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I have a List like this:

var l = new List<string> {"bla 1.txt","bla 2.txt","bla 10.txt","bla 3.txt"};

If i call l.Sort(), the list gets sorted in the order 1,10,2,3 which makes sense from a pure string point of view, but sucks from a User Perspective.

Since I don't want to/can't force my users to name them 01, 02, 03,... I wonder if there is either a built-in method or simple algorithm to detect and sort numbers properly, so that I have 1,2,3,10? Since the numbers are only 1 or 2 characters long (i.e., no more than 99) I could possibly do a regex that temporarily prefixes all 1-digit numbers with a 0 and sort, but before I reinvent the wheel I wonder if something already exists?

.net 3.5SP1 if that matters, not 4.0

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1  
Looks related, have a look at stackoverflow.com/questions/1022203/… – VoodooChild Jan 24 '11 at 23:07

3 Answers

up vote 10 down vote accepted

The best approach is making use of IComparer. This has already been done and can be found on code project.

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+1 ...or use an existing solution – Babak Naffas Jan 24 '11 at 23:11
I've used this same solution in the past - worked like a charm! – Pwninstein Jan 24 '11 at 23:14
1  
I like existing and tested solutions - works like a charm! Hint for anyone who wants to use this: Get rid of NumericComparer.cs, move the Compare function to StringLogicalComparer, make the Compare(string,string) non-static and have the class implement IComparer, IComparer<string> – Michael Stum Jan 24 '11 at 23:22

Why not write something that will extract a number from a string, like this?

// Note: This could very well be a bad implementation. I'm not too great with Regex.
static int ExtractNumber(string text)
{
    Match match = Regex.Match(text, @"(\d+)");
    if (match == null)
    {
        return 0;
    }

    int value;
    if (!int.TryParse(match.Value, out value))
    {
        return 0;
    }

    return value;
}

Then you could sort your list using:

list.Sort((x, y) => ExtractNumber(x).CompareTo(ExtractNumber(y)));

This strikes me as pretty inefficient, but it should be functional at least.

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You could implement your own IComparer that maybe uses a regular expression on the input ("bla 1.txt"), converts that to an int, and peforms the comparison on that parsed value.

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