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I've got a bunch of PDFs that I'm trying to append together, and I've got a program that, given a list of files, will append them to one PDF.

The issue I'm having is that piping the file names to sort does not produce the desired order. None of the flags of sort give me what I want either. I've got some examples below:

Desired sort order:

test1.pdf
test2.pdf
test10.pdf

Achieved sort order using sort:

test1.pdf
test10.pdf
test2.pdf

For more info on exactly what constitutes the sort order I desire, see:

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb759947.aspx

1 Answer 1

68

Assuming you're using GNU sort, use the-V option:

   -V, --version-sort
          natural sort of (version) numbers within text

For your input, it'd produce:

test1.pdf
test2.pdf
test10.pdf
9
  • 14
    If you use ls, you can do ls -1v, which gives you this. Apr 8, 2014 at 21:08
  • @LaughDonor Thanks. I don't happen to use ls much.
    – devnull
    Apr 8, 2014 at 21:09
  • 1
    Unfortunately, -V does not work for the file names that I've got. They're of the form: sec2_pages12-20, sec2_pages21-30 etc... the ls option totally works though, thank you!
    – jknielse
    Apr 8, 2014 at 21:30
  • 2
    Unfortunately BusyBox sort (typical on embedded Linux) doesn't support -V option. Jul 6, 2015 at 7:35
  • 2
    For posterity, natural sort is not included with the ls that is part of FreeBSD or OSX as well. (I know, this question is about cygwin..)
    – ghoti
    Oct 12, 2015 at 3:36

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