I was sorting an nsmutableSet but I met a weird problem.
NSArray *data = @[@[@"1",@"2",@"3"],
@[@"2",@"3",@"4",@"5",@"6"],
@[@"8",@"9",@"10"],
@[@"15",@"16",@"17",@"18"]];
NSArray *sortArr = [[NSArray alloc] init];
NSMutableArray *Data = [[NSMutableArray alloc] init];
NSMutableSet *interSection = [[NSMutableSet alloc] init];
interSection = [NSMutableSet setWithArray:[data objectAtIndex:0]];
NSSortDescriptor *sort = [NSSortDescriptor sortDescriptorWithKey:@"description" ascending:YES ];
for (int i =1; i < 4; i ++) {
if ([interSection intersectsSet:[NSSet setWithArray:[data objectAtIndex:i]]]) {
[interSection unionSet:[NSSet setWithArray:[data objectAtIndex:i]]];
}
else{
sortArr = [interSection sortedArrayUsingDescriptors:[NSArray arrayWithObject:sort]];
[Data addObject:sortArr];
interSection = [NSMutableSet setWithArray:[data objectAtIndex:i]];
}
}
if ([interSection count] != 0) {
sortArr = [interSection sortedArrayUsingDescriptors:[NSArray arrayWithObject:sort]];
[Data addObject:sortArr];
}
NSLog(@"%@",Data);
but the output is : ( 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 ), ( 10, 8, 9 ), ( 15, 16, 17, 18 ) )
why it is(10,8,9) but (8,9,10) ?
Anyone knows the answer?
You're using NSSortDescriptor
for string so it it sorts in string way (8>10, 9>10). You should create a custom NSSortDescriptor
like this:
NSSortDescriptor * sort = [NSSortDescriptor sortDescriptorWithKey:@"sort" ascending:YES comparator:^(id obj1, id obj2) {
if ([obj1 integerValue] > [obj2 integerValue]) {
return (NSComparisonResult)NSOrderedDescending;
}
if ([obj1 integerValue] < [obj2 integerValue]) {
return (NSComparisonResult)NSOrderedAscending;
}
return (NSComparisonResult)NSOrderedSame;
}];
sortArr = [[data objectAtIndex:i] sortedArrayUsingDescriptors:[NSArray arrayWithObject: sort]];