I'm trying to sort a Backbone.js collection in reverse order. There are previous replies on how to do this with integers, but none with strings.

var Chapter  = Backbone.Model;
var chapters = new Backbone.Collection;

chapters.comparator = function(chapter) {
  return chapter.get("title");
};

chapters.add(new Chapter({page: 9, title: "The End"}));
chapters.add(new Chapter({page: 5, title: "The Middle"}));
chapters.add(new Chapter({page: 1, title: "The Beginning"}));

alert(chapters.pluck('title'));

The above code sorts the chapters from A -> Z, but how do I write a comparator that sorts it from Z -> A?

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The example is from the documentation: documentcloud.github.com/backbone/#Collection-comparator - with "title" instead of "page" inside the comparator. – Emil Stenström Apr 12 '11 at 14:26
possible duplicate of reverse sort order with Backbone.js – Matt Ball Apr 12 '11 at 14:30
4  
Not a duplicate, the question differs in the need of sorting strings instead of numbers which can't be done with the minus sign as suggested at the other question. – František Žiačik Apr 12 '11 at 14:48
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3 Answers

up vote 27 down vote accepted

You could:

  • grab the char code for each character in the string,
  • subtract each value from 0xffff (the maximum return value of string.charCodeAt),
  • use String.fromCharCode to turn that back into string of "negated" characters

and that will be your sorting key.

chapters.comparator = function(chapter) {
    return String.fromCharCode.apply(String,
        _.map(chapter.get("title").split(""), function (c) {
            return 0xffff - c.charCodeAt();
        })
    );
}

And voila:

> console.log(chapters.pluck('title'));
["The Middle", "The End", "The Beginning"]

Note: if your comparison strings are long (as in 65 kb or more), you may run into trouble (see Matt's comment below). To avoid this, and speed up comparisons a bit, just use a shorter slice of your comparison string. (In the above example, you could go for chapter.get("title").slice(0, 100).split("") instead.) How long a slice you need will depend on your application.

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1  
That's inspired! I'm feeling a bit one-upped! – Gary Chambers Apr 12 '11 at 17:50
Thanks! Yours was a great one to up. :) – Filip Salomonsson Apr 12 '11 at 22:04
Your comparator function can now be what's passed to sort() removing the need for this hackery. See github.com/documentcloud/backbone/issues/488 – wizard Feb 17 at 19:27
1  
@Filip, I ran into an issue where fromCharCode.apply would lock up Safari when called with very long arrays. An array with a length greater than 65536 would cause it to fail completely and throw a RangeError. Perhaps this comparator function can be made safer (and potentially more efficient) by extracting a slice of the first n characters from the comparison string. – Matt Mar 12 at 12:14
Nice catch, Matt! And a great solution - I suspect it's pretty rare that you'd even need more than even 65 chars, let alone 65 thousand. – Filip Salomonsson Mar 25 at 16:18
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If you're working with non-numerical values, there is no obvious way to do a reverse sort. Backbone makes use of the _.sortBy() and _.sortedIndex() methods from Underscore to order the models based on the comparator, and these methods automatically sort in ascending order. The naive way to do this would be to use chapters.pluck('title').reverse(), as the result of pluck will be an array. But calling reverse on some Collection methods will reverse the Collection models in place, so next time you call it, the models will be back in ascending order. You could always do something like:

var results = [],
    titles  = chapters.pluck('title');

for(var i=0, len=titles.length; i<len; i++) {
  results.push(titles[i]);
}

results.reverse();

This would not affect the models array in your Backbone collection, as it would create a completely new results array in memory, but retain references to the original models, so calling things like save would still update the Collection state.

But that's not very elegant, and creates a lot of extra coding throughout your project any time you want to reverse the results. I think we can do better.

In order to make this work, you'll need to perform a bit of unwieldy JavaScript ninjary in your comparator method to make this work - note this is untested:

chapters.comparator = function(chapter) {
  var alphabet = '0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz',
      title = chapter.get('title').toLowerCase(),
      inverse_title = '',
      index;

  for(var i=0, len=title.length; i<len; i++) {
    index = alphabet.indexOf(title.charAt(i));

    if(index === -1) {
      inverse_title += title.charAt(i);
      continue;
    }

    inverse_title += alphabet.charAt(alphabet.length - index - 1);
  }

  return inverse_title;
};

This concept probably needs improving to take into account symbols, etc., but essentially it inverts the comparator string in such a way that "Z" becomes "0", "Y" becomes "1", etc., which should produce the reverse sort you're after.

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I REALLY appreciate your long and descriptive answer of how backbone and underscore works, and would mark both your answers as best replies if I could. Having no idea what to do, I just picked the shortest one. Sorry! And THANKS! :) – Emil Stenström Apr 12 '11 at 21:28
Hey, no problem. Glad I could help. I prefer his answer, anyway :) Much more elegant, and it'll work for whatever string you throw at it. – Gary Chambers Apr 12 '11 at 21:30
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As Backbone merely uses the .sortBy method, simply proxy in your own logic:

collectionInQuestion.sortBy = function () {
  var models = _.sortBy(this.models, this.comparator);
  if (forSomeReason) {
    models.reverse();
  }
  return models;
};

..or add it somewhere else..

TweakedCollection = Backbone.Collection.extend({ sortBy: [...] })
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