Sort NSDictionary in ascending order

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孤城傲影
孤城傲影 2021-01-28 02:55

I am trying to sort an NSDictionary in ascending order. I am using this code:

NSDictionary *valDict = self.mGetDataDict[key][rowKey];

for (NSString         


        
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  • 2021-01-28 03:09

    Get the Array of the Values, sort that array and then get the key corresponding to the value.

    You can get the values with:

    NSArray* values = [myDict allValues];
    NSArray* sortedValues = [values sortedArrayUsingSelector:@selector(comparator)];
    

    But, if the collection is as you show in your example, (I mean, you can infer the value from the key), you can always sort the keys instead messing with the values.

    Using:

    NSArray* sortedKeys = [myDict keysSortedByValueUsingSelector:@selector(comparator)];
    

    The comparator is a message selector which is sent to the object you want to order.

    If you want to order strings, then you should use a NSString comparator. The NSString comparators are i.e.: caseInsensitiveCompare or localizedCaseInsensitiveCompare:.

    If none of these are valid for you, you can call your own comparator function

    [values sortedArrayUsingFunction:comparatorFunction context:nil]
    

    Being comparatorFunction (from AppleDocumentation)

    NSInteger intSort(id num1, id num2, void *context)
    {
        int v1 = [num1 intValue];
        int v2 = [num2 intValue];
        if (v1 < v2)
            return NSOrderedAscending;
        else if (v1 > v2)
            return NSOrderedDescending;
        else
            return NSOrderedSame;
    }
    
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  • 2021-01-28 03:25

    Try to use this one....

    // changes.......

    NSArray *valDict = [[self.mGetDataDict allValues] sortedArrayUsingSelector:@selector(localizedCaseInsensitiveCompare:)];
    NSMutableDictionary *orderedDictionary=[[NSMutableDictionary alloc] init];
    
    for (NSString *valor in valDict)
    {
        for (NSString *clave in [yourDictionary allKeys])
        {
            if ([valor isEqualToString:[valDict valueForKey:clave]]) 
            {
                [orderedDictionary setValue:valor forKey:clave];
            }
        }
    }
    
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  • 2021-01-28 03:31

    You can use NSSortDescriptor like this:

    NSArray* array1 = @[@"1 = off", @"10 = off", @"2 = on", @"3 = on"];
    NSSortDescriptor *descriptor = [NSSortDescriptor sortDescriptorWithKey:@"" ascending:YES selector:@selector(localizedStandardCompare:)];
    
    NSLog(@"Ordered array: %@", [array1 sortedArrayUsingDescriptors:@[ descriptor ]]);
    

    which produces this output:

    2013-06-04 12:26:22.039 EcoverdFira[3693:c07] Ordered array: (
      "1 = off",
      "2 = on",
      "3 = on",
      "10 = off"
    )
    

    There's a good article on NSSortedDescriptor's here.

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