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delphi - How do I sort a generic list using a custom comparer?

I'm kinda a Delphi-newbie and I don't get how the Sort method of a TList of Records is called in order to sort the records by ascending integer value. I have a record like the following:

 type
   TMyRecord = record
     str1: string;
     str2: string;
     intVal: integer;
   end;

And a generic list of such records:

TListMyRecord = TList<TMyRecord>;

Have tried to find a code-example in the help files and found this one:

MyList.Sort(@CompareNames);

Which I can't use, since it uses classes. So I tried to write my own compare function with a little different parameters:

function CompareIntVal(i1, i2: TMyRecord): Integer;
begin
  Result := i1.intVal - i2.intVal;
end;

But the compiler always throws a 'not enough parameters' - error when I call it with open.Sort(CompareIntVal);, which seems obvious; so I tried to stay closer to the help file:

function SortKB(Item1, Item2: Pointer): Integer;
begin
  Result:=PMyRecord(Item1)^.intVal - PMyRecord(Item2)^.intVal;
end;

with PMyRecord as PMyRecord = ^TMyRecord;

I have tried different ways of calling a function, always getting some error...

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The Sort overload you should be using is this one:

procedure Sort(const AComparer: IComparer<TMyRecord>);

Now, you can create an IComparer<TMyRecord> by calling TComparer<TMyRecord>.Construct. Like this:

var
  Comparison: TComparison<TMyRecord>;
....
Comparison := 
  function(const Left, Right: TMyRecord): Integer
  begin
    Result := Left.intVal-Right.intVal;
  end;
List.Sort(TComparer<TMyRecord>.Construct(Comparison));

I've written the Comparison function as an anonymous method, but you could also use a plain old style non-OOP function, or a method of an object.

One potential problem with your comparison function is that you may suffer from integer overflow. So you could instead use the default integer comparer.

Comparison := 
  function(const Left, Right: TMyRecord): Integer
  begin
    Result := TComparer<Integer>.Default.Compare(Left.intVal, Right.intVal);
  end;

It might be expensive to call TComparer<Integer>.Default repeatedly so you could store it away in a global variable:

var
  IntegerComparer: IComparer<Integer>;
....
initialization
  IntegerComparer := TComparer<Integer>.Default;

Another option to consider is to pass in the comparer when you create the list. If you only ever sort the list using this ordering then that's more convenient.

List := TList<TMyRecord>.Create(TComparer<TMyRecord>.Construct(Comparison));

And then you can sort the list with

List.Sort;

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