rating', 'name'));
Why don't you write short code?
objs.sort((a, b) => a.last_nom > b.last_nom ? 1 : -1)
1, -1, 0
a>b && 1|| -1
is equal to a> b ? 1 : -1
, operator &&
returns first logical false
value, operator ||
returns first logical true
value.
Use JavaScript sort method
The sort
method can be modified to sort anything like an array of numbers, strings and even objects using a compare function.
A compare function is passed as an optional argument to the sort method.
This compare function accepts 2 arguments generally called a and b. Based on these 2 arguments you can modify the sort method to work as you want.
If the compare function returns less than 0, then the sort() method sorts a at a lower index than b. Simply a will come before b. If the compare function returns equal to 0, then the sort() method leaves the element positions as they are. If the compare function returns greater than 0, then the sort() method sorts a at greater index than b. Simply a will come after b.
Use the above concept to apply on your object where a will be your object property.
var objs = [ { first_nom: 'Lazslo', last_nom: 'Jamf' }, { first_nom: 'Pig', last_nom: 'Bodine' }, { first_nom: 'Pirate', last_nom: 'Prentice' } ]; function compare(a, b) { if (a.last_nom > b.last_nom) return 1; if (a.last_nom < b.last_nom) return -1; return 0; } objs.sort(compare); console.log(objs) // for better look use console.table(objs)
Sorting (more) Complex Arrays of Objects
Since you probably encounter more complex data structures like this array, I would expand the solution.
TL;DR
Are more pluggable version based on @ege-Özcan's very lovely answer.
Problem
I encountered the below and couldn't change it. I also did not want to flatten the object temporarily. Nor did I want to use underscore / lodash, mainly for performance reasons and the fun to implement it myself.
var People = [
{Name: {name: "Name", surname: "Surname"}, Middlename: "JJ"},
{Name: {name: "AAA", surname: "ZZZ"}, Middlename:"Abrams"},
{Name: {name: "Name", surname: "AAA"}, Middlename: "Wars"}
];
Goal
The goal is to sort it primarily by People.Name.name
and secondarily by People.Name.surname
Obstacles
Now, in the base solution uses bracket notation to compute the properties to sort for dynamically. Here, though, we would have to construct the bracket notation dynamically also, since you would expect some like People['Name.name']
would work - which doesn't.
Simply doing People['Name']['name']
, on the other hand, is static and only allows you to go down the n-th level.
Solution
The main addition here will be to walk down the object tree and determine the value of the last leaf, you have to specify, as well as any intermediary leaf.
var People = [
{Name: {name: "Name", surname: "Surname"}, Middlename: "JJ"},
{Name: {name: "AAA", surname: "ZZZ"}, Middlename:"Abrams"},
{Name: {name: "Name", surname: "AAA"}, Middlename: "Wars"}
];
People.sort(dynamicMultiSort(['Name','name'], ['Name', '-surname']));
// Results in...
// [ { Name: { name: 'AAA', surname: 'ZZZ' }, Middlename: 'Abrams' },
// { Name: { name: 'Name', surname: 'Surname' }, Middlename: 'JJ' },
// { Name: { name: 'Name', surname: 'AAA' }, Middlename: 'Wars' } ]
// same logic as above, but strong deviation for dynamic properties
function dynamicSort(properties) {
var sortOrder = 1;
// determine sort order by checking sign of last element of array
if(properties[properties.length - 1][0] === "-") {
sortOrder = -1;
// Chop off sign
properties[properties.length - 1] = properties[properties.length - 1].substr(1);
}
return function (a,b) {
propertyOfA = recurseObjProp(a, properties)
propertyOfB = recurseObjProp(b, properties)
var result = (propertyOfA < propertyOfB) ? -1 : (propertyOfA > propertyOfB) ? 1 : 0;
return result * sortOrder;
};
}
/**
* Takes an object and recurses down the tree to a target leaf and returns it value
* @param {Object} root - Object to be traversed.
* @param {Array} leafs - Array of downwards traversal. To access the value: {parent:{ child: 'value'}} -> ['parent','child']
* @param {Number} index - Must not be set, since it is implicit.
* @return {String|Number} The property, which is to be compared by sort.
*/
function recurseObjProp(root, leafs, index) {
index ? index : index = 0
var upper = root
// walk down one level
lower = upper[leafs[index]]
// Check if last leaf has been hit by having gone one step too far.
// If so, return result from last step.
if (!lower) {
return upper
}
// Else: recurse!
index++
// HINT: Bug was here, for not explicitly returning function
// https://stackoverflow.com/a/17528613/3580261
return recurseObjProp(lower, leafs, index)
}
/**
* Multi-sort your array by a set of properties
* @param {...Array} Arrays to access values in the form of: {parent:{ child: 'value'}} -> ['parent','child']
* @return {Number} Number - number for sort algorithm
*/
function dynamicMultiSort() {
var args = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments); // slight deviation to base
return function (a, b) {
var i = 0, result = 0, numberOfProperties = args.length;
// REVIEW: slightly verbose; maybe no way around because of `.sort`-'s nature
// Consider: `.forEach()`
while(result === 0 && i < numberOfProperties) {
result = dynamicSort(args[i])(a, b);
i++;
}
return result;
}
}
Example
Working example on JSBin
One more option:
var someArray = [...];
function generateSortFn(prop, reverse) {
return function (a, b) {
if (a[prop] < b[prop]) return reverse ? 1 : -1;
if (a[prop] > b[prop]) return reverse ? -1 : 1;
return 0;
};
}
someArray.sort(generateSortFn('name', true));
sorts ascending by default.
A simple way:
objs.sort(function(a,b) {
return b.last_nom.toLowerCase() < a.last_nom.toLowerCase();
});
See that '.toLowerCase()'
is necessary to prevent erros in comparing strings.
objs.sort( (a,b) => b.last_nom.toLowerCase() < a.last_nom.toLowerCase() );
A simple function that sort an array of object by a property
function sortArray(array, property, direction) {
direction = direction || 1;
array.sort(function compare(a, b) {
let comparison = 0;
if (a[property] > b[property]) {
comparison = 1 * direction;
} else if (a[property] < b[property]) {
comparison = -1 * direction;
}
return comparison;
});
return array; // Chainable
}
Usage:
var objs = [
{ first_nom: 'Lazslo', last_nom: 'Jamf' },
{ first_nom: 'Pig', last_nom: 'Bodine' },
{ first_nom: 'Pirate', last_nom: 'Prentice' }
];
sortArray(objs, "last_nom"); // Asc
sortArray(objs, "last_nom", -1); // Desc
This is my take on this:
The order
parameter is optional and defaults to "ASC" for ascending order.
Works on accented chars and it's case insensitive.
NOTE: It sorts and returns the ORIGINAL array.
function sanitizeToSort(str) {
return str
.normalize('NFD') // REMOVE ACCENTED AND DIACRITICS
.replace(/[\u0300-\u036f]/g,'') // REMOVE ACCENTED AND DIACRITICS
.toLowerCase() // SORT WILL BE CASE INSENSITIVE
;
}
function sortByProperty(arr, property, order="ASC") {
arr.forEach((item) => item.tempProp = sanitizeToSort(item[property]));
arr.sort((a,b) => order === "ASC" ?
a.tempProp > b.tempProp ? 1 : a.tempProp < b.tempProp ? -1 : 0
: a.tempProp > b.tempProp ? -1 : a.tempProp < b.tempProp ? 1 : 0
);
arr.forEach((item) => delete item.tempProp);
return arr;
}
SNIPPET
function sanitizeToSort(str) { return str .normalize('NFD') // REMOVE ACCENTED CHARS .replace(/[\u0300-\u036f]/g,'') // REMOVE DIACRITICS .toLowerCase() ; } function sortByProperty(arr, property, order="ASC") { arr.forEach((item) => item.tempProp = sanitizeToSort(item[property])); arr.sort((a,b) => order === "ASC" ? a.tempProp > b.tempProp ? 1 : a.tempProp < b.tempProp ? -1 : 0 : a.tempProp > b.tempProp ? -1 : a.tempProp < b.tempProp ? 1 : 0 ); arr.forEach((item) => delete item.tempProp); return arr; } const rockStars = [ { name: "Axl", lastname: "Rose" }, { name: "Elthon", lastname: "John" }, { name: "Paul", lastname: "McCartney" }, { name: "Lou", lastname: "Reed" }, { name: "freddie", // WORKS ON LOWER/UPPER CASE lastname: "mercury" }, { name: "Ámy", // WORKS ON ACCENTED CHARS TOO lastname: "winehouse"} ]; sortByProperty(rockStars,"name"); console.log("Ordered by name A-Z:"); rockStars.forEach((item) => console.log(item.name + " " + item.lastname)); sortByProperty(rockStars,"lastname","DESC"); console.log("\nOrdered by lastname Z-A:"); rockStars.forEach((item) => console.log(item.lastname + ", " + item.name));
Warning! Using this solution is not recommended as it does not result in a sorted array. It is being left here for future reference, because the idea is not rare.
objs.sort(function(a,b){return b.last_nom>a.last_nom})
Combining Ege's dynamic solution with Vinay's idea, you get a nice robust solution:
Array.prototype.sortBy = function() { function _sortByAttr(attr) { var sortOrder = 1; if (attr[0] == "-") { sortOrder = -1; attr = attr.substr(1); } return function(a, b) { var result = (a[attr] < b[attr]) ? -1 : (a[attr] > b[attr]) ? 1 : 0; return result * sortOrder; } } function _getSortFunc() { if (arguments.length == 0) { throw "Zero length arguments not allowed for Array.sortBy()"; } var args = arguments; return function(a, b) { for (var result = 0, i = 0; result == 0 && i < args.length; i++) { result = _sortByAttr(args[i])(a, b); } return result; } } return this.sort(_getSortFunc.apply(null, arguments)); } Usage: // Utility for printing objects Array.prototype.print = function(title) { console.log("************************************************************************"); console.log("**** " + title); console.log("************************************************************************"); for (var i = 0; i < this.length; i++) { console.log("Name: " + this[i].FirstName, this[i].LastName, "Age: " + this[i].Age); } } // Setup sample data var arrObj = [{ FirstName: "Zach", LastName: "Emergency", Age: 35 }, { FirstName: "Nancy", LastName: "Nurse", Age: 27 }, { FirstName: "Ethel", LastName: "Emergency", Age: 42 }, { FirstName: "Nina", LastName: "Nurse", Age: 48 }, { FirstName: "Anthony", LastName: "Emergency", Age: 44 }, { FirstName: "Nina", LastName: "Nurse", Age: 32 }, { FirstName: "Ed", LastName: "Emergency", Age: 28 }, { FirstName: "Peter", LastName: "Physician", Age: 58 }, { FirstName: "Al", LastName: "Emergency", Age: 51 }, { FirstName: "Ruth", LastName: "Registration", Age: 62 }, { FirstName: "Ed", LastName: "Emergency", Age: 38 }, { FirstName: "Tammy", LastName: "Triage", Age: 29 }, { FirstName: "Alan", LastName: "Emergency", Age: 60 }, { FirstName: "Nina", LastName: "Nurse", Age: 54 } ]; //Unit Tests arrObj.sortBy("LastName").print("LastName Ascending"); arrObj.sortBy("-LastName").print("LastName Descending"); arrObj.sortBy("LastName", "FirstName", "-Age").print("LastName Ascending, FirstName Ascending, Age Descending"); arrObj.sortBy("-FirstName", "Age").print("FirstName Descending, Age Ascending"); arrObj.sortBy("-Age").print("Age Descending");
additional desc params for Ege Özcan code
function dynamicSort(property, desc) {
if (desc) {
return function (a, b) {
return (a[property] > b[property]) ? -1 : (a[property] < b[property]) ? 1 : 0;
}
}
return function (a, b) {
return (a[property] < b[property]) ? -1 : (a[property] > b[property]) ? 1 : 0;
}
}
Given the original example:
var objs = [
{ first_nom: 'Lazslo', last_nom: 'Jamf' },
{ first_nom: 'Pig', last_nom: 'Bodine' },
{ first_nom: 'Pirate', last_nom: 'Prentice' }
];
Sort by multiple fields:
objs.sort(function(left, right) {
var last_nom_order = left.last_nom.localeCompare(right.last_nom);
var first_nom_order = left.first_nom.localeCompare(right.first_nom);
return last_nom_order || first_nom_order;
});
Notes
a.localeCompare(b) is universally supported and returns -1,0,1 if ab respectively.
|| in the last line gives last_nom priority over first_nom.
Subtraction works on numeric fields: var age_order = left.age - right.age;
Negate to reverse order, return -last_nom_order || -first_nom_order || -age_order;
function compare(propName) {
return function(a,b) {
if (a[propName] < b[propName])
return -1;
if (a[propName] > b[propName])
return 1;
return 0;
};
}
objs.sort(compare("last_nom"));
Using Ramda,
npm install ramda
import R from 'ramda'
var objs = [
{ first_nom: 'Lazslo', last_nom: 'Jamf' },
{ first_nom: 'Pig', last_nom: 'Bodine' },
{ first_nom: 'Pirate', last_nom: 'Prentice' }
];
var ascendingSortedObjs = R.sortBy(R.prop('last_nom'), objs)
var descendingSortedObjs = R.reverse(ascendingSortedObjs)
Success story sharing
return a.last_nom.localeCompare(b.last_nom)
will work, too.return a.value - b.value;
(ASC)charCodeAt
, then use the numeric inline above for a more concise one liner:objs.sort((a,b) => a.last_nom.charCodeAt(0) - b.last_nom.charCodeAt(0));
. This avoids the ugly nested ternary.