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    Can I sort IP addresses in numeric value

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    • Mark BrookmanM
      Mark Brookman
      last edited by

      Many Thanks this works great!!!

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • Matthijs WensveenM
        Matthijs Wensveen
        last edited by

        Works great. Tiny addition: make sure you have the correct EOL. I replaced the comma’s in a comma-separated list of IP addresses with ‘\n’ in a CRLF (Windows) document. Sorting as described above produced unpredictable (to me) results.

        Scott SumnerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • Scott SumnerS
          Scott Sumner @Matthijs Wensveen
          last edited by

          @Matthijs-Wensveen said:

          I replaced the comma’s in a comma-separated list of IP addresses with ‘\n’ in a CRLF (Windows) document

          For the benefit of any future readers, what you should have done is a regular-expression replacement with \r\n for a Windows document.

          Sorting as described above produced unpredictable (to me) results.

          What does this mean? You also said “Works great”–so which is it?

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • michalpl7M
            michalpl7
            last edited by

            Hello is there any option to sort ip addresses if they followed by other data in columns? This method is not working. For example:

            IP MAC
            192.168.1.140 0023-ac20-3918
            192.168.1.49 08ea-2931-ca12
            192.168.1.145 08ea-2903-bc32
            192.168.1.133 98f1-12ca-2456
            192.168.1.73 9440-21ab-2512
            192.168.1.134 eceb-565a-2953
            192.168.1.132 d067-bc22-3174

            PeterJonesP CoisesC 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • PeterJonesP
              PeterJones @michalpl7
              last edited by

              @michalpl7 said in Can I sort IP addresses in numeric value:

              Hello is there any option to sort ip addresses if they followed by other data in columns

              @guy038’s regex above assumed the whole line was an IP.

              But with a slight tweak – allowing a space or tab to come after the final digits, not just a dot or newline – makes it match any of your examples. So his first FIND WHAT becomes (?:^|(?<=\.))\d(\d)?(?=\.|\h|$)

              His first replacement (with spaces) works… but it’s harder to undo later when you have other spaces in the rest of your line. So I change his first REPLACE WITH to 0(?1:0)$0 so that it inserts one or two zeroes instead of one or two spaces

              So
              FIND = (?:^|(?<=\.))\d(\d)?(?=\.|\h|$)
              REPLACE = 0(?1:0)$0
              SEARCH MODE = regular expression

              That search/replace will give you

              192.168.001.140 0023-ac20-3918
              192.168.001.049 08ea-2931-ca12
              192.168.001.145 08ea-2903-bc32
              192.168.001.133 98f1-12ca-2456
              192.168.001.073 9440-21ab-2512
              192.168.001.134 eceb-565a-2953
              192.168.001.132 d067-bc22-3174
              

              Now you can sort lexicographically ascending as he recommended.

              Then you need to change the second search/replace. Instead of searching for spaces and removing them, what we want to do is search for leading zeroes and remove them.

              FIND = \b0+(?=\d+?(?=\.|\h))
              REPLACE = leave empty
              SEARCH MODE = regular expression

              This got me to

              192.168.1.49 08ea-2931-ca12
              192.168.1.73 9440-21ab-2512
              192.168.1.132 d067-bc22-3174
              192.168.1.133 98f1-12ca-2456
              192.168.1.134 eceb-565a-2953
              192.168.1.140 0023-ac20-3918
              192.168.1.145 08ea-2903-bc32
              
              michalpl7M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
              • CoisesC
                Coises @michalpl7
                last edited by

                @michalpl7 said in Can I sort IP addresses in numeric value:

                Hello is there any option to sort ip addresses if they followed by other data in columns? This method is not working. For example:

                IP MAC
                192.168.1.140 0023-ac20-3918
                192.168.1.49 08ea-2931-ca12
                192.168.1.145 08ea-2903-bc32
                192.168.1.133 98f1-12ca-2456
                192.168.1.73 9440-21ab-2512
                192.168.1.134 eceb-565a-2953
                192.168.1.132 d067-bc22-3174

                In addition to Peter Jones’ solution, you can also do this in a single operation with the Columns++ plugin.

                Select the lines you want to sort.

                Select Sort… from the Columns++ menu.

                Columns++ Sort for IP addresses.png

                Select:
                What to sort: Whole lines
                Sort type: Ascending and Numericundefined
                Sort key: Regular expression

                Check: Specify keys using capture groups.

                Enter:
                Find what: (\d+)\.(\d+)\.(\d+)\.(\d+)
                Keys: 1,2,3,4

                Click OK.

                When asked to “Convert to a rectangular selection enclosing the selected lines?” click OK.

                michalpl7M 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 3
                • michalpl7M
                  michalpl7 @Coises
                  last edited by

                  This post is deleted!
                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • michalpl7M
                    michalpl7 @PeterJones
                    last edited by

                    @PeterJones hello the problem with this command is that it also could change MAC address deletes “00” from it.

                    PeterJonesP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • michalpl7M
                      michalpl7 @Coises
                      last edited by

                      @Coises said in Can I sort IP addresses in numeric value:

                      1,2,3,4

                      Perfect! Thanks :)

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • PeterJonesP
                        PeterJones @michalpl7
                        last edited by

                        @michalpl7 said in Can I sort IP addresses in numeric value:

                        it also could change MAC address deletes “00” from it

                        I was afraid you were going to realize that exception.

                        (?:^|\.)\K0+(?=\d+?(?=\.|\h))

                        This changes the requirement to whatever goes before the leading zero digits must be either start of line or a period. But because of the \K, you have to use Replace All (it will not work with a single Replace)

                        When I tried my old one on

                        192.168.001.020 d067-bc22-0004
                        

                        it wrongly became

                        192.168.1.20 d067-bc22-4
                        

                        but when I tried my modified expression, it correctly became

                        192.168.1.20 d067-bc22-0004
                        

                        But if @Coises’s plugin solution works for you, I’d go that way, because it doesn’t involve as much complication, and ensures that it’s only dealing with the digits inside an IP address.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • JonJ
                          Jon
                          last edited by

                          The Python solution hasn’t been discussed here and as that thread is very old I’ll post here.
                          … I need 1 reputation point to post links, so here it is - remove the spaces!
                          https:// community.notepad-plus-plus .org/topic/11105/feature-request-sort-by-ip-address-cidr-notation

                          Those scripts didn’t work for me so I wrote my own. This handles both IP & CIDR interchangeably.

                          import re
                          
                          addresses = editor.getText().split('\n') # Contents to string array
                           
                          non_blank_addresses = [] # Filter out blank lines
                          for addr in addresses:   #  and clean the input data using regular expressions.
                            cleaned_addr = re.sub(r'\s', '', addr)  # Remove whitespace
                            if cleaned_addr:       # Check if not empty
                              non_blank_addresses.append(cleaned_addr)
                          
                          # Sort all addresses (CIDRs and individual IPs)
                          sorted_addresses = sorted(non_blank_addresses, key=lambda addr: (
                            tuple(map(int, re.split(r'[/.]', addr)))[:-1],  # Extract IP components
                            int(re.split(r'[/.]', addr)[-1]) if '/' in addr else 32  # Extract and convert prefix length
                          ))
                          
                          editor.beginUndoAction()
                          editor.setText('\n'.join(sorted_addresses))
                          editor.endUndoAction()
                          
                          Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • Alan KilbornA
                            Alan Kilborn @Jon
                            last edited by

                            @Jon

                            This script will, perhaps quietly, corrupt a user’s file, because it changes line endings from Windows’ type (CRLF) to Linux type (LF). :-(

                            Mark OlsonM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • Mark OlsonM
                              Mark Olson @Alan Kilborn
                              last edited by Mark Olson

                              @Alan-Kilborn said in Can I sort IP addresses in numeric value:

                              corrupt a user’s file, because it changes line endings from Windows’ type (CRLF) to Linux type (LF).

                              AlanKilborn is correct.

                              My practice in any file when I’m dumping lines is to do something like this:

                              # Near the top of the script (with other global constants)
                              EOLS = ('\r\n', '\r', '\n')
                              # code
                              #...
                              # whenever I want to choose newline, do this:
                                  eol = EOLS[editor.getEOLMode()]
                              
                              Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
                              • Alan KilbornA
                                Alan Kilborn @Mark Olson
                                last edited by Alan Kilborn

                                @Mark-Olson

                                My version of that is eol = ['\r\n', '\n', '\r'][editor.getEOLMode()]… the same, but all in one place.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                                • Alan KilbornA
                                  Alan Kilborn
                                  last edited by Alan Kilborn

                                  I spoke before of:

                                  perhaps quietly, corrupt a user’s file

                                  and then I presented some code which does just that. :-(


                                  Instead of:

                                  eol = ['\r\n', '\n', '\r'][editor.getEOLMode()]

                                  in my posting immediately above, it should have been:

                                  eol = ['\r\n', '\r', '\n'][editor.getEOLMode()]

                                  (note that the '\r' and the '\n' were swapped in the erroneous code)

                                  My apologies for the error.

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                  • supasillyassS
                                    supasillyass @guy038
                                    last edited by supasillyass

                                    @guy038 Edit > Line Operations > Sort Lines As Integers Ascending 😉

                                    Oh wow, necro thread 💀

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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