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You should just be able to iterate through the sorts in reverse precedence:

list = [[2, 0, 1], [1, 5, 2], [1, 0, 3]]

list = list.sort{ a,b -> a[2] <=> b[2] }
list = list.sort{ a,b -> a[1] <=> b[1] }
list = list.sort{ a,b -> a[0] <=> b[0] }

assert list == [[1, 0, 3], [1, 5, 2], [2, 0, 1]]

It should establish sorting within the lower precedence and reorder it just enough for upper.


Edit -- If Groovy supports it, a better option would actually be:

list.sort{ a,b -> (a[0] <=> b[0]) || (a[1] <=> b[1]) || (a[2] <=> b[2]) }

In theory, it should return the result of the first comparison that doesn't match. This requires that || returns an operand rather than equating true/false from them.

Potentially, ?: might handle it if || can't:

list.sort{ a,b -> ((a[0] <=> b[0]) ?: (a[1] <=> b[1])) ?: (a[2] <=> b[2]) }
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You should just be able to iterate through the sorts in reverse precedence:

list = [[2, 0, 1], [1, 5, 2], [1, 0, 3]]

list = list.sort{ a,b -> a[2] <=> b[2] }
list = list.sort{ a,b -> a[1] <=> b[1] }
list = list.sort{ a,b -> a[0] <=> b[0] }

assert list == [[1, 0, 3], [1, 5, 2], [2, 0, 1]]

It should establish sorting within the lower precedence and reorder it just enough for upper.