13

I'm trying to use the jinja documentation to figure it out but all my attempts are failing.

http://jinja.pocoo.org/docs/dev/templates/#sort

Here is some test JSON data:

items: [{
        name: 'item 1',
        time: '2015-02-12T00:38:18.055Z'
    },{
        name: 'item 2',
        time: '2014-01-12T00:40:18.881Z'
    }]

How should I form the sort code so that I can sort by time?

I'ved tried:

{% for item in items|sort%}

and

{% for item in items|sort(attribute='time')%}

and

{% for item in items|sort('time')%}

and

{% for item in items|sort(time)%}

and

{% for item in items|sort(item.time)%}

But nothing works. Thank you!

0

3 Answers 3

14

Nunjucks only seems to support positional arguments:

{% for item in items|sort(false, true, 'time') %}
{{item.name}}<br>
{% endfor %}

var res = nunjucks.renderString("{% for item in items|sort(false, true, 'time') %}{{item.name}}<br>{% endfor %}", { items: [{
        name: 'item 1',
        time: '2015-02-12T00:38:18.055Z'
    },{
        name: 'item 2',
        time: '2014-01-12T00:40:18.881Z'
    }] });

document.body.innerHTML = res;
<script src="https://mozilla.github.io/nunjucks/files/nunjucks.js"></script>

1
  • 1
    This saved me a lot of time. Thanks.
    – sol
    Mar 8, 2018 at 21:25
4

Now nunjucks already supports arguments, so {% for item in items|sort(attribute='time')%} works fine

0
0

Parse the time as Epoch time and pass it as another attribute so you can sort it.

items: [{
    name: 'item 1',
    time: '2015-02-12T00:38:18.055Z',
    epoch: 1232323532
}]

Or use a custom filter that does it automatically

1
  • 2
    There's no need for a numeric attribute value, the strings will compare fine.
    – Ja͢ck
    May 28, 2015 at 4:40

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