3

To sort a List on multiple criteria, I'm currently doing something like:

collection.Sort((f1, f2) =>
{
    var comp = f1.FirstCriteria.CompareTo(f2.FirstCriteria);
    return comp != 0 ? comp : f1.SecondCriteria.CompareTo(f2. SecondCriteria);
});

But wouldn't it be nice to be able to do something like:

collection.MultipleSort(f1.FirstCriteria, f2.FirstCriteria)
          .Then(f1.SecondCriteria, f2.SecondCriteria)

Any ideas for a good implementation of a fluent interface for sorting?

2 Answers 2

15

You mean something like the following?

using System.Linq;

collection.OrderBy(t => t.FirstCriteria).ThenBy(t => t.SecondCriteria);
4
  • Now why didn't google bring that one up! :-) I should read more books before asking questions! Apr 29, 2009 at 12:02
  • The only question would then be how to do descending? Apr 29, 2009 at 12:03
  • 4
    @Hainsey, How about OrderByDescending and ThenByDescending?
    – LukeH
    Apr 29, 2009 at 12:06
  • @Hainsey, I wouldn't worry about missing it too much. To me Linq extensions aren't always the most discoverable things. But the nice thing is, once you discover it, you don't forget it :>
    – billb
    Apr 29, 2009 at 12:09
2

The problem here is that it sounds like you want to do an in place sort; in which case, you'd need to know (with a fluent API) when you've finished adding conditions. This contrasts to the LINQ approach, because that uses deferred execution.

For single condition sorts, you can use something like:

public static void Sort<TSource, TValue>(this List<TSource> source,
        Func<TSource, TValue> selector) {
    var comparer = Comparer<TValue>.Default;
    source.Sort((x,y)=>comparer.Compare(selector(x),selector(y)));
}
public static void SortDescending<TSource, TValue>(this List<TSource> source,
        Func<TSource, TValue> selector) {
    var comparer = Comparer<TValue>.Default;
    source.Sort((x,y)=>comparer.Compare(selector(y),selector(x)));
}

It would be harder with multiple sorts; you can't use params because each TValue may be different. You'd probably need to either use a terminator step and an intermediary "builder" class (essentially writing a DSL), or you'd need to construct the comparer separately first.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.