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package Sort::Versions; $Sort::Versions::VERSION = '1.62'; # Copyright (c) 1996, Kenneth J. Albanowski. All rights reserved. This # program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under # the same terms as Perl itself. use 5.006; use strict; use warnings; require Exporter; our @ISA = qw(Exporter); our @EXPORT = qw(&versions &versioncmp); our @EXPORT_OK = qw(); sub versioncmp ($$) { my @A = ($_[0] =~ /([-.]|\d+|[^-.\d]+)/g); my @B = ($_[1] =~ /([-.]|\d+|[^-.\d]+)/g); my ($A, $B); while (@A and @B) { $A = shift @A; $B = shift @B; if ($A eq '-' and $B eq '-') { next; } elsif ( $A eq '-' ) { return -1; } elsif ( $B eq '-') { return 1; } elsif ($A eq '.' and $B eq '.') { next; } elsif ( $A eq '.' ) { return -1; } elsif ( $B eq '.' ) { return 1; } elsif ($A =~ /^\d+$/ and $B =~ /^\d+$/) { if ($A =~ /^0/ || $B =~ /^0/) { return $A cmp $B if $A cmp $B; } else { return $A <=> $B if $A <=> $B; } } else { $A = uc $A; $B = uc $B; return $A cmp $B if $A cmp $B; } } @A <=> @B; } sub versions () { my $callerpkg = (caller)[0]; my $caller_a = "${callerpkg}::a"; my $caller_b = "${callerpkg}::b"; no strict 'refs'; return versioncmp($$caller_a, $$caller_b); } =encoding utf-8 =head1 NAME Sort::Versions - a perl 5 module for sorting of revision-like numbers =head1 SYNOPSIS use Sort::Versions; @l = sort { versioncmp($a, $b) } qw( 1.2 1.2.0 1.2a.0 1.2.a 1.a 02.a ); ... use Sort::Versions; print 'lower' if versioncmp('1.2', '1.2a') == -1; ... use Sort::Versions; %h = (1 => 'd', 2 => 'c', 3 => 'b', 4 => 'a'); @h = sort { versioncmp($h{$a}, $h{$b}) } keys %h; =head1 DESCRIPTION Sort::Versions allows easy sorting of mixed non-numeric and numeric strings, like the 'version numbers' that many shared library systems and revision control packages use. This is quite useful if you are trying to deal with shared libraries. It can also be applied to applications that intersperse variable-width numeric fields within text. Other applications can undoubtedly be found. For an explanation of the algorithm, it's simplest to look at these examples: 1.1 < 1.2 1.1a < 1.2 1.1 < 1.1.1 1.1 < 1.1a 1.1.a < 1.1a 1 < a a < b 1 < 2 1.1-3 < 1.1-4 1.1-5 < 1.1.6 More precisely (but less comprehensibly), the two strings are treated as subunits delimited by periods or hyphens. Each subunit can contain any number of groups of digits or non-digits. If digit groups are being compared on both sides, a numeric comparison is used, otherwise a ASCII ordering is used. A group or subgroup with more units will win if all comparisons are equal. A period binds digit groups together more tightly than a hyphen. Some packages use a different style of version numbering: a simple real number written as a decimal. Sort::Versions has limited support for this style: when comparing two subunits which are both digit groups, if either subunit has a leading zero, then both are treated like digits after a decimal point. So for example: 0002 < 1 1.06 < 1.5 This wonE<39>t always work, because there wonE<39>t always be a leading zero in real-number style version numbers. There is no way for Sort::Versions to know which style was intended. But a lot of the time it will do the right thing. If you are making up version numbers, the style with (possibly) more than one dot is the style to use. =head1 USAGE The function C<versioncmp()> takes two arguments and compares them like C<cmp>. With perl 5.6 or later, you can also use this function directly in sorting: @l = sort versioncmp qw(1.1 1.2 1.0.3); The function C<versions()> can be used directly as a sort function even on perl 5.005 and earlier, but its use is deprecated. =head1 SEE ALSO L<version>, L<CPAN::Version> which is part of the L<CPAN> distribution. =head1 REPOSITORY L<https://github.com/neilb/Sort-Versions> =head1 AUTHOR Ed Avis <ed@membled.com> and Matt Johnson <mwj99@doc.ic.ac.uk> for recent releases; the original author is Kenneth J. Albanowski <kjahds@kjahds.com>. Thanks to Hack Kampbjørn and Slaven Rezic for patches and bug reports. =head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE This software is copyright (c) 1996 by Kenneth J. Albanowski. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself. =cut 1;
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