132

I have a string arraylist names which contains names of people. I want to sort the arraylist in alphabetical order.

ArrayList<String> names = new ArrayList<String>();
names.add("seetha");
names.add("sudhin");
names.add("Swetha");
names.add("Neethu");
names.add("ananya");
names.add("Athira");
names.add("bala");
names.add("Tony");
names.add("Karthika");
names.add("Nithin");
names.add("Vinod");
names.add("jeena");
Collections.sort(names);
for(int i=0; i<names.size(); i++)
    System.out.println(names.get(i));

I tried to sort the list in above way. But it is displaying the sorted array as:

Athira
Karthika
..
..
ananya
bala
...

but I don't want to make it case sensitive. I want the result as:

ananya
Athira
bala
0

10 Answers 10

354

Custom Comparator should help

Collections.sort(list, new Comparator<String>() {
    @Override
    public int compare(String s1, String s2) {
        return s1.compareToIgnoreCase(s2);
    }
});

Or if you are using Java 8:

list.sort(String::compareToIgnoreCase);
9
  • 1
    can u tell me what is string s1 and s2?and how can see the result if the compare function returning integer value.
    – andro-girl
    Apr 28, 2011 at 8:01
  • @seethalakshmi that's the strings from your list. Please take a look at the sources of Collections.sort method if you want to get more details on that Apr 28, 2011 at 8:02
  • i want to display the sorted list in logcat.how can i do that?
    – andro-girl
    Apr 28, 2011 at 8:11
  • It will appear as an Object, unless you break down the list with a loop after sorting. for (TYPE newvariable : ARRAYTYPE arrayname) { Log.i("YOURAPPTAG", newvariable); } May 22, 2013 at 20:13
  • 2
    @Dante if you take a look at hthe implementation of String.CASE_INSENSITIVE_ORDER, then you'll see that A1 is condired less than A10 just because the lenght is smaller. There is no "natural sort" support out of the box, you might want to take a look at stackoverflow.com/questions/1262239/… Oct 7, 2014 at 8:22
207

The simplest thing to do is:

Collections.sort(list, String.CASE_INSENSITIVE_ORDER);
3
  • @djunod, thanks for the answer. I've tried also your solution for the ArrayList from A1 thru A10, but the A10 didn't sort correctly just like denis.solenenko's solution. Somehow, the A10 goes after A1. Basically, it sorted like A1, A10, A2, A3, etc. Why did it happen and how can I sort list correctly?
    – Dante
    Oct 5, 2014 at 16:39
  • 2
    @dante, that is normal string sorting. If you want A2 to come before A10, you will have to change it to A02, etc.
    – djunod
    Oct 7, 2014 at 22:47
  • 1
    Plus 1. Worked in Android too. Thanks and congrats. May 16, 2017 at 16:14
30

try this code

Collections.sort(yourarraylist, new SortBasedOnName());



import java.util.Comparator;
import com.RealHelp.objects.FBFriends_Obj;
import com.RealHelp.ui.importFBContacts;

public class SortBasedOnName implements Comparator
{
public int compare(Object o1, Object o2) 
{

    FBFriends_Obj dd1 = (FBFriends_Obj)o1;// where FBFriends_Obj is your object class
    FBFriends_Obj dd2 = (FBFriends_Obj)o2;
    return dd1.uname.compareToIgnoreCase(dd2.uname);//where uname is field name
}

}
1
  • 3
    Great answer! I think if you change 'implements Comparator' to 'implements Comparator<FBFriends_Obj> and you change the Object types in the compare to FBFriends_Obj then you don't need dd1 and dd2 you can use o1 and o2 directly in the return statement Jul 19, 2012 at 23:28
16

Based on the above mentioned answers, I managed to compare my custom Class Objects like this:

ArrayList<Item> itemList = new ArrayList<>();
...
Collections.sort(itemList, new Comparator<Item>() {
            @Override
            public int compare(Item item, Item t1) {
                String s1 = item.getTitle();
                String s2 = t1.getTitle();
                return s1.compareToIgnoreCase(s2);
            }

        });
0
6

Unfortunately, all answers so far do not take into account that "a" must not be considered equal to "A" when it comes to sorting.

String[] array = {"b", "A", "C", "B", "a"};

// Approach 1
Arrays.sort(array);
// array is [A, B, C, a, b]

// Approach 2
Arrays.sort(array, String.CASE_INSENSITIVE_ORDER);
// array is [A, a, b, B, C]

// Approach 3
Arrays.sort(array, java.text.Collator.getInstance());
// array is [a, A, b, B, C]

In approach 1 any lower case letters are considered greater than any upper case letters.

Approach 2 makes it worse, since CASE_INSENSITIVE_ORDER considers "a" and "A" equal (comparation result is 0). This makes sorting non-deterministic.

Approach 3 (using a java.text.Collator) is IMHO the only way of doing it correctly, since it considers "a"and "A" not equal, but puts them in the correct order according to the current (or any other desired) Locale.

4

You need to use custom comparator which will use compareToIgnoreCase, not compareTo.

1
  • i tried this link.but i m not able to find d solution.can u plz explain
    – andro-girl
    Apr 28, 2011 at 8:10
4

Starting from Java 8 you can use Stream:

List<String> sorted = Arrays.asList(
                          names.stream().sorted(
                              (s1, s2) -> s1.compareToIgnoreCase(s2)
                          ).toArray(String[]::new)
                      );

It gets a stream from that ArrayList, then it sorts it (ignoring the case). After that, the stream is converted to an array which is converted to an ArrayList.

If you print the result using:

System.out.println(sorted);

you get the following output:

[ananya, Athira, bala, jeena, Karthika, Neethu, Nithin, seetha, sudhin, Swetha, Tony, Vinod]
0
def  lst = ["A2", "A1", "k22", "A6", "a3", "a5", "A4", "A7"]; 

println lst.sort { a, b -> a.compareToIgnoreCase b }

This should be able to sort with case insensitive but I am not sure how to tackle the alphanumeric strings lists

-1

KOTLIN DEVELOPERS

For Custome List, if you want to sort based on one String then you can use this:

phoneContactArrayList.sortWith(Comparator { item, t1 ->
        val s1: String = item.phoneContactUserName
        val s2: String = t1.phoneContactUserName
        s1.compareTo(s2, ignoreCase = true)
    })
-1

Kotlin. Sorting objects by string fields, case insensitive.

items?.sortedWith { o1, o2 ->
            o1.name.compareTo(o2.name, true)
        }

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