This crate can help you sort order for files and folders whose names contain numerals.
With the Rust native sort
method, strings and paths are arranged into lexicographical order. In some cases, it is not so intuitive. For example, there are screen snap shots named by shot-%N like shot-2, shot-1, shot-11. After a lexicographical sorting, they will be ordered into shot-1, shot-11, shot-2. However, we would prefer shot-1, shot-2, shot-11 mostly.
let mut names = ["shot-2", "shot-1", "shot-11"];
names.sort();
assert_eq!(["shot-1", "shot-11", "shot-2"], names);
Thus, in this kind of case, an alphanumeric sort might come in handy.
let mut names = ["shot-2", "shot-1", "shot-11"];
alphanumeric_sort::sort_str_slice(&mut names);
assert_eq!(["shot-1", "shot-2", "shot-11"], names);
use std::path::Path;
let mut paths = [Path::new("shot-2"), Path::new("shot-1"), Path::new("shot-11")];
alphanumeric_sort::sort_path_slice(&mut paths);
assert_eq!([Path::new("shot-1"), Path::new("shot-2"), Path::new("shot-11")], paths);
compare_*
Functions and the sort_*
FunctionsTo sort a slice, the code can also be written like,
use std::path::Path;
let mut paths = [Path::new("shot-2"), Path::new("shot-1"), Path::new("shot-11")];
paths.sort_by(|a, b| alphanumeric_sort::compare_path(a, b));
assert_eq!([Path::new("shot-1"), Path::new("shot-2"), Path::new("shot-11")], paths);
But it is not recommended because the compare_*
functions try to convert data (e.g Path
, CStr
) to &str
every time in its execution and thus they are slower than the sort_*
functions when sorting a slice.
1.3
to 1.4
No breaking change in API is made, though the order has some changes.
"0001"
is greater than "001"
instead of being equal."中"
is greater than "1"
instead of being less. "第1章"
is still less than "第1-2章"
, even though "章"
is greater than "-"
.Disable the default features to compile this crate without std.
[dependencies.alphanumeric-sort]
version = "*"
default-features = false
cargo bench
https://crates.io/crates/alphanumeric-sort
https://docs.rs/alphanumeric-sort