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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T19:57:50+00:00 2026-05-14T19:57:50+00:00

I have a ruby array that looks something like this: my_array = [‘mushroom’, ‘beef’,

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I have a ruby array that looks something like this:

my_array = ['mushroom', 'beef', 'fish', 'chicken', 'tofu', 'lamb']

I want to sort the array so that ‘chicken’ and ‘beef’ are the first two items, then the remaining items are sorted alphabetically. How would I go about doing this?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T19:57:51+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 7:57 pm
    irb> my_array.sort_by { |e| [ e == 'chicken' ? 0 : e == 'beef' ? 1 : 2, e ] }
     #=> ["chicken", "beef", "fish", "lamb", "mushroom", "tofu"]
    

    This will create a sorting key for each element of the array, and then sort the array elements by their sorting keys. Since the sorting key is an array, it compares by position, so [0, 'chicken'] < [1, 'beef'] < [2, 'apple' ] < [2, 'banana'].

    If you don’t know what elements you wanted sorted to the front until runtime, you can still use this trick:

     irb> promotables = [ 'chicken', 'beef' ]
      #=> [ 'chicken', 'beef' ]
     irb> my_array.sort_by { |e| [ promotables.index(e) || promotables.size, e ] }
      #=> ["chicken", "beef", "fish", "lamb", "mushroom", "tofu"]
     irb> promotables = [ 'tofu', 'mushroom' ]
      #=> [ 'tofu', 'mushroom' ]
     irb> my_array.sort_by { |e| [ promotables.index(e) || promotables.size, e ] }
      #=> [ "tofu", "mushroom", "beef", "chicken", "fish", "lamb"]
    
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