8

How can I sort the dates in Perl?

my @dates =  ( "02/11/2009" , "20/12/2001" , "21/11/2010" ); 

I have above dates in my array . How can I sort those dates?

My date format is dd/mm/YYYY.

1
  • 12
    Storing dates as YYYY/MM/DD makes much easier. You can do whatever you want when you display them. Mar 22, 2010 at 11:14

4 Answers 4

19
@dates = sort { join('', (split '/', $a)[2,1,0]) cmp join('', (split '/', $b)[2,1,0]) } @dates;

or using separate sorting subroutine:

sub mysort {
    join('', (split '/', $a)[2,1,0]) cmp join('', (split '/', $b)[2,1,0]);
}
@dates = sort mysort @dates;

Update: A more efficient approach is the Schwartzian Transform:

@dates = 
    map $_->[0],
    sort { $a->[1] cmp $b->[1] }
    map  [ $_, join('', (split '/', $_)[2,1,0]) ], @dates;
2
  • 4
    Do this with a Schwartzian Transform or other cached key sort so you don't have to recompute the values every time. Mar 22, 2010 at 15:32
  • And if your dates have times e.g. 29/4/2021-00:10:10 you can split on / or - using [\/\-] and join fields back using [2,1,0,3]. i.e. sort { join('', (split '[\/\-]', $a)[2,1,0,3]) cmp join('', (split '[\/\-]', $b)[2,1,0,3]) }
    – gaoithe
    Jun 18, 2021 at 2:59
4

I prefer the YYYY/MM/DD format better, for just this reason. It's guaranteed to sort dates properly, between 1000/01/01 and 9999/12/31.

my @sorted_alt = sort map { join '/', reverse split '/', $_  } @dates;

If you really need it in DD/MM/YYYY format, you could always go for a complete Schwartzian transform.

my @sorted = map {
  join '/', reverse split '/', $_
}
sort
map {
  join '/', reverse split '/', $_ 
} @dates;

or

my @sorted = map {
  join '/', reverse @$_
}
sort { "@$a" cmp "@$b" }
map {
  [ reverse split '/', $_ ]
} @dates;
1

Or use the epoch format in timestamp and sort them as numbers. Then convert date strings output as you want. Then you are not stuck with formatting the origin strings.

1
  • 2
    Would be helpful if you showed how to do this. Can you add an example?
    – slm
    Feb 4, 2013 at 14:36
1

Many people here argued correctly that the original format of the dates should be in yyyy-mm-dd format, but nobody has given the Perl code that can handle that case yet. So here it is:

my @dates = (
    '2014-08-15',
    '2016-09-13',
    '2001-01-02',
    '1998-09-22',
    '1998-09-21',
    '1998-09-23',
    '1999-04-20',
    '2020-01-30',
);

@dates = sort {$a cmp $b} @dates;   # 1998 is the first date's year
@dates = sort {$b cmp $a} @dates;   # 2014 is the first date's year
2
  • Brad Gilbert's answer contains code for that case. It's just @dates = sort @dates;.
    – melpomene
    Oct 8, 2016 at 15:16
  • Ah, good point -- but I like my example because it actually works on an array of correct values (no split map magic), it shows both orders in explaining ascending versus descending, and it does not unnecessarily interpolate the sorted values. Oct 8, 2016 at 16:58

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