Help:Sorting: Difference between revisions

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[[Help:Table|Tables]] can be made sortable via [[w:client-side JavaScript|client-side JavaScript]] with <code>class="sortable"</code>. This works in MediaWiki 1.9, which is installed in all Wikimedia projects. Sortable tables are identified by the arrows in each of its header cells. Clicking them will cause the table rows to sort based on the selected column, in ascending order first, and subsequently toggling between ascending and descending order. Links and other wiki-markup are not possible in headers.
[[Help:Table|Tables]] can be made {{mlw|sorting||sortable}} via [[w:client-side JavaScript|client-side JavaScript]] with <code>class="sortable"</code> (in combination with the usual formatting: <code>class="wikitable sortable"</code>). This works in MediaWiki 1.9 and above, which is installed in all Wikimedia projects.


A table that is sortable is identified by arrows to the right of the header in a header cell. A sortable table may be sortable by one or more columns in the table. Clicking an arrow sorts the table rows based on the selected column. Repeated clicking of an arrow changes the sort state in this sequence: Ascending, Descending, Unsorted.
Note that all of the below is subject to change due to improvements in the script.


Shift-clicking the arrows of other columns will trigger a secondary sort based on the most recent column on which the shift-click occurred. NB: Shift-clicking capability extends to tertiary and beyond.
==Javascript==
<nowiki>{{SERVER}}/skins-1.5/common/wikibits.js</nowiki>, on this site {{SERVER}}/skins-1.5/common/wikibits.js contains the site-wide MediaWiki JS code. It is the same on at least each Wikimedia site. In addition a site may have a page [[MediaWiki:Common.js]] which adds and overrides some code. The description below is in the process of being adapted to the version on Meta, {{mlm|MediaWiki:Common.js}}. The sorting code in it can be copied to other sites (by sysops of these other sites).


Links and other wiki-markup are not possible in headers.
==Sorting modes==

The sorting modes (the [[w:data type|data type]]s, which, in addition to the choice "ascending" or "descending", determine the sorting order) are:
== JavaScript ==
*string

**criterion: the first non-blank element is not of type numeric, date or currency;
The JavaScript code [https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/source/mediawiki/browse/master/resources/src/jquery.tablesorter/jquery.tablesorter.js jquery.tablesorter.js (source)] of the tablesorter is loaded by the ResourceLoader. Some sites may have a page [[MediaWiki:Common.js]] which adds and overrides some code. Browsers need to support JavaScript and it needs to be enabled for sorting to work.
**order: after conversion of capitals to lowercase the order is [[w:ASCII|ASCII]] - partial list showing the order: !"#$%&'()*+,-./09:;<=>?@[\]^_'az{|}~é&mdash; (see also below; a blank space comes before every other character; an [[w:Non-breaking space|nbsp]] code counts as a space; two adjacent ordinary blank spaces count as one; for multiple blank spaces one can use nbsps or alternate nbsps and ordinary blank spaces)

*numeric
== Sort modes ==
**criterion: the first non-blank element consists of just digits, points, commas, spaces, -, e and E''
The way items are sorted depends on the [[w:data type|data type]] of the first rows. To determine the data type, the first 5 non-blank rows below the header are tested after loading the page and the most appropriate format is chosen. Mismatches are possible. The sort order of a column can be forced. See the relevant section farther [[#Forcing the sort mode for a column|down]].
**order: if the string starts with a number (where spaces and nbsp's at the start are ignored) the order is numeric according to the first number in the string ([http://www.devguru.com/technologies/ecmascript/QuickRef/parsefloat.html parseFloat] is applied) after removing the commas, if any; if it does not (parseFloat returns [[w:NaN|NaN]]), the element is positioned like 0

:::''proposed improvement: ignore spaces in evaluating numbers to determine the sorting order''
Tags such as ''span'' or ''sup'' are ignored when determining data type, but reference numbers and additional visible comments are not ignored today.
:::''proposed internationalisation: in German etc., treat comma as a decimal point''

*date (see also below)
=== Dates ===
**criterion: the first non-blank element is of the form "dd-dd-dddd", "dd-dd-dd", or "dd aaa dddd"

**order: the string abcdefghij of length 10 is positioned as ghijdeab, the string abcdefghijk of length 8 as 19ghdeab if gh>=50 (string comparison) and 20ghdeab otherwise (i.e., the assumed format is DD-MM-YYYY or DD-MM-YY), and the string "dd aaa dddd" with aaa an abbreviated month name: chronologically
Various date formats are supported, including those with localized month names.
On the German Wikipedia, "16. März 2010" is correctly sorted as 2010-03-16

Most other numerical formats are supported as well, including those with different separators (such as . , ' or / );
On English Wikipedias dates are treated as US-Dates (eg. month-day-year) per default.

=== Numbers ===

The script can recognize numbers with different decimal separators (. and ,) as well as e/E numbers. However, numbers will be sorted alphanumerically (with 9 sorted after 10) unless this default behaviour is overridden. (See below.)

=== Text ===

Text is compared at client-side JavaScript since July 2019 ([https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/rMW1fed6d003dd05efabe38bf5bb8ee3de02fe0481a Commit]) with Intl.Collator. This sort accented characters depend on <code>PageContentLanguage</code> correctly.
But sort of special characters is depend on Browser implementation. Example for Intl.Collator(de):
Firefox52.9: _-—,;:!?.'"()[]{}§@*/\&#%^+±<=>|~∞¢$£¥€0…9²³aä…eé…ö…ß…ü…z
IE11: '-—!"#$%&()*,./:;?@[\]^_{|}~¢£¥€+<=>±≤≥§♠0²³9∞aä…eé…ö…ß…ü…z

Only Android systems use the old sort mode with [[w:UTF-16|UTF-16]] coded characters. Any accented/special characters follow after the basic latin alphabet. This can be changed site wide by posting code like the following inside the [[MediaWiki:Common.js]]:
<pre>
mw.config.set('tableSorterCollation', {'ä':'a', 'ß':'ss', 'þ':'th', 'aa':'å'});
</pre>
Afterwards, all 'Ä' and 'ä' will be sorted as if they were an 'a' etc.
Partial list showing the default order:<br>'''<code>! " # $ % & ' ( ) * + , - . / 0 9 : ; < = > ? @ [ \ ] ^ _ ` A Z a z { | } ~ É é &mdash;</code>'''
* See: [[#Basic alphabetic sorting order]]
* See also: [https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Sorting#Sort_order MediaWiki:Help:Sorting#Sort order] (here capital letters like A–Z are sorted after @)

=== Forcing the sort mode for a column ===

The sort mode can be manually specified by putting <code>data-sort-type="…"</code> inside the header of the respective row. This functionality is based on [https://web.archive.org/web/20180924065055/http://tablesorter.com/docs/ tablesorter.com (webarchive)]. The following (case-insensitive) values are valid for data-sort-type:
*text
*number
*IPAddress
*currency
*currency
*url
**criterion: the first non-blank element starts with $, £, €, or ¥
*isoDate
**order: numeric, ignoring all characters except digits and points
*usLongDate
*date
*time


Example:
The sorting mode is determined by the table element that is ''currently'' in the first non-blank row below the header. Thus it may change after sorting, which can give a cycle of four or even more instead of two.


<nowiki>{|</nowiki>class="wikitable sortable"
==Examples==
<nowiki>!</nowiki><b style="color:red">data-sort-type="date"</b><nowiki>|Date!!Name!!Height!!</nowiki><b style="color:red">data-sort-type="number"</b><nowiki>|Salary</nowiki>
Text after a number (e.g. a footnote) does not affect the sorting order, if the sorting mode is numeric. However, if the number at the top has text after it, this makes the sorting mode alphabetic.
<nowiki>|-</nowiki>
<nowiki>|01.10.1977||Smith||1.85||1,000.000</nowiki>
<nowiki>|-</nowiki>
<nowiki>|11.6.1972||Ray||1.89||900.000</nowiki>
<nowiki>|-</nowiki>
<nowiki>|1.9.1992||Bianchi||1.72||2,000.50</nowiki>
<nowiki>|}</nowiki>


{|class="wikitable sortable"
{|
! data-sort-type="date" | Date!!Name!!Height!!data-sort-type="number" |Salary
|-
|-
|01.10.1977||Smith||1.85||1,000.000
|
{|class=sortable
!numbers with thousands separators
|-
|-
|11.6.1972||Ray||1.89||900.000
|123.4
|-
|-
|1.9.1992||Bianchi||1.72||2,000.50
|2,500,000,000
|-
|300,000,000
|-
|3,000,000 abc
|-
|5,000,000
|-
|2,000 def
|-
| -4,000
|-
| ghi
|-
| -9,999
|-
|4,000
|-
|9,999
|-
|800,000
|-
|900,000
|}
|}

|
== Specifying a sort key ==
{|class=sortable

!numbers with thousands separators
Sometimes the value of a cell is not correctly parsed or one wants to sort the row in a special way. (e.g. a cell containing 'John Smith' should actually be sorted as 'Smith' and not as 'John')
This can be easily achieved by setting the <code>data-sort-value</code> attribute.

Wiki markup:

<nowiki>{|</nowiki>class="wikitable sortable"
!Name and Surname!!Height
<nowiki>|</nowiki>-
<nowiki>|</nowiki><b style="color:red">data-sort-value="Smith, John"</b>|John Smith||1.85
<nowiki>|</nowiki>-
<nowiki>|</nowiki><b style="color:red">data-sort-value="Ray, Ian"</b>|Ian Ray||1.89
<nowiki>|</nowiki>-
<nowiki>|</nowiki><b style="color:red">data-sort-value="Bianchi, Zachary"</b>|Zachary Bianchi||1.72
<nowiki>|}</nowiki>

This gives:

{|class="wikitable sortable"
!Name and Surname!!Height
|-
|-
|data-sort-value="Smith, John"|John Smith||1.85
|123.4
|-
|-
|data-sort-value="Ray, Ian"|Ian Ray||1.89
|2,500,000,000
|-
|-
|data-sort-value="Bianchi, Zachary"|Zachary Bianchi||1.72
|300,000,000
|-
|3,000,000 abc
|-
|5,000,000
|-
|2,000 def
|-
|4,000
|-
|ghi 9,999
|-
|800,000
|-
|900,000
|}
|}

|
Note, however, that this makes use of a new feature in HTML5, which is enabled by default in MediaWiki (including WMF wikis since September 2012 cfr. [[bugzilla:27478]]).
{|class=sortable
The old version was to set hidden sort key with {{tiw|sort}}.
!numbers with thousands separators
See also [[mw:Help:Sorting#Specifying a sort key|mediawiki.org]].
|-

|123.4 ghi
== Controlling sorting and display ==
|-

|2,500,000,000
If some Text undesired for sorting but needed for display, force the sort mode with <code>data-sort-type="…"</code> and write text ''after'' values (e.g. "200 approx", or reference tags "100<sup style="color:blue" title="link to Reference">[1]</sup>"). Empty cell is treated as "-Infinity" when sorting numerically. <!-- See e.g. [[Help:Sorting/countries]]. -->

In the case of a cell containing a range of dates or numbers (e.g. from 2 to 5), specify a <code>data-sort-value="…"</code>.

== Examples ==

The first column demonstrates how plain numbers are detected and sorted as numbers.
The second column shows that with <code>data-sort-type="number"</code> in table header more content detected as numbers.
The fourth column shows that with <code>data-sort-value="…"</code> a numeric sortvalue is defined, independent of the cell content.
{|class="wikitable sortable"
! numbers !! data-sort-type="number"| <code>data-sort-type="number"</code> !!class="unsortable"| !! data-sort-type="number"| <code>data-sort-type="number"</code>
|-
|-
| <span title="-8000">-8e3<span> || <span title="-8000">-8 e3<span> || || <span title="-8000">-8 e3<span>
|300,000,000
|-
|-
| <span title="-0.003">-3e-3</span> || <span title="-0.003">-3 e-3</span> || || <span title="-0.003">-3 e-3</span>
|3,000,000 abc
|-
|-
| 2.000 || <span title="sorted as 2">2-5 km²</span> || <code>data-sort-value="3.5"</code> ||data-sort-value="3.5"| <span title="sorted as 3.5">2-5 km²</span>
|5,000,000
|-
|-
| 3.99 || 3.99 km² || || 3.99 km²
|2,000 def
|-
|-
| 4 || 4 km² || || 4 km²
|4,000
|-
|-
| 90 % || 90 Percent || <code>data-sort-value="90"</code> ||data-sort-value="90"| about 90 Percent
|9,999
|-
|-
| <span title="100">1E2<span> || 100<sup style="color:blue" title="link to Reference">[1]</sup> || || 100<sup style="color:blue" title="link to Reference">[1]</sup>
|800,000
|-
|-
| 1,000,000.0 || 1 000 000.0 || <code>data-sort-value="1e6"</code> ||data-sort-value="1e6"| one Million
|900,000
|}
|}
The thousand separator(,) and digits separator(.) depends on language specific configuration of the Mediawiki software.
|}
Currency symbols before or after numbers or the %-symbol will be sorted numerical.

{|
{|
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
|-
|
|
{|class=sortable
{|class="wikitable sortable"
!currencies
!currency demo
|-
|-
|$ 9
|$ 9
Line 126: Line 161:
|}
|}
|
|
{|class=sortable
{|class="wikitable sortable"
!currencies
!currency demo
|-
|-
|9 €
|€ 9
|-
|-
|80
|80
|-
|-
|70
|70
|-
|-
|600
|600
|}
|}
|
|
{|class=sortable
{|class="wikitable sortable"
!currencies
!currency demo
|-
|-
|£ 9
|£ 9
Line 150: Line 185:
|}
|}
|
|
{|class=sortable
{|class="wikitable sortable"
!currencies
!currency demo
|-
|-
|¥ 9
|¥ 9
Line 162: Line 197:
|}
|}
|
|
{|class=sortable
{|class="wikitable sortable"
!percent
!comparison
|-
|-
|a 9
|9 %
|-
|-
|a 80
|80 %
|-
|-
|a 70
|70 %
|-
|-
|a 600
|600 %
|}
|}
|
|
{|class=sortable
{|class="wikitable sortable"
!numbers
!comparison
|-
|-
| −7e270
|e 9
|-
|-
| {{#expr:-.000000000001/7}}
|e 80
|-
|-
|e 70
| 999e9
|-
|-
|e 600
| 7e270
|}
|}
|}
|}


== Secondary sort key ==
The example with "a" gives alphabetic sorting; that with "e" gives (on Meta) numeric sorting mode, but with all entries starting with text counted as 0, so in this example there is effectively no sorting.


It is possible to sort by column A (primary sort key), while for equal values in column A, sort by column B (secondary sort key): first sort by A by clicking the sort button of column A once or twice, then, while holding the shift-key, click the sort button of column B once or twice.
{|class=sortable

!numbers with e
Example:

First click on column Text and then, while holding the shift-key, on Numbers, you'll see that the ordering is on Text (1), Numbers (2).

{|class="wikitable sortable"
!Numbers!!Text!!Dates!!Currency!!More text
|-
|-
|4||a||01.Jan.2005||4.20||row 1
|e 3
|-
|-
|5||a||05/12/2006||7.15||row 2
|e 9
|-
|-
|1||b||02-02-2004||5.00||row 3
|e 80
|-
|-
|1||a||02-02-2004||5.00||row 4
|e 70
|-
|-
|2||x||13-apr-2005||||row 5
|e 600
|-
|-
|2||a||13-apr-2005||||row 6
|999e9
|-
|-
|3||a||17.aug.2006||6.50||row 7
|88e80
|-
|-
|3||z||25.aug.2006||2.30||row 8
|7e270
|-
|-
|3||z||28.aug.2006||5.50||row 9
|999e-9
|-
|-
|3||z||31.aug.2006||3.77||row 10
|88e-80
|-
|-
|3||z||01.sep.2006||1.50||row 11
|7e-270
|-
|-
!Bottom!!!!!!!!
| -999e9
|-
|-
| -88e80
|-
| -7e270
|-
| -999e-9
|-
| -88e-80
|-
| -7e-270
|-
|e3
|-
|1e3
|-
|e9
|-
|e80
|-
|e270
|}
|}


== Additional features ==
This example demonstrates that text is positioned at zero, and that e.g. e3 for 1000 is not allowed, use 1e3 instead.

==Alphabetic sorting with hidden sortkey==
If necessary one can apply alphabetic sorting using a sortkey which due to CSS is not displayed:
:<nowiki><span style="display:none">...</span></nowiki>

Javascript sorting is based on the text inside and outside the tags, without the tags themselves. The sortkey comes at the start and is separated from the displayed text in such a way that the latter does not affect the sorting order. For example, if a sortkey system is used where there are no blank spaces in any sortkey, then a blank space can be used for separation. If a single blank space ''is'' possible in a sortkey, two nbsps can be used. For table elements for which the text to be displayed is equal to the sortkey, no duplication is needed, of course.

If the text inside and outside the tags together is of a form that would cause a sorting mode other than alphabetic (if and when the element is at the top), a character can be appended at the end of the sortkey to avoid this, again making sure it does not affect the sorting order by putting a space or two nbsps. This can be dispensed with if the element can never be at the top, but this can be complicated to assess as that can be caused by sorting other columns, with varying sorting modes, and it can change when deleting a row, adding a column, etc.


=== Excluding the last row from sorting ===
Instead of "display=none" another way is using a font color equal to the background, e.g. <nowiki><font color="#f9f9f9">999</font></nowiki> gives "<font color="#f9f9f9">999</font>". With this method the hidden code can be seen in selected text (e.g. with the mouse). Also the hidden text is included when copying the rendered text. The first may be an advantage or a disadvantage, the second seems only a disadvantage. A complication is also that if a user uses a background color different from the default, the specified text color may not match it; to make sure they are the same the background color can be specified also.


Sometimes it is helpful to exclude the last row of a table from the sorting process.
Alphabetic sorting mode can be forced by writing either all numbers with a "+" in front. ''(This no longer applies when a plus in the first number no longer prevents numeric sorting mode.)''
This can be achieved by setting <code>class="sortbottom"</code> on the last row. Declaring the last row as a footer (with <code>!</code>) will also exclude it from sorting.


Wiki markup:
The absolute position of the plus has to be a non-increasing function of the number, e.g. the pluses are in the same absolute position, or in the same position relative to the first digit.


<nowiki>{|</nowiki>class="wikitable sortable"
Within a column, either all or no numbers in the range 0 - 1 should have a zero before the decimal point.
<nowiki>!</nowiki>Name!!Surname!!Height
<nowiki>|-</nowiki>
<nowiki>|</nowiki>John||Smith||1.85
<nowiki>|-</nowiki>
<nowiki>|</nowiki>Ron||Ray||1.89
<nowiki>|-</nowiki>
<nowiki>|</nowiki>Mario||Bianchi||1.72
<nowiki>|-</nowiki> <b style="color:red">class="sortbottom"</b>
! !!</b>Average:||1.82
<nowiki>|}</nowiki>


What it looks like in your browser:
In the case where the width of a number is not fixed or not known, as in the case where the number depends on parameters or templates, and/or is the result of a computation, an automatic way of padding with nbsps is needed. This can be done with {{tim|lsc11}} which also provides thousands separators, and the pluses necessary in the range 0 - 1000 (see above).

We cannot use variable [[Help:Magic_words#Formatting|padleft]] with the nbsp code, because &, the first character of the code, is used for padding, even if the code is put in a template.

===Padding with no-break spaces===
The effect of left-padding with [[w:Non-breaking space|"&amp;nbsp;" codes]], which render as blank spaces, depends on the browser: in IE they are (unlike actual blank spaces) counted for sorting as leading blank spaces, so in a list of numbers with text (for which the alphabetic sorting mode applies) they could be used to equalize the number of characters before the explicit or implicit decimal separator. However, in Firefox they are ignored for the purpose of sorting.


{|class="wikitable sortable"
{|class="wikitable sortable"
!Name!!Surname!!Height
!Sorting using nbsps, works on IE but not on Firefox
!Name
|-
|-
|John||Smith||1.85
|100.3 FM
|Third
|-
|-
|Ron||Ray||1.89
|&nbsp;89.5 FM
|First
|-
|-
|Mario||Bianchi||1.72
|107.3 FM
|Fourth
|-
|-
! !!Average:||1.82
|&nbsp;95.3 FM
|Second
|}
|}


=== Excluding the first row from sorting ===
See also [[w:Talk:List_of_U.S._states_by_population#Sortable_Table]].


The same can be applied for first rows as well, by setting <code>class="sorttop"</code>.
===Padding with zeros===
Example:
*{{padleft:{{#expr:12*13}}|6|0}}


Wiki markup:
Formatnum can be combined with padleft:


<nowiki>{|</nowiki>class="wikitable sortable"
Integer:
<nowiki>!</nowiki>Name!!Surname!!Height
<nowiki>|-</nowiki> <b style="color:red">class="sorttop"</b>
! !!Average:||1.82
<nowiki>|-</nowiki>
<nowiki>|</nowiki>John||Smith||1.85
<nowiki>|-</nowiki>
<nowiki>|</nowiki>Ron||Ray||1.89
<nowiki>|-</nowiki>
<nowiki>|</nowiki>Mario||Bianchi||1.72
<nowiki>|}</nowiki>


{|class="wikitable sortable"
<nowiki>{{formatnum:{{padleft:299792458|16|0}}}}</nowiki> gives:
!Name!!Surname!!Height
|- class="sorttop"
! !!Average:||1.82
|-
|John||Smith||1.85
|-
|Ron||Ray||1.89
|-
|Mario||Bianchi||1.72
|}


=== Making a column unsortable ===
*{{formatnum:{{padleft:299792458|16|0}}}}


If you want a specific column not to be sortable, specify <code>class="unsortable"</code> in the attributes of its header cell.
Real:


Wiki markup:
<nowiki>{{formatnum:{{padleft:{{#expr:((299792458.056 - .5) round 0)}}|16|0}}}}.{{padleft:{{#expr:(1000000*(299792458.056 - ((299792458.056 - .5) round 0))) round 0}}|6|0}}</nowiki> gives:


<nowiki>{|</nowiki>class="wikitable sortable"
*{{formatnum:{{padleft:{{#expr:((299792458.056 - .5) round 0)}}|16|0}}}}.{{padleft:{{#expr:(1000000*(299792458.056 - ((299792458.056 - .5) round 0))) round 0}}|6|0}}
<nowiki>!</nowiki>Numbers!!Alphabet!!Dates!!Currency!!<b style="color:red">class="unsortable"|</b>Unsortable
<nowiki>|-</nowiki>
<nowiki>|</nowiki>1||Z||02-02-2004||5.00||This
<nowiki>|-</nowiki>
<nowiki>|</nowiki>2||y||13-apr-2005||||Column
<nowiki>|-</nowiki>
<nowiki>|</nowiki>3||X||17.aug.2006||6.50||Is
<nowiki>|-</nowiki>
<nowiki>|</nowiki>4||w||01.Jan.2005||4.20||Unsortable
<nowiki>|-</nowiki>
<nowiki>|</nowiki>5||V||05/12/2006||7.15||See?
<nowiki>|-</nowiki>
<nowiki>!</nowiki>Total: 15!!!!!!Total: 29.55!!
<nowiki>|-</nowiki>
<nowiki>|}</nowiki>


What it looks like in your browser:
===Corresponding alphabetic and numeric sorting===
:''(This more cumbersome method is less often needed after the described fixes are applied)''

Alphabetic and numeric sorting can be made to correspond for all numbers between -1e100 and 1e100 in arbitrary precision as follows:
*where scientific notation is used, it is normalized such that the absolute value of the mantissa is between 1 and 10; the exponent is put first
*scientific notation is used for all negative numbers, and all positive numbers outside some interval (below: 1e-9 to 1e9), and not inside that interval
*where the absolute value of the exponent and/or the mantissa is a decreasing function of the number, the notation uses its complement with respect to 99 for exponents and 10 for mantissas; the code "c" is added in these cases
*numbers 0 &le; ''x'' < 1000 get a "+" in front
*positive numbers in scientific notation with a negative exponent get "+0" in front
*spaces and nbsps are added where needed:
**for numbers not in scientific notation the positions of all explicit and implicit decimal points are aligned
**for the starting position, i.e. the position of the first "-", "+", or "e", of other numbers, see the example table

For readibility a plain notation can be added after the coded form. If a blank space is used for separation, and no number code has a space at this position, then adding the plain notation does not affect the sorting order. If a number code ''can'' have a space at this position, two nbsps can be used. Moreover, display of the first part, acting as sortkey, can be avoided using CSS (this does not affect its functioning for sorting):
:<nowiki><span style="display:none">...</span></nowiki>

(However, on some projects, notably Ontoworld, a page with this wikitext cannot be saved, as spam protection.)

In the following the left column shows the code for alphabetic sorting, where cryptic followed by the regular notation. The second column contains the same (hence sorting the same), but with code hidden with CSS. The third column shows the corresponding plain numbers with thousands separators, equal to what the second column shows. Thus this column also provides numeric sorting, this time using numeric sorting mode, but only when the first element is detected as numeric, i.e., when it is a non-negative number which is ''not'' in scientific notation. As a result sorting toggles between ascending numeric and descending alphabetic order.


{|class="wikitable sortable"
{|class="wikitable sortable"
!Numbers!!Alphabet!!Dates!!Currency!!class="unsortable"|Unsortable
|-
|-
|1||Z||02-02-2004||5.00||This
!full code for alphabetic sorting!! display form !!plain number with thousands separators
|-
|<tt>{{lsc11|6|}} </tt>||{{lsc11|6}} || 6
|-
|<tt>{{lsc11|7|}} </tt>||{{lsc11|7}} || 7
|-
|<tt>{{lsc11|{{pow|4|10|}}|}} </tt>||{{lsc11|{{pow|4|10|}}}} || {{formatnum:{{pow|4|10|}}}}
|-
|<tt>{{lsc11|1234|}} </tt>|||{{lsc11|1234}} || 1,234
|-
|<tt>{{lsc11|123|}} </tt>||{{lsc11|123}} || 123
|-
|<tt>{{lsc11|{{pow|4|12|}}|}} </tt>||{{lsc11|{{pow|4|12|}}}} || {{formatnum:{{pow|4|12|}}}}
|-
|<tt>{{lsc11|{{pow|4|8|}}|}} </tt>||{{lsc11|{{pow|4|8|}}}} || {{formatnum:{{pow|4|8|}}}}
|-
|<tt>{{lsc11|{{pow|4|13|}}|}} </tt>||{{lsc11|{{pow|4|13|}}}} || {{formatnum:{{pow|4|13|}}}}
|-
|<tt><span>e23 6</span> 6e23 </tt>||<span style="display:none">e23 6</span> 6e23 || 6e23
|-
|<tt><span>e09 1</span> 1e9 </tt>||<span style="display:none">e09 1</span> 1e9 || 1e9
|-
|<tt><span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;+0 ec89 9.999,99 </span> 9.999,99e-10</tt>||<span style="display:none">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;+0 ec89 9.999,99 </span> 9.999,99e-10|| 9.999,99e-10
|-
|<tt><span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;+</span>0.000,000,001 </tt>||<span style="display:none">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;+</span>0.000,000,001 || 0.000,000,001
|-
|-
|2||y||13-apr-2005||||Column
|<tt><span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;+0 ec87 6 </span>6e-12</tt>||<span style="display:none">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;+0 ec87 6 </span>6e-12|| 6e-12
|-
|-
|3||X||17.aug.2006||6.50||Is
|<tt><span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;+0 ec86 7 </span>7e-13</tt>||<span style="display:none">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;+0 ec86 7 </span>7e-13|| 7e-13
|-
|-
|4||w||01.Jan.2005||4.20||Unsortable
|<tt><span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;+0 ec87 5 </span> 5e-12</tt>||<span style="display:none">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;+0 ec87 5 </span> 5e-12|| 5e-12
|-1
|<tt><span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;-e-10 c0.000,01</span> -9.999,99e-10 </tt>||<span style="display:none">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;-e-10 c0.000,01</span> -9.999,99e-10 || -9.999,99e-10
|-
|-
|5||V||05/12/2006||7.15||See?
|<tt><span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;-e-08 c6.8 </span> -3.2e-8</tt>||<span style="display:none">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;-e-08 c6.8 </span> -3.2e-8|| -3.2e-8
|-
|-
!Total: 15!!!!!!Total: 29.55!![http://www.joostdevalk.nl/code/sortable-table/ Original example]
|<tt><span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;-ec86 c0.3 </span> -9.7e13</tt>||<span style="display:none">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;-ec86 c0.3 </span> -9.7e13|| -9.7e13
|-
|-
|<tt><span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;-ec99 c7.7 </span> -2.3</tt>||<span style="display:none">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;-ec99 c7.7 </span> -2.3|| -2.3
|-
|<tt>999,999,999.999,99 </tt>||999,999,999.999,99 || 999,999,999.999,99
|-
|<tt>{{lsc11|0|}} </tt>||{{lsc11|0}} || 0
|-
|<tt>{{lsc11|0|}}.3 </tt>||{{lsc11|0}}.3 || 0.3
|}
|}


=== Keeping some rows together ===
If no scientific notation is used then alternatively, if a column contains only a few negative numbers we can preserve the correspondence between alphabetic and numeric order by putting the minuses at the position of the right-most plus sign in the column, and inserting a number of nbsp codes after the minus sign, the closer to zero the more.


If you want that a row will always be below the row just above it and will follow it around, no matter how the sorting is applied, specify <code>class="expand-child"</code> in the attribute of this row.
A column of plain numbers (not in scientific notation), partly negative, sorts as follows:
*if the first number is non-negative, sorting alternates between ascending numeric order and descending alphabetic order
*if the first number is negative, sorting first gives ascending alphabetic order, and then alternates again between ascending numeric order and descending alphabetic order (starting with the latter)


Wiki markup:
==Dates==


{|class=sortable
<nowiki>{|</nowiki> class="wikitable sortable"
<nowiki>!</nowiki> style="width:9em"| Country !!data-sort-type="number"| Area
<nowiki>|-</nowiki>
<nowiki>|</nowiki> France
<nowiki>|</nowiki> 674 843 km²
<nowiki>|-</nowiki> <b style="color:red">class="expand-child"</b> style="font-size:85%; line-height:1.2; color:gray"
<nowiki>|</nowiki> colspan="2" | In Paris is the Eiffel Tower.
<nowiki>|-</nowiki>
<nowiki>|</nowiki> U.K.
<nowiki>|</nowiki> 242 495 km²
<nowiki>|-</nowiki> <b style="color:red">class="expand-child"</b> style="font-size:85%; line-height:1.2; color:gray"
<nowiki>|</nowiki> colspan="2" | In the U.K. you cannot pay with euros.
<nowiki>|-</nowiki> <b style="color:red">class="expand-child"</b> style="font-size:85%; line-height:1.2; color:gray"
<nowiki>|</nowiki> colspan="2" | And you drive on the left side of the road.
<nowiki>|-</nowiki>
<nowiki>|</nowiki> Germany
<nowiki>|</nowiki> 357 168 km²
<nowiki>|-</nowiki> <b style="color:red">class="expand-child"</b> style="font-size:85%; line-height:1.2; color:gray"
<nowiki>|</nowiki> colspan="2" | Germany includes the former DDR.
<nowiki>|}</nowiki>

What it looks like in your browser:

{| class="wikitable sortable"
!style="width:9em"| Country !!data-sort-type="number"| Area
|-
|-
| France
!Date sorting mode
| 674 843 km²
|- class="expand-child" style="font-size:85%; line-height:1.2; color:gray"
|colspan="2" | In Paris is the Eiffel Tower.
|-
|-
| U.K.
|07 Apr 2007
| 242 495 km²
|- class="expand-child" style="font-size:85%; line-height:1.2; color:gray"
|colspan="2" | In the U.K. you cannot pay with euros.
|- class="expand-child" style="font-size:85%; line-height:1.2; color:gray"
|colspan="2" | And you drive on the left side of the road.
|-
|-
| Germany
|16 Apr 2007
| 357 168 km²
|-
|- class="expand-child" style="font-size:85%; line-height:1.2; color:gray"
|18 Mar 2007
|colspan="2" | Germany includes the former DDR.
|-
|27 Mar 2007
|-
|20 Aug 2006
|-
|22 Jul 2006
|}
|}


If you put in ''data-sort-value'' the same content as above row, keep this rows also together. The original mutual order of these rows is preserved. A better way for this is class expand-child, see above [[#Keeping some rows together]].
<div style="float: right">

'''Example:''' ''([{{fullurl:{{FULLPAGENAME}}|action=edit}} edit] to view source)''
Example where ''data-sort-value'' is used is the case for the rows about the Netherlands:
{|class=sortable

!date
<nowiki>{|class="wikitable sortable"
!Country/province!!Capital
|-
|-
|France||Paris
| [[2006]] <span style="display:none">a</span>
|-
|-
|Netherlands||Amsterdam
| {{dts|2006-12-03}}
|-
|-
|data-sort-value=Netherlands|South Holland||data-sort-value=Amsterdam|The Hague
| {{dts|-0000-03-27}}
|-
|-
|U.K.||London
| <span style="display:none">2006-12 </span>[[December]] [[2006]]
|}</nowiki>

{|class="wikitable sortable"
!Country/province!!Capital
|-
|-
|France||Paris
| <span style="display:none">!9936-04 </span>[[April]] [[-63|64 BC]]
|-
|-
|Netherlands||Amsterdam
| <span style="display:none">!9900-07-13</span>[[-0099-07-13]]
|-
|-
|data-sort-value=Netherlands|South Holland||data-sort-value=Amsterdam|The Hague
| <span style="display:none">!9937-09-23</span>[[-0062-09-23]]
|-
|-
|U.K.||London
| <span style="display:none">!9937-10-08</span>[[-0062-10-08]]
|-
| <span style="display:none">!9998-12-21</span>[[-0001-12-21]]
|-
| {{dts|2006-11-08}}
|-
| {{dts|0304-12-31}}
|-
| {{dts|2005-05-15}}
|}
|}
</div>
For dates, the sorting mode is based on the ''rendered'' [[Help:Date formatting and linking|date format]]. Unfortunately, none of the standard formats for the [[Help:Date formatting and linking|Mediawiki's date-formatting feature]] match either of the formats for the "date" sorting mode. Thus, if dates are entered in one of those standard formats, the sorting mode would be "string"; only dates formated as <code>YYYY-MM-DD</code> will result in true chronological sorting.


== Special dates ==
However, like above we can put a sortkey in front which, due to CSS, is not displayed. With a hidden sortkey one can simply use the non-wikilinked format <code>YYYY-MM-DD</code> for years AD followed by any choice of displayable text, including Mediawiki date formatting. The Wikipedia template {{tiw|dts}} provides a convenient way of applying this method while using the date-formatting feature for display.


For years BC we can use, for example, <code>!9937-09-23</code> for [[-0062-09-23]] (subtract the year number BC from 10000, or the absolute value of the astronomical year from 9999).
For years BC we can use, for example, <code>!9937-09-23</code> for [[-0062-09-23]] (subtract the year number BC from 10000, or the absolute value of the astronomical year from 9999).
Line 431: Line 450:
If a table column contains any or all incomplete dates, this will not cause sorting problems. If only a year and month are given, that incomplete date is positioned alphabetically before the first day of the month in question. Likewise, if only a year is given, the date is positioned before the first month or day given for that year.
If a table column contains any or all incomplete dates, this will not cause sorting problems. If only a year and month are given, that incomplete date is positioned alphabetically before the first day of the month in question. Likewise, if only a year is given, the date is positioned before the first month or day given for that year.


=== Use of #time ===
If at some point (i.e., after possible previous sorting) the form <code><nowiki>[[YYYY]]</nowiki></code> is at the top with a non-negative year, sorting would be numerical; in this case, after toggling between ascending and descending there would be no proper sorting ''within'' each year (because [http://www.devguru.com/technologies/ecmascript/QuickRef/parsefloat.html parsefloat] is applied, finding the first number in the string, and basing sorting on only that number). Also, years BC would not be sorted properly. Therefore, alphabetic sorting has to be enforced. This can be done by putting a non-displayed character after the year, separated by a space.


Using parser function #time we can put <code><nowiki><span style="display:none">&{{#expr:3e11+{{#time:U|..}}}}</span></nowiki></code> in front of the displayed date. This works in the range 1 Jan 111, 00:00:00 through 31 Dec 9999, 23:59:59 for the [[w:Proleptic Gregorian calendar|proleptic Gregorian calendar]]. The added value makes all values positive and the same length (if scientific format would show up an additional step is needed to prevent this). The "&" forces string sort mode.
See also:
*{{tiw|dts}}
*[[bugzilla:8226]].


Dates and times can be entered in any [http://www.php.net/manual/en/datetime.formats.php php date/time format]. Note that when we have just a year, a month (typically Jan) must be added in the hidden part.
==Examples elsewhere==


Example using [[Help:Sorting/date]]:
*[[w:Ranked list of Dutch provinces]]
{|class="wikitable sortable"
*[[w:List of countries by GDP estimates for 2006 (nominal)]]
!input date!!text!!date and time as interpreted, with hidden sort key!!input with visible sort key!!input with hidden sort key!!Unix time
*[[w:List of countries by GDP (PPP), 2006]]
|-
*[[w:List of longest reigning current monarchs]] - date columns are sortable for people with "no preference" for date formatting, and for people with preference <nowiki>[[YYYY-MM-DD]]</nowiki>.
| || || || ||
*[[w:User:Smurrayinchester/Template|Pokémon table]] - prefixes numbers with "#" to have them before "-".
{{Help:Sorting/date|010203}}
*[[w:Nuclear_power_by_country|Nuclear power by country]] (Featured List)
{{Help:Sorting/date|1/2}}
*[[w:Desert Island Discs: castaways' choices]]
{{Help:Sorting/date|1/2/3}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|1-2-2003}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|1-2-3}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|2007}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|1 Jan 111, 00:00:00}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|31 Dec 9999, 23:59:59}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|Sep 1970}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|1970}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|Jun 2007| or later}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|Jun 2007| perhaps earlier}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|2007-6}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|Jun 2007}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|4 Jun 2007}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|3 Jul 2007}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|12 Aug 2006}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|1 Mar 2006 -1day}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|1 Mar 2008 -1day}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|1 Mar 2010 -1day}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|1 Mar 1900 -1day}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|1 Mar 1600 -1day}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|Jun 1607}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|{{CURRENTTIMESTAMP}}}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|yesterday}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|today}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|tomorrow}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|1week}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|-1week}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|1day}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|-1day}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|1month}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|-1month}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|1year}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|-1year}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|1000year}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|10000month}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|1000000day}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|10000000hour}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|1000000000minute}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|100000000000second}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|7980year}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|-1890year}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|Mon}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|Tue}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|Wed}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|Thu}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|Fri}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|Sat}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|Sun}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|}}
{{Help:Sorting/date|unknown}}
|}


To use dates before the year 111, add a multiple of 400, e.g. 6000, to all years, this effectively shifts the range to 1 Jan -5889, 00:00:00 through 31 Dec 3999, 23:59:59, without changing the calendar.
==Limitations==
Javascript sorting may not work properly on tables with cells extending over multiple rows and/or columns. In some cases the table gets messed up when attempting to sort, in other cases some of the sorting buttons work while others don't.


See also:
==Empty cells==
*{{tiw|dts}} - sorting a table by a date column
If the first cell below the header of a column of numbers or dates is blank the sort mode will be alphabetic. In the case of a column of numbers this can be avoided by putting a hyphen (minus sign) in the cells without number. This should be avoided in a column that should be sorted alphabetically. Instead, apart from leaving the cell blank, one can use another [[w:dash|dash]].
*{{tim|sd}} - shows weekday in a separate column before date, and link all dates

==Sorting the wikitext of a table==
Unfortunately it does not seem possible to directly and automatically sort the wikitext itself, according to one of the sortkeys. This would, after saving, directly produce a table sorted as required.


== Cell spanning multiple rows/cells ==
However, if for a given table, we make an auxiliary sortable table rendering as wikitext for the original table, we ''can'' sort the wikitext of the original table.


A cell which spans more than one row or column is treated as if it were multiple cells with the same value.
Example:
{|

|
Original table:
{|class="smwtable" id="wikitable2" style="width:100%"
{|class="wikitable sortable"
|+ rowspan
!demo
! data-sort-type="date" | Date!!Name!!Height
|-
|-
|01.10.1977||Smith||rowspan="2"|1.85
|9
|-
|-
|11.06.1972||Adams
|12
|-
|-
|01.09.1992||Bianchi||1.72
|11
|}
| <div style="margin-left:3em">
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|+ colspan
! A !! colspan="2" style="width:2.5em" | B !! C
|-
| A
| 2
| 1
|-
| B
| colspan="2" | 1
| 3
|-
| C
| colspan="3" | 2
|}
|}


</div>
Auxiliary table:
|}


As of MediaWiki Version [[mw:MediaWiki_1.26/wmf23| 1.26 wmf23]] (Sept. 2015), sorting of colspanned cells works correctly. Also, ''missing'' cells at the end of a row will change after first sort into cells with empty content.
<nowiki>{|class="sortable" style="width:100%"</nowiki><br>

<nowiki>!demo</nowiki>
=== Colspanned cells ===
{|class="sortable" style="width:100%"

!header
The auto-detection of [[#Sort modes|sort mode]] is done for colspanned cells for each column separately. Defining the sort mode by putting <code>data-sort-type</code> inside the header will specify this sort mode for all colspanned columns.

To use separate sort keys for each column in a colspanned cell, use the CSS hack described here:
To allow sorting, the formal number of cells in each row should be equal (If not, all columns become sortable. This should apply at least for the number of cells up to and including the last sortable column.) However, with a CSS hack the number of cells ''shown'' in a row can differ from the formal number of cells. For example, two formal cells can be shown as one by specifying a width for the first column, shifting the contents of the second cell to the left, increasing its width by the same amount, and hiding the cell border that would normally be visible. Hidden sort keys can be used to control the sort order of particular rows with respect to each column.

Example:
{| class="wikitable sortable"
!style="width:9.3em"|Country!!Capital
|-
|-
|France
|<nowiki>|-</nowiki><br><nowiki>| 9</nowiki>
|Paris
|-
|-
|<span style="display:none">Z</span>
|<nowiki>|-</nowiki><br><nowiki>|12</nowiki>
|style="border-left:2px solid #fff;border-left-style:hidden;background:#fff;padding:0.4em 0em"|<span style="display:none">M</span><div style="position:relative;left:-9em;margin-right:-9em;overflow:auto">Sorting with respect to the first column this row sorts like Z, with respect to the second column like M</div>
|-
|-
|U.K.
|<nowiki>|-</nowiki><br><nowiki>|11</nowiki>
|London
|}
|}
<nowiki>|}</nowiki>


== Static column ==
After copying the rendered text to the edit box, and deleting the header line, this renders as:


A static column, e.g. with row numbers, can be obtained with two side-by-side tables with for each row the same height set in both tables:
{|class="sortable" style="width:100%"

!demo
{| width="50%"
|-
|-
| 9
|
{| class="wikitable" style="margin-right:0"
|-
! Number
|11
|-
|-
!style="height:40px;" scope="row"| 1
|12
|-
!style="height:40px;" scope="row"| 2
|}
|}
|
{| class="wikitable sortable"
! Country !! Capital
|-
|style="height:40px;"| The Netherlands || Amsterdam (although The Hague is the seat of government)
|-
|style="height:40px;"| France || Paris
|}
|}

The style can be adjusted to make it appear as a single table. If for some row the height of that row is too small for the text in a cell on one of the sides, the browser increases it, and there is no longer a match.

== Default order ==

It is not possible to make a table appear sorted by a certain column without the user clicking on it. By default, the rows of a table always appear in the same order as in the wikitext. If you want a table to appear sorted by a certain column, you must sort the wikitext itself in that order; see the next section for one way to do this.

=== Sorting the wikitext of a table ===

Sorting the wikitext itself, thus creating a new default sort order, can be done semi-automatically as follows. Take the wikitext of the table without top and bottom lines. Use "find and replace" to replace the cell separators with special code not containing "|". If there are pipes in the table cells, replace all pipes by some code, and replace that code with a newline in front of it (originating from the code for the start of a new row) back. Apply [[mw:Module:Sort]] (see [[mw:Module talk:Sort]]) at [[mw:Special:ExpandTemplates]] by putting:
<code><nowiki>{{#invoke:Sort|f|{{!}}-</nowiki></code><br/>
<code><nowiki>{{!}}</nowiki></code>
(with the newline) before, and <code><nowiki>}}</nowiki></code> after the wikitext, to sort the items between the pipes, with the desired separator in the result. Discard the items at the start containing "-" and a newline. Restore the cell separators and the pipes in the cells by replacing the temporary codes for them. Readd the top and bottom lines.

This method sorts by the wikitext of the rows, so in principal by the first column (and the second as secondary key), although wikitext codes in the cells of the first column before the content can affect the order.

See [[Help:Sorting#Maintaining tables sorted by rank]] for sorting tables by a different column.

=== Using JavaScript to trigger client-side table sorting ===

An addition to [[MediaWiki:Common.js]] can be used to "re-sort" a table automatically on the client side when the page loads (as if the user had clicked the header.) The example below sorts all the tables on a set of pages by the first column (see the [[mw:Tablesorter|Tablesorter]] documentation for syntax.)

Note : This appears to break sorting by clicking on headers. It sorts ascending on the clicked on header, but won't sort the other way when clicked on again

<syntaxhighlight lang="javascript">
function isSortedTablePage() {
return ( wgPageName == "Page_To_Sort" || wgPageName == "Other_Page_To_Sort" );
}

jQuery( document ).ready( function( $ ) {
// wrapped in "mw.loader.using" so this doesn't execute until Tablesorter has loaded
mw.loader.using( 'jquery.tablesorter', function() {
if( isSortedTablePage() ) $('table.sortable').tablesorter( {sortList: [ { 0: 'asc'} ]} )
// or look for tables with an ID attribute of "sortMe" on any page
// $( '#sortMe' ).tablesorter( {sortList: [ { 0: 'asc'} ]} )
} );
} );
</syntaxhighlight>

== Basic alphabetic sorting order ==


==Alphabetic sorting order==
{|class="wikitable sortable"
{|class="wikitable sortable"
!demo
!demo
Line 560: Line 704:
| _
| _
|-
|-
| `<!-- yes this is a back quote -->
| '
|-
|-
| A
| A
Line 585: Line 729:
|-
|-
| ~
| ~
|-
| &mdash;
|-
|-
Line 595: Line 737:
|-
|-
|é1
|é1
|-
| &mdash;
|}
|}


The two-character entries such as A1 demonstrate that A and a are at the same position.
The two-character entries such as A1 demonstrate that A and a are at the same position.


This is not a fully alphabetic sort order: letter case is first folded to lowercase using a basic 1-to-1 conversion table (limited to the Basic Multilingual Plane of Unicode, and whose coverage and completeness still depends on browser versions and on their current implementation of the versioned Unicode Character Database), but letters with diacritics (and all other digits, symbols or special whitespaces or format control characters) will still sort according to the binary encoding of the casefolded letter, using the binary order of the UTF-16 code units (exposed and seen in Javascript through the parsed HTML DOM), but not the binary order of UTF-8 code units in the HTML page, and not of codepoints as one could also expect for encoded characters in supplementary planes).
==See also==

*{{tiw|dts}} - sorting a table by a date column, while following [[w:Wikipedia:Manual_of_Style_%28dates_and_numbers%29#Dates_containing_a_month_and_a_day]] for display
In addition, no normalization of the Unicode text is being performed (so canonically equivalent strings, that should compare equal or with only very minor binary difference, may sometimes compare very far away, with completely different strings interleaved between them). For this reason, MediaWiki pages should always be encoded with their text in the Normalized Form C (preComposed), as recommended in the HTML standards.
*{{tim|sd}} - shows buggy date sorting when some or all dates are linked

As of today, an UCA-based sort is still not implemented in the client-side Javascript code, but some wikis are implementing a limited form of multilevel collation using custom basic replacement rules tuned for specific languages.

== Server issue ==

It has been observed that the MediaWiki code on the server replaces a regular space before "!" by a [[w:non-breaking space|non-breaking space]] <code>&amp;#160;</code>, affecting the sorting order. To avoid this, this blank space can be coded as <code>&amp;#32;</code>, or the exclamation mark may be surrounded by <code>&lt;nowiki&gt;</code> and <code>&lt;/nowiki&gt;</code> tags. This is to comply with French typographic rules, where exclamation marks (and a few other punctuations) must be preceded (or sometimes followed) by a space (preferably narrow) which must still be unbreakable when it is effectively needed and present, the substitution being performed as an convenient editing facility of the Wiki code for cases that are very frequent within many texts.

== Persistent sort states using cookies ==

Adding this snippet to your [[MediaWiki:Common.js]] page will make the sortable tables remember their columns sort states in a cookie so they look the same next time the page is visited. Each sortable table must have a unique '''id''' attribute for its state to be stored in the cookie.
<syntaxhighlight lang=javascript>
addOnloadHook( function() {
jQuery('.sortable').each( function() {
var id = jQuery(this).attr('id');
document.shCookie = getCookie('sortheader-'+id);
document.sortheaderId = 0;
jQuery('#'+id+' a.sortheader').each( function() {
var id = jQuery(this).parent().parent().parent().parent().attr('id');
var sh = document.sortheaderId++;
if( sh+100 == document.shCookie ) { ts_resortTable(this); ts_resortTable(this); }
if( sh == document.shCookie ) { ts_resortTable(this); sh += 100; }
jQuery(this).bind('click', {id: id, sh: sh}, function(e) {
setCookie('sortheader-'+e.data.id, e.data.sh, 1);
e.data.sh += e.data.sh < 100 ? 100 : -100;
});
});
});
});

function setCookie(c_name,value,exdays) {
var exdate=new Date();
exdate.setDate(exdate.getDate() + exdays);
var c_value=escape(value) + ((exdays==null) ? "" : "; expires="+exdate.toUTCString());
document.cookie=c_name + "=" + c_value;
}

function getCookie(c_name) {
var i,x,y,ARRcookies=document.cookie.split(";");
for (i=0;i<ARRcookies.length;i++) {
x=ARRcookies[i].substr(0,ARRcookies[i].indexOf("="));
y=ARRcookies[i].substr(ARRcookies[i].indexOf("=")+1);
x=x.replace(/^\s+|\s+$/g,"");
if (x==c_name) return unescape(y);
}
}
</syntaxhighlight>

== See also ==

*[[Help:Table]]
*[[Help:Table]]
*[[:w:Category:Sorting templates]]
*{{SERVER}}/skins-1.5/common/wikibits.js - standard MediaWiki JS code used by the browser
*[https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/diffusion/MW/browse/master/resources/src/jquery.tablesorter/jquery.tablesorter.js jquery.tablesorter.js] - sorting code
**{{mlm|MediaWiki:Common.js}} page overriding function ts_parseFloat(num) on Meta with an improved version (can be done on other sites too)
*[[phab:tag/mediawiki-jquery-tablesorter/]] Tablesorter Workboard for bugs and improvments
*[[bugzilla:2001]] - resolved feature request
*[[bugzilla:8063]] - request to enable sorting of numbers with a point as thousands separator
*[[bugzilla:8115]]
*http://www.kryogenix.org/code/browser/sorttable/ - explanation of the original version of the code by Stuart Langridge; an improvement in the MediaWiki version is that tables no longer need to have an id.
*http://www.kryogenix.org/code/browser/sorttable/ - explanation of the original version of the code by Stuart Langridge; an improvement in the MediaWiki version is that tables no longer need to have an id.
*[[mw:Help:Sorting]]
*http://blog.webkist.com/archives/000043.html
*[[mw:Extension:Sort2]] generates sorted lists based on existing token lists.
*http://www.joostdevalk.nl/code/sortable-table/

*[[w:Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2007-01-02/Technology report]]
Examples elsewhere:
*{{tiw|sort}}

*[[mw:Extension:Sort2]]
*[[w:Ranked list of Dutch provinces]]
*[[mw:Extension:Sort]]
*[[w:List of countries by GDP estimates for 2006 (nominal)]]
*[[w:User:TimR/Tables]]
*[[w:List of countries by GDP (PPP), 2006]]
*[[w:List of longest reigning current monarchs]] - date columns are sortable for people with "no preference" for date formatting, and for people with preference <nowiki>[[YYYY-MM-DD]]</nowiki>.
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Smurrayinchester/Template&oldid=97802084 Pokémon table] - prefixes numbers with "#" to have them before "-".
*[[w:Nuclear_power_by_country|Nuclear power by country]] (Featured List)
*[[w:Desert Island Discs: castaways' choices]]
*[[:zh:秘鲁行政区划#大区人口|zh:秘鲁行政区划]] (Subdivisions of Peru) for sorting of Chinese (CJK)
*[[w:Standard electrode potential (data page)‎]]



{{h:f|enname=Sorting}}
{{h:f|enname=Sorting}}

[[Category:Editor handbook]]

Revision as of 02:08, 1 March 2024

Other languages:

Tables can be made sortable via client-side JavaScript with class="sortable" (in combination with the usual formatting: class="wikitable sortable"). This works in MediaWiki 1.9 and above, which is installed in all Wikimedia projects.

A table that is sortable is identified by arrows to the right of the header in a header cell. A sortable table may be sortable by one or more columns in the table. Clicking an arrow sorts the table rows based on the selected column. Repeated clicking of an arrow changes the sort state in this sequence: Ascending, Descending, Unsorted.

Shift-clicking the arrows of other columns will trigger a secondary sort based on the most recent column on which the shift-click occurred. NB: Shift-clicking capability extends to tertiary and beyond.

Links and other wiki-markup are not possible in headers.

JavaScript

The JavaScript code jquery.tablesorter.js (source) of the tablesorter is loaded by the ResourceLoader. Some sites may have a page MediaWiki:Common.js which adds and overrides some code. Browsers need to support JavaScript and it needs to be enabled for sorting to work.

Sort modes

The way items are sorted depends on the data type of the first rows. To determine the data type, the first 5 non-blank rows below the header are tested after loading the page and the most appropriate format is chosen. Mismatches are possible. The sort order of a column can be forced. See the relevant section farther down.

Tags such as span or sup are ignored when determining data type, but reference numbers and additional visible comments are not ignored today.

Dates

Various date formats are supported, including those with localized month names. On the German Wikipedia, "16. März 2010" is correctly sorted as 2010-03-16

Most other numerical formats are supported as well, including those with different separators (such as . , ' or / ); On English Wikipedias dates are treated as US-Dates (eg. month-day-year) per default.

Numbers

The script can recognize numbers with different decimal separators (. and ,) as well as e/E numbers. However, numbers will be sorted alphanumerically (with 9 sorted after 10) unless this default behaviour is overridden. (See below.)

Text

Text is compared at client-side JavaScript since July 2019 (Commit) with Intl.Collator. This sort accented characters depend on PageContentLanguage correctly. But sort of special characters is depend on Browser implementation. Example for Intl.Collator(de):

Firefox52.9: _-—,;:!?.'"()[]{}§@*/\&#%^+±<=>|~∞¢$£¥€0…9²³aä…eé…ö…ß…ü…z
IE11:      '-—!"#$%&()*,./:;?@[\]^_{|}~¢£¥€+<=>±≤≥§♠0²³9∞aä…eé…ö…ß…ü…z

Only Android systems use the old sort mode with UTF-16 coded characters. Any accented/special characters follow after the basic latin alphabet. This can be changed site wide by posting code like the following inside the MediaWiki:Common.js:

mw.config.set('tableSorterCollation', {'ä':'a', 'ß':'ss', 'þ':'th', 'aa':'å'});

Afterwards, all 'Ä' and 'ä' will be sorted as if they were an 'a' etc. Partial list showing the default order:
! " # $ % & ' ( ) * + , - . / 0 9 : ; < = > ? @ [ \ ] ^ _ ` A Z a z { | } ~ É é —

Forcing the sort mode for a column

The sort mode can be manually specified by putting data-sort-type="…" inside the header of the respective row. This functionality is based on tablesorter.com (webarchive). The following (case-insensitive) values are valid for data-sort-type:

  • text
  • number
  • IPAddress
  • currency
  • url
  • isoDate
  • usLongDate
  • date
  • time

Example:

{|class="wikitable sortable"
!data-sort-type="date"|Date!!Name!!Height!!data-sort-type="number"|Salary
|-
|01.10.1977||Smith||1.85||1,000.000
|-
|11.6.1972||Ray||1.89||900.000
|-
|1.9.1992||Bianchi||1.72||2,000.50
|}
Date Name Height Salary
01.10.1977 Smith 1.85 1,000.000
11.6.1972 Ray 1.89 900.000
1.9.1992 Bianchi 1.72 2,000.50

Specifying a sort key

Sometimes the value of a cell is not correctly parsed or one wants to sort the row in a special way. (e.g. a cell containing 'John Smith' should actually be sorted as 'Smith' and not as 'John') This can be easily achieved by setting the data-sort-value attribute.

Wiki markup:

{|class="wikitable sortable"
!Name and Surname!!Height
|-
|data-sort-value="Smith, John"|John Smith||1.85
|-
|data-sort-value="Ray, Ian"|Ian Ray||1.89
|-
|data-sort-value="Bianchi, Zachary"|Zachary Bianchi||1.72
|}

This gives:

Name and Surname Height
John Smith 1.85
Ian Ray 1.89
Zachary Bianchi 1.72

Note, however, that this makes use of a new feature in HTML5, which is enabled by default in MediaWiki (including WMF wikis since September 2012 cfr. bugzilla:27478). The old version was to set hidden sort key with w:Template:Sort. See also mediawiki.org.

Controlling sorting and display

If some Text undesired for sorting but needed for display, force the sort mode with data-sort-type="…" and write text after values (e.g. "200 approx", or reference tags "100[1]"). Empty cell is treated as "-Infinity" when sorting numerically.

In the case of a cell containing a range of dates or numbers (e.g. from 2 to 5), specify a data-sort-value="…".

Examples

The first column demonstrates how plain numbers are detected and sorted as numbers. The second column shows that with data-sort-type="number" in table header more content detected as numbers. The fourth column shows that with data-sort-value="…" a numeric sortvalue is defined, independent of the cell content.

numbers data-sort-type="number" data-sort-type="number"
-8e3 -8 e3 -8 e3
-3e-3 -3 e-3 -3 e-3
2.000 2-5 km² data-sort-value="3.5" 2-5 km²
3.99 3.99 km² 3.99 km²
4 4 km² 4 km²
90 % 90 Percent data-sort-value="90" about 90 Percent
1E2 100[1] 100[1]
1,000,000.0 1 000 000.0 data-sort-value="1e6" one Million

The thousand separator(,) and digits separator(.) depends on language specific configuration of the Mediawiki software. Currency symbols before or after numbers or the %-symbol will be sorted numerical.

currencies
$ 9
$ 80
$ 70
$ 600
currencies
9 €
80 €
70 €
600 €
currencies
£ 9
£ 80
£ 70
£ 600
currencies
¥ 9
¥ 80
¥ 70
¥ 600
percent
9 %
80 %
70 %
600 %
numbers
−7e270
-1.4285714285714E-13
999e9
7e270

Secondary sort key

It is possible to sort by column A (primary sort key), while for equal values in column A, sort by column B (secondary sort key): first sort by A by clicking the sort button of column A once or twice, then, while holding the shift-key, click the sort button of column B once or twice.

Example:

First click on column Text and then, while holding the shift-key, on Numbers, you'll see that the ordering is on Text (1), Numbers (2).

Numbers Text Dates Currency More text
4 a 01.Jan.2005 4.20 row 1
5 a 05/12/2006 7.15 row 2
1 b 02-02-2004 5.00 row 3
1 a 02-02-2004 5.00 row 4
2 x 13-apr-2005 row 5
2 a 13-apr-2005 row 6
3 a 17.aug.2006 6.50 row 7
3 z 25.aug.2006 2.30 row 8
3 z 28.aug.2006 5.50 row 9
3 z 31.aug.2006 3.77 row 10
3 z 01.sep.2006 1.50 row 11
Bottom

Additional features

Excluding the last row from sorting

Sometimes it is helpful to exclude the last row of a table from the sorting process. This can be achieved by setting class="sortbottom" on the last row. Declaring the last row as a footer (with !) will also exclude it from sorting.

Wiki markup:

{|class="wikitable sortable"
!Name!!Surname!!Height
|-
|John||Smith||1.85
|-
|Ron||Ray||1.89
|-
|Mario||Bianchi||1.72
|- class="sortbottom"
! !!Average:||1.82
|}

What it looks like in your browser:

Name Surname Height
John Smith 1.85
Ron Ray 1.89
Mario Bianchi 1.72
Average: 1.82

Excluding the first row from sorting

The same can be applied for first rows as well, by setting class="sorttop".

Wiki markup:

{|class="wikitable sortable"
!Name!!Surname!!Height
|- class="sorttop"
! !!Average:||1.82
|-
|John||Smith||1.85
|-
|Ron||Ray||1.89
|-
|Mario||Bianchi||1.72
|}
Name Surname Height
Average: 1.82
John Smith 1.85
Ron Ray 1.89
Mario Bianchi 1.72

Making a column unsortable

If you want a specific column not to be sortable, specify class="unsortable" in the attributes of its header cell.

Wiki markup:

{|class="wikitable sortable"
!Numbers!!Alphabet!!Dates!!Currency!!class="unsortable"|Unsortable
|-
|1||Z||02-02-2004||5.00||This
|-
|2||y||13-apr-2005||||Column
|-
|3||X||17.aug.2006||6.50||Is
|-
|4||w||01.Jan.2005||4.20||Unsortable
|-
|5||V||05/12/2006||7.15||See?
|-
!Total: 15!!!!!!Total: 29.55!!
|-
|}

What it looks like in your browser:

Numbers Alphabet Dates Currency Unsortable
1 Z 02-02-2004 5.00 This
2 y 13-apr-2005 Column
3 X 17.aug.2006 6.50 Is
4 w 01.Jan.2005 4.20 Unsortable
5 V 05/12/2006 7.15 See?
Total: 15 Total: 29.55 Original example

Keeping some rows together

If you want that a row will always be below the row just above it and will follow it around, no matter how the sorting is applied, specify class="expand-child" in the attribute of this row.

Wiki markup:

{| class="wikitable sortable"
! style="width:9em"| Country !!data-sort-type="number"| Area
|-
| France
| 674 843 km²
|- class="expand-child" style="font-size:85%; line-height:1.2; color:gray"
| colspan="2" | In Paris is the Eiffel Tower.
|-
| U.K.
| 242 495 km²
|- class="expand-child" style="font-size:85%; line-height:1.2; color:gray"
| colspan="2" | In the U.K. you cannot pay with euros.
|- class="expand-child" style="font-size:85%; line-height:1.2; color:gray"
| colspan="2" | And you drive on the left side of the road.
|-
| Germany
| 357 168 km² 
|- class="expand-child" style="font-size:85%; line-height:1.2; color:gray"
| colspan="2" | Germany includes the former DDR.
|}

What it looks like in your browser:

Country Area
France 674 843 km²
In Paris is the Eiffel Tower.
U.K. 242 495 km²
In the U.K. you cannot pay with euros.
And you drive on the left side of the road.
Germany 357 168 km²
Germany includes the former DDR.

If you put in data-sort-value the same content as above row, keep this rows also together. The original mutual order of these rows is preserved. A better way for this is class expand-child, see above #Keeping some rows together.

Example where data-sort-value is used is the case for the rows about the Netherlands:

{|class="wikitable sortable"
!Country/province!!Capital
|-
|France||Paris
|-
|Netherlands||Amsterdam
|-
|data-sort-value=Netherlands|South Holland||data-sort-value=Amsterdam|The Hague
|-
|U.K.||London
|}
Country/province Capital
France Paris
Netherlands Amsterdam
South Holland The Hague
U.K. London

Special dates

For years BC we can use, for example, !9937-09-23 for -0062-09-23 (subtract the year number BC from 10000, or the absolute value of the astronomical year from 9999).

If a table column contains any or all incomplete dates, this will not cause sorting problems. If only a year and month are given, that incomplete date is positioned alphabetically before the first day of the month in question. Likewise, if only a year is given, the date is positioned before the first month or day given for that year.

Use of #time

Using parser function #time we can put <span style="display:none">&{{#expr:3e11+{{#time:U|..}}}}</span> in front of the displayed date. This works in the range 1 Jan 111, 00:00:00 through 31 Dec 9999, 23:59:59 for the proleptic Gregorian calendar. The added value makes all values positive and the same length (if scientific format would show up an additional step is needed to prevent this). The "&" forces string sort mode.

Dates and times can be entered in any php date/time format. Note that when we have just a year, a month (typically Jan) must be added in the hidden part.

Example using Help:Sorting/date:

input date text date and time as interpreted, with hidden sort key input with visible sort key input with hidden sort key Unix time

To use dates before the year 111, add a multiple of 400, e.g. 6000, to all years, this effectively shifts the range to 1 Jan -5889, 00:00:00 through 31 Dec 3999, 23:59:59, without changing the calendar.

See also:

  • w:Template:Dts - sorting a table by a date column
  • Template:Sd - shows weekday in a separate column before date, and link all dates

Cell spanning multiple rows/cells

A cell which spans more than one row or column is treated as if it were multiple cells with the same value.

rowspan
Date Name Height
01.10.1977 Smith 1.85
11.06.1972 Adams
01.09.1992 Bianchi 1.72
colspan
A B C
A 2 1
B 1 3
C 2

As of MediaWiki Version 1.26 wmf23 (Sept. 2015), sorting of colspanned cells works correctly. Also, missing cells at the end of a row will change after first sort into cells with empty content.

Colspanned cells

The auto-detection of sort mode is done for colspanned cells for each column separately. Defining the sort mode by putting data-sort-type inside the header will specify this sort mode for all colspanned columns.

To use separate sort keys for each column in a colspanned cell, use the CSS hack described here: To allow sorting, the formal number of cells in each row should be equal (If not, all columns become sortable. This should apply at least for the number of cells up to and including the last sortable column.) However, with a CSS hack the number of cells shown in a row can differ from the formal number of cells. For example, two formal cells can be shown as one by specifying a width for the first column, shifting the contents of the second cell to the left, increasing its width by the same amount, and hiding the cell border that would normally be visible. Hidden sort keys can be used to control the sort order of particular rows with respect to each column.

Example:

Country Capital
France Paris
Z M
Sorting with respect to the first column this row sorts like Z, with respect to the second column like M
U.K. London

Static column

A static column, e.g. with row numbers, can be obtained with two side-by-side tables with for each row the same height set in both tables:

Number
1
2
Country Capital
The Netherlands Amsterdam (although The Hague is the seat of government)
France Paris

The style can be adjusted to make it appear as a single table. If for some row the height of that row is too small for the text in a cell on one of the sides, the browser increases it, and there is no longer a match.

Default order

It is not possible to make a table appear sorted by a certain column without the user clicking on it. By default, the rows of a table always appear in the same order as in the wikitext. If you want a table to appear sorted by a certain column, you must sort the wikitext itself in that order; see the next section for one way to do this.

Sorting the wikitext of a table

Sorting the wikitext itself, thus creating a new default sort order, can be done semi-automatically as follows. Take the wikitext of the table without top and bottom lines. Use "find and replace" to replace the cell separators with special code not containing "|". If there are pipes in the table cells, replace all pipes by some code, and replace that code with a newline in front of it (originating from the code for the start of a new row) back. Apply mw:Module:Sort (see mw:Module talk:Sort) at mw:Special:ExpandTemplates by putting: {{#invoke:Sort|f|{{!}}-
{{!}} (with the newline) before, and }} after the wikitext, to sort the items between the pipes, with the desired separator in the result. Discard the items at the start containing "-" and a newline. Restore the cell separators and the pipes in the cells by replacing the temporary codes for them. Readd the top and bottom lines.

This method sorts by the wikitext of the rows, so in principal by the first column (and the second as secondary key), although wikitext codes in the cells of the first column before the content can affect the order.

See Help:Sorting#Maintaining tables sorted by rank for sorting tables by a different column.

Using JavaScript to trigger client-side table sorting

An addition to MediaWiki:Common.js can be used to "re-sort" a table automatically on the client side when the page loads (as if the user had clicked the header.) The example below sorts all the tables on a set of pages by the first column (see the Tablesorter documentation for syntax.)

Note : This appears to break sorting by clicking on headers. It sorts ascending on the clicked on header, but won't sort the other way when clicked on again

function isSortedTablePage() {
    return ( wgPageName == "Page_To_Sort"  || wgPageName == "Other_Page_To_Sort" );
}

jQuery( document ).ready( function( $ ) {
    // wrapped in "mw.loader.using" so this doesn't execute until Tablesorter has loaded
    mw.loader.using( 'jquery.tablesorter', function() {
        if( isSortedTablePage() ) $('table.sortable').tablesorter( {sortList: [ { 0: 'asc'} ]} )
        // or look for tables with an ID attribute of "sortMe" on any page
        // $( '#sortMe' ).tablesorter( {sortList: [ { 0: 'asc'} ]} )
    } );
} );

Basic alphabetic sorting order

demo
!
"
#
$
%
&
'
(
)
*
+
,
-
.
/
0
9
:
;
<
=
>
?
@
[
\
]
^
_
`
A
Z
a
z
A1
Z1
a1
z1
{
|
}
~
É
é
É1
é1

The two-character entries such as A1 demonstrate that A and a are at the same position.

This is not a fully alphabetic sort order: letter case is first folded to lowercase using a basic 1-to-1 conversion table (limited to the Basic Multilingual Plane of Unicode, and whose coverage and completeness still depends on browser versions and on their current implementation of the versioned Unicode Character Database), but letters with diacritics (and all other digits, symbols or special whitespaces or format control characters) will still sort according to the binary encoding of the casefolded letter, using the binary order of the UTF-16 code units (exposed and seen in Javascript through the parsed HTML DOM), but not the binary order of UTF-8 code units in the HTML page, and not of codepoints as one could also expect for encoded characters in supplementary planes).

In addition, no normalization of the Unicode text is being performed (so canonically equivalent strings, that should compare equal or with only very minor binary difference, may sometimes compare very far away, with completely different strings interleaved between them). For this reason, MediaWiki pages should always be encoded with their text in the Normalized Form C (preComposed), as recommended in the HTML standards.

As of today, an UCA-based sort is still not implemented in the client-side Javascript code, but some wikis are implementing a limited form of multilevel collation using custom basic replacement rules tuned for specific languages.

Server issue

It has been observed that the MediaWiki code on the server replaces a regular space before "!" by a non-breaking space &#160;, affecting the sorting order. To avoid this, this blank space can be coded as &#32;, or the exclamation mark may be surrounded by <nowiki> and </nowiki> tags. This is to comply with French typographic rules, where exclamation marks (and a few other punctuations) must be preceded (or sometimes followed) by a space (preferably narrow) which must still be unbreakable when it is effectively needed and present, the substitution being performed as an convenient editing facility of the Wiki code for cases that are very frequent within many texts.

Persistent sort states using cookies

Adding this snippet to your MediaWiki:Common.js page will make the sortable tables remember their columns sort states in a cookie so they look the same next time the page is visited. Each sortable table must have a unique id attribute for its state to be stored in the cookie.

addOnloadHook( function() {
    jQuery('.sortable').each( function() {
        var id = jQuery(this).attr('id');
        document.shCookie = getCookie('sortheader-'+id);
        document.sortheaderId = 0;
        jQuery('#'+id+' a.sortheader').each( function() {
            var id = jQuery(this).parent().parent().parent().parent().attr('id');
            var sh = document.sortheaderId++;
            if( sh+100 == document.shCookie ) { ts_resortTable(this); ts_resortTable(this); }
            if( sh == document.shCookie ) { ts_resortTable(this); sh += 100; }
            jQuery(this).bind('click', {id: id, sh: sh}, function(e) {
                setCookie('sortheader-'+e.data.id, e.data.sh, 1);
                e.data.sh += e.data.sh < 100 ? 100 : -100;
            });
        });
    });
});

function setCookie(c_name,value,exdays) {
    var exdate=new Date();
    exdate.setDate(exdate.getDate() + exdays);
    var c_value=escape(value) + ((exdays==null) ? "" : "; expires="+exdate.toUTCString());
    document.cookie=c_name + "=" + c_value;
}

function getCookie(c_name) {
    var i,x,y,ARRcookies=document.cookie.split(";");
    for (i=0;i<ARRcookies.length;i++) {
        x=ARRcookies[i].substr(0,ARRcookies[i].indexOf("="));
        y=ARRcookies[i].substr(ARRcookies[i].indexOf("=")+1);
        x=x.replace(/^\s+|\s+$/g,"");
        if (x==c_name) return unescape(y);
    }
}

See also

Examples elsewhere:


Links to other help pages

Help contents
Meta · Wikinews · Wikipedia · Wikiquote · Wiktionary · Commons: · Wikidata · MediaWiki · Wikibooks · Wikisource · MediaWiki: Manual · Google
Versions of this help page (for other languages see further)
What links here on Meta or from Meta · Wikipedia · MediaWiki
Reading
Go · Search · Namespace · Page name · Section · Backlinks · Redirect · Category · Image page · Special pages · Printable version
Tracking changes
Recent changes (enhanced) | Related changes · Watching pages · Diff · Page history · Edit summary · User contributions · Minor edit · Patrolled edit
Logging in and preferences
Logging in · Preferences
Editing
Starting a new page · Advanced editing · Editing FAQ · Export · Import · Shortcuts · Edit conflict · Page size
Referencing
Links · URL · Interwiki linking · Footnotes
Style and formatting
Wikitext examples · CSS · Reference card · HTML in wikitext · Formula · Lists · Table · Sorting · Colors · Images and file uploads
Fixing mistakes
Show preview · Reverting edits
Advanced functioning
Expansion · Template · Advanced templates · Parser function · Parameter default · Magic words · System message · Substitution · Array · Calculation · Transclusion
Others
Special characters · Renaming (moving) a page · Preparing a page for translation · Talk page · Signatures · Sandbox · Legal issues for editors
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