Dev:Sorting

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Revision as of 05:38, 4 October 2024 by Nexus wiki (talk | contribs) (Created page with "All commands that generate a list of values supports sorting. Sorting can drill down to specific parts of the JSON hierarchy to provide advanced sorting and paging abilities. All sorting happens as the data-set is built, allowing sorting on just about any part of the JSON object. == Parameters == The following parameters can be used to apply sorting to the returned data-set: === limit === The number of records to return. Default: 100. === page === Zero-indexed page...")
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All commands that generate a list of values supports sorting. Sorting can drill down to specific parts of the JSON hierarchy to provide advanced sorting and paging abilities. All sorting happens as the data-set is built, allowing sorting on just about any part of the JSON object.

Parameters

The following parameters can be used to apply sorting to the returned data-set:

limit

The number of records to return. Default: 100.

page

Zero-indexed page number that depends on limit for page boundaries.

offset

Alternative to page, offset can be used to page the results by index.

order

Descending desc or ascending asc as only permitted values.

sort

The column or field-name to apply the sorting logic to.

Alternative input

The limit and offset parameters can be given with the following format:

This above will map to the parameters of limit=100 and offset=10.

Recursive Sorting

This parameter supports moving up levels of JSON keys by using .. This is a recursive function so therfore allows traversing any amount of levels in a JSON hierarchy. Let us take the following JSON object:

{
   "modified": 1621782289,
   "json": {
       "account": "8Cdr874GBd8t6MaQ4BVK8fXVVpzVHrGwZpQquUVzUXZroruYdeR",
       "date": "12-21-2020"
   }
}

The following parameter would allow sorting through the hierarchy:

sort=json.date

Using this parameter we would apply a sort to a nested JSON object that would sort it by the date field. The Nexus API supports any number of nested statements. Take the following object:

{
   "txid": "01c1e74718bbcbc83f46a0e03a86538350779f61df2e385a4456d3926808d3a29e3ac9d8d3ba2ea4b625b52b525d22fb675066184c4552c40824214b4f575e1c",
   "type": "tritium user",
   "version": 3,
   "sequence": 3,
   "timestamp": 1635813560,
   "blockhash": "1341043478e2850c8d3f232e7f4602d609e9cba29e93e9a409ed4ba9e52bca97030426122dc55c2ab88c3da914f38409e5f3248b301950251c2b578e07992b19b192a7b7377a294e3e24c6ff68a6058c425074b3278307574568c6bccbc63c7dfde3d6933b4f1e041c7ddc05953c12988be6bb47f0ca2cd822eb033f4bf6e197",
   "confirmations": 18,
   "genesis": "b7918d3942a14bd98ceb0f1be4c8675cc833eda354665167140050eee935b1a2",
   "nexthash": "bafb32b0a09f726d5bd1a23f69bdd605fa53037b0247f1cbb45e3faf6c8f202c",
   "prevhash": "0126a0201d0e0dc27506a2fb90c6deb008c1ec99c6cf401d9397d973151c3c56207d184e059fe3cde9abdb029a77f632c220f28472faa413e4c06ba37c950fb8",
   "pubkey": "0310281593331ce546efb5b275cf77bec88b7f59f2b8e90552cdf2c66fde3d4e5a965ce2e3c501560ff5fe6c9d8db1245071a5c608bc728896ee1fff3b660c5e68",
   "signature": "308184024075ec99396598b601adfcba0a9e9a23ba4dfc68fbe5164a71e4e676e301532338934f4cd7822de687b96168536ed901951debeac6ec40f7aa5d36cb4076ddfef50240518ba3c8dc3a457463919ddc8bd3a62aed82a70f60082bdd36e1e725a58e21895835b70968a38f2b07349e9cc89e6c61807d4aa28bb0a38b9a542a9bfbe456bc",
   "contracts": [
       {
           "id": 0,
           "OP": "CREATE",
           "address": "8Ca7nWMah3tes3tmnXkz7H25FLrJ31JoaFxcJUsFhz2PyKMSxaL",
           "type": "OBJECT",
           "standard": "ACCOUNT",
           "object": {
               "balance": 0.0,
               "token": "0",
               "ticker": "NXS"
           }
       }
   ]
},

This list of transactions (only one shown for convenience) could be sorted by the object's token when created by using the following parameter:

sort=contracts.object.token

This command above would move up each level of JSON with each period, resulting in a sort by the contract object's token value.