A trait for data that have a single, natural ordering.
A trait for data that have a single, natural ordering. See scala.math.Ordering before using this trait for more information about whether to use scala.math.Ordering instead.
Classes that implement this trait can be sorted with scala.util.Sorting and can be compared with standard comparison operators (e.g. > and <).
Ordered should be used for data with a single, natural ordering (like integers) while Ordering allows for multiple ordering implementations. An Ordering instance will be implicitly created if necessary.
scala.math.Ordering is an alternative to this trait that allows multiple orderings to be defined for the same type.
scala.math.PartiallyOrdered is an alternative to this trait for partially ordered data.
For example, create a simple class that implements Ordered
and then sort it with scala.util.Sorting:
case class OrderedClass(n:Int) extends Ordered[OrderedClass] {
def compare(that: OrderedClass) = this.n - that.n
}
val x = Array(OrderedClass(1), OrderedClass(5), OrderedClass(3))
scala.util.Sorting.quickSort(x)
x
It is important that the equals
method for an instance of Ordered[A]
be consistent with the
compare method. However, due to limitations inherent in the type erasure semantics, there is no
reasonable way to provide a default implementation of equality for instances of Ordered[A]
.
Therefore, if you need to be able to use equality on an instance of Ordered[A]
you must
provide it yourself either when inheriting or instantiating.
It is important that the hashCode
method for an instance of Ordered[A]
be consistent with
the compare
method. However, it is not possible to provide a sensible default implementation.
Therefore, if you need to be able compute the hash of an instance of Ordered[A]
you must
provide it yourself either when inheriting or instantiating.
- See also
- Companion
- object
Value members
Abstract methods
Concrete methods
Returns true if this
is less than or equal to that
.
Returns true if this
is less than or equal to that
.