On 3/25/20 3:02 PM, Richard Ipsum wrote:
On Wed, Mar 25, 2020 at 01:17:19PM -0500, Eric Blake wrote:
On 3/25/20 12:37 PM, Richard Ipsum wrote:
[snip]
See the difference? In the first case, sort is doing its default
case-insensitive comparison of the entire line (because you passed -f but
On Wed, Mar 25, 2020 at 01:17:19PM -0500, Eric Blake wrote:
> On 3/25/20 12:37 PM, Richard Ipsum wrote:
[snip]
>
> See the difference? In the first case, sort is doing its default
> case-insensitive comparison of the entire line (because you passed -f but
> not -k), AND a stability comparison of
On 3/25/20 12:37 PM, Richard Ipsum wrote:
Hi,
I'm trying to understand something and thought it would be good to ask
here.
I get different results for a case-insensitive sort using -c. My
understanding is that -f should lead to lower case characters with upper
case equivalents being converted
Hi,
I'm trying to understand something and thought it would be good to ask
here.
I get different results for a case-insensitive sort using -c. My
understanding is that -f should lead to lower case characters with upper
case equivalents being converted to their upper case equivalents. This