JRS: In article <64**************************@posting.google.com >, seen
in news:comp.lang.javascript, Kevin Davis <kd*******@msn.com> posted at
Mon, 7 Jul 2003 06:10:53 :-
Please use an informative Subject line when starting a thread - see FAQ
2.3 para 2.
I would like to know if Javascript can do the following thing.
I have a list of files and they have the following names:
05 Jun 03
04 Jun 03
03 Jun 03
02 Jun 03
01 Jun 03
and so on..
I would like to know if there is a script that would
Surely the current existence is of no importance, and you merely want to
know whether you can have a script, possibly new.
a: list the file names in the order (with the most recent first) and
automtically add the file that is listed say for example I add 06 Jun
03 to the listing and the list would show:
06 Jun 03
05 Jun 03
04 Jun 03
03 Jun 03
02 Jun 03
01 Jun 03
To copy an array into reverse order, use .reverse(); to sort it use
..sort() .
You may or not be dealing with a (very simple) database; consider how
the data will be stored.
You may or may not need to actually sort an array of dates.
To sort those dates, one must first resolve the ambiguity of whether
they are all dates in this year or they are all June 3rd of different
years.
My MSIE4, happily, will give NaN for 06 Jun 03, but understands 2006 Jun
03 and 06 Jun 2003; but for 03/06/09 it transposes month and date, and
gets the century wrong.
If at all possible, choose file names such as 20030601 or 2003-06-01,
which are everywhere unambiguous. With a .replace to change - to /, the
latter can be read, everywhere, by new Date() if required.
Moreover, that format has the advantage that sorting as string gives the
correct order; no need to waste time and effort on conversions.
AFAIK, javascript has no list type. If you have those dates in an
array, you can use the .sort() method to put them into order, followed
by .reverse() .
But, since you have not shown a data structure, and reading your
question literally, the answer must be - there can be.
To sort an array of dates datewise, either the dates must be suitable
strings, or .sort(x) must be provided, at x, with a comparison function
for dates - possibly
function Fn(D1, D2) { return D1.valueOf() - D2.valueOf() }
See <URL:http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/js-dates.htm#SbDT>.
--
© John Stockton, Surrey, UK. ?@merlyn.demon.co.uk Turnpike v4.00 IE 4 ©
<URL:http://jibbering.com/faq/> Jim Ley's FAQ for news:comp.lang.javascript
<URL:http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/js-index.htm> JS maths, dates, sources.
<URL:http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/> TP/BP/Delphi/JS/&c., FAQ topics, links.