I have a C# list collection that I'm trying to sort. The strings that I'm trying to sort are dates "10/19/2009","10/20/2009"...etc. The sort method on my list will sort the dates but the problem is when a day has one digit, like "10/2/2009". When this happens the order is off. It will go "10/19/2009","10/20/2009","11/10/2009","11/2/2009","11/21/2009"..e开发者_StackOverflow社区tc. This is ordering them wrong because it sees the two as greater than the 1 in 10. How can I correct this?
thanks
The problem is they're strings, but you want to sort them by dates. Use a comparison function that converts them to dates before comparing. Something like this:
List<string> strings = new List<string>();
// TODO: fill the list
strings.Sort((x, y) => DateTime.Parse(x).CompareTo(DateTime.Parse(y)));
Assuming all your strings will parse:
MyList.OrderBy(d => DateTime.Parse(d));
Otherwise, you might need to use ParseExact() or something a little more complicated.
write a compare method to convert "10/2/2009" to a date then compare
I wanted to see how well I could outperform Chris's solution with my own IComparer
. The difference was negligible. To sort the same list of one million dates, my solution took 63.2 seconds, and Chris's took 66.2 seconds.
/// <summary>
/// Date strings must be in the format [M]M/[D]D/YYYY
/// </summary>
class DateStringComparer : IComparer<string>
{
private static char[] slash = { '/' };
public int Compare(string Date1, string Date2)
{
// get date component strings
string[] strings1 = Date1.Split(slash);
string[] strings2 = Date2.Split(slash);
// get date component numbers
int[] values1 = { Convert.ToInt32(strings1[0]),
Convert.ToInt32(strings1[1]),
Convert.ToInt32(strings1[2]) };
int[] values2 = { Convert.ToInt32(strings2[0]),
Convert.ToInt32(strings2[1]),
Convert.ToInt32(strings2[2]) };
// compare year, month, day
if (values1[2] == values2[2])
if (values1[0] == values2[0])
return values1[1].CompareTo(values2[1]);
else
return values1[0].CompareTo(values2[0]);
else
return values1[2].CompareTo(values2[2]);
}
}
As for sorting the dates as pre-existing DateTime instances, that took 252 milliseconds.
You need to either use a sort specific for dates, or use something like Natural Sort.
Parse the strings to DateTime objects and use DateTime.Compare.
Chris beat me to it!
If you care about performance and if that is possible for you, you would preferably sort your dates before you generate the strings. You would then use the date objects directly for the sort.
You would then save time manipulating strings back and forth.
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