sort - phpMan

Command: man perldoc info search(apropos)  


Sections
NAME SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION CAVEATS
NAME
    sort - perl pragma to control sort() behaviour

SYNOPSIS
        use sort 'stable';          # guarantee stability
        use sort 'defaults';        # revert to default behavior
        no  sort 'stable';          # stability not important

        my $current;
        BEGIN {
            $current = sort::current();     # identify prevailing pragmata
        }

DESCRIPTION
    With the "sort" pragma you can control the behaviour of the builtin
    "sort()" function.

    A stable sort means that for records that compare equal, the original
    input ordering is preserved. Stability will matter only if elements that
    compare equal can be distinguished in some other way. That means that
    simple numerical and lexical sorts do not profit from stability, since
    equal elements are indistinguishable. However, with a comparison such as

       { substr($a, 0, 3) cmp substr($b, 0, 3) }

    stability might matter because elements that compare equal on the first
    3 characters may be distinguished based on subsequent characters.

    Whether sorting is stable by default is an accident of implementation
    that can change (and has changed) between Perl versions. If stability is
    important, be sure to say so with a

      use sort 'stable';

    The "no sort" pragma doesn't *forbid* what follows, it just leaves the
    choice open. Thus, after

      no sort 'stable';

    sorting may happen to be stable anyway.

CAVEATS
    As of Perl 5.10, this pragma is lexically scoped and takes effect at
    compile time. In earlier versions its effect was global and took effect
    at run-time; the documentation suggested using "eval()" to change the
    behaviour:

      { eval 'no sort "stable"';      # stability not wanted
        print sort::current . "\n";
        @a = sort @b;
        eval 'use sort "defaults"';   # clean up, for others
      }
      { eval 'use sort qw(defaults stable)';     # force stability
        print sort::current . "\n";
        @c = sort @d;
        eval 'use sort "defaults"';   # clean up, for others
      }

    Such code no longer has the desired effect, for two reasons. Firstly,
    the use of "eval()" means that the sorting algorithm is not changed
    until runtime, by which time it's too late to have any effect. Secondly,
    "sort::current" is also called at run-time, when in fact the
    compile-time value of "sort::current" is the one that matters.

    So now this code would be written:

      { no sort "stable";      # stability not wanted
        my $current;
        BEGIN { $current = sort::current; }
        print "$current\n";
        @a = sort @b;
        # Pragmas go out of scope at the end of the block
      }
      { use sort qw(defaults stable);     # force stability
        my $current;
        BEGIN { $current = sort::current; }
        print "$current\n";
        @c = sort @d;
      }


Generated by phpMan Author: Che Dong On Apache Under GNU General Public License - MarkDown Format
2026-05-23 05:17 @216.73.217.24 CrawledBy Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com)
Valid XHTML 1.0 TransitionalValid CSS!

^_back to top