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						Function std.algorithm.sorting.ordered
Like isSorted, returns true if the given values are ordered
according to the comparison operation less. Unlike isSorted, takes values
directly instead of structured in a range.
						
				bool ordered(alias less, T...)
				(
				
				  T values
				
				)
				
				if (T
				ordered allows repeated values, e.g. ordered(1, 1, 2) is true. To verify
that the values are ordered strictly monotonically, use strictlyOrdered;
strictlyOrdered(1, 1, 2) is false.
With either function, the predicate must be a strict ordering. For example,
using "a <= b" instead of "a < b" is incorrect and will cause failed
assertions.
Parameters
| Name | Description | 
|---|---|
| values | The tested value | 
| less | The comparison predicate | 
Returns
true if the values are ordered; ordered allows for duplicates,
    strictlyOrdered does not.
Example
assert(ordered(42, 42, 43));
assert(!strictlyOrdered(43, 42, 45));
assert(ordered(42, 42, 43));
assert(!strictlyOrdered(42, 42, 43));
assert(!ordered(43, 42, 45));
// Ordered lexicographically
assert(ordered("Jane", "Jim", "Joe"));
assert(strictlyOrdered("Jane", "Jim", "Joe"));
// Incidentally also ordered by length decreasing
assert(ordered!((a, b) => aAuthors
License
					Copyright © 1999-2022 by the D Language Foundation | Page generated by ddox.