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sort

Operator

sort sort values

Synopsis

sort [-r] [-nulls first|last] [<expr> [asc|desc] [, <expr> [asc|desc] ...]]

Description

The sort operator sorts its input by reading all values until the end of input, sorting the values according to the provided sort expression(s), and emitting the values in the sorted order.

The sort expressions act as primary key, secondary key, and so forth. By default, the sort order is ascending, from lowest value to highest. If desc is specified in a sort expression, the sort order for that key is descending.

Zed follows the SQL convention that, by default, null values appear last in either case of ascending or descending sort. This can be overridden by specifying -nulls first.

If no sort expression is provided, a sort key is guessed based on heuristics applied to the values present. The heuristic examines the first input record and finds the first field in left-to-right order that is an integer, or if no integer field is found, the first field that is floating point. If no such numeric field is found, sort finds the first field in left-to-right order that is not of the time data type. Note that there are some cases (such as the output of a grouped aggregation performed on heterogeneous data) where the first input record to sort may vary even when the same query is executed repeatedly against the same data. If you require a query to show deterministic output on repeated execution, explicit sort expressions must be provided.

If -r is specified, the sort order for each key is reversed. For clarity when sorting by named fields, specifying desc is recommended instead of -r, particularly when multiple sort expressions are present. However, sort -r provides a shorthand if the heuristics described above suffice but reversed output is desired.

If not all data fits in memory, values are spilled to temporary storage and sorted with an external merge sort.

Zed's sort is stable such that values with identical sort keys always have the same relative order in the output as they had in the input, such as provided by the -s option in Unix's "sort" command-line utility.

Note that a total order is defined over the space of all Zed values even between values of different types so sort order is always well-defined even when comparing heterogeneously typed values.

TBD: document the definition of the total order

Examples

A simple sort with a null

echo '2 null 1 3' | zq -z 'sort this' -

=>

1
2
3
null

With no sort expression, sort will sort by this for non-records

echo '2 null 1 3' | zq -z sort -

=>

1
2
3
null

The "nulls last" default may be overridden

echo '2 null 1 3' | zq -z 'sort -nulls first' -

=>

null
1
2
3

With no sort expression, sort's heuristics will find a numeric key

echo '{s:"bar",k:2}{s:"bar",k:3}{s:"foo",k:1}' | zq -z sort -

=>

{s:"foo",k:1}
{s:"bar",k:2}
{s:"bar",k:3}

It's best practice to provide the sort key

echo '{s:"bar",k:2}{s:"bar",k:3}{s:"foo",k:1}' | zq -z 'sort k' -

=>

{s:"foo",k:1}
{s:"bar",k:2}
{s:"bar",k:3}

Sort with a secondary key

echo '{s:"bar",k:2}{s:"bar",k:3}{s:"foo",k:2}' | zq -z 'sort k,s' -

=>

{s:"bar",k:2}
{s:"foo",k:2}
{s:"bar",k:3}

Sort by secondary key in reverse order when the primary keys are identical

echo '{s:"bar",k:2}{s:"bar",k:3}{s:"foo",k:2}' | zq -z 'sort k,s desc' -

=>

{s:"foo",k:2}
{s:"bar",k:2}
{s:"bar",k:3}

Sort with a numeric expression

echo '{s:"sum 2",x:2,y:0}{s:"sum 3",x:1,y:2}{s:"sum 0",x:-1,y:-1}' |
zq -z 'sort x+y' -

=>

{s:"sum 0",x:-1,y:-1}
{s:"sum 2",x:2,y:0}
{s:"sum 3",x:1,y:2}

Case sensitivity affects sorting "lowest value to highest" in string values

echo '{word:"hello"}{word:"Hi"}{word:"WORLD"}' |
zq -z 'sort' -

=>

{word:"Hi"}
{word:"WORLD"}
{word:"hello"}

Case-insensitive sort by using a string expression

echo '{word:"hello"}{word:"Hi"}{word:"WORLD"}' |
zq -z 'sort lower(word)' -

=>

{word:"hello"}
{word:"Hi"}
{word:"WORLD"}

Shorthand to reverse the sort order for each key

echo '2 null 1 3' | zq -z 'sort -r' -

=>

3
2
1
null