package numeric_string

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A comparison function for strings that sorts numeric fragments of strings according to their numeric value, so that e.g. "abc2" < "abc10".

Install

Dune Dependency

Authors

Maintainers

Sources

v0.17.0.tar.gz
sha256=d3c552957dd6e2b0791d5db4a9a50ec28eed60c2009acd46f9ecfd6891c2fe0f

README.md.html

Numeric string comparison

Numeric string comparison

A comparison function (and assorted sets / maps / etc.) for strings that sorts numeric fragments of strings according to their numeric value, so that e.g. "abc2" < "abc10".

People often call this "natural sort", and link to this:

https://blog.codinghorror.com/sorting-for-humans-natural-sort-order/

which links to a few other posts about the matter. Sometimes it's called "alphanum sort" or "human sort" or something. "Numeric string compare" is chosen as the name that gets closest to expressing what it actually does (to me, "natural sort" sounds like something that might include a different treatment of case, special handling of whitespace or punctuation, etc.)

See the comments in the interface for a precise specification of the algorithm.

Tie-breaking

One of the main ambiguities in the spec is what to do with strings that have equal numeric value because of leading zeroes.

This library makes the decision to preserve normal string equality, since having "equal" values that aren't really equal is often more confusing than it's worth (you have to start thinking about things like which copy to keep when you're removing duplicates). Hence we have to break ties somehow.

You could imagine trying as hard as possible to preserve the notion that equal numeric values are equal, and e.g. compare "a01a" < "a1b" < "a01c", yet still break ties in "a1a" vs. "a01a" somehow. I can't think of any simple semantics that implements this idea -- it's much easier to explain an algorithm that always works component-by-component.

So then the question is how to break ties within numeric components. One idea I had was to always sort numeric components by length first, even when they had leading zeroes. This still gets you the result you expect without leading zeroes, and moreover it implements an intuition that if you see (say) "ab001" in a name, it should be assumed there's a three-digit format there, so we should group it together with other names that have three digits there, rather than putting it close to "ab1" and "ab2".

While I think there's a good argument for that approach, I think it's not obvious enough, so people wouldn't expect that behaviour without thinking about it carefully. Aiming, therefore, to implement the least surprising behaviour, I just always sort components by numeric value first, and then break ties in some arbitrary way -- the easiest is by length. Then "1" appears next to "01" in the ordering, which is I think what people would expect even if it's not obviously what they want.

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