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Home/ Questions/Q 931191
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T20:27:38+00:00 2026-05-15T20:27:38+00:00

I have a sample file containg aA0_- characters on each one on a single.

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I have a sample file containg “aA0_- ” characters on each one on a single. Sorting it using GNU sort gives the following sort order:

$ cat /tmp/sample | sort

_
-
0
a
A

after appending some other character, we obtain a different order (non-alphanumeric characters seems to have lower priority):

$ cat /tmp/sample | sed 's/$/x/' | sort
0x
ax
Ax
 x
_x
-x

while when we insert this character to the beginning, we obtain the original sort order:

$ cat /tmp/sample | sed 's/^/x/' | sort
x 
x_
x-
x0
xa
xA

.. what is the explanation of such behavior?

UPDATE

when ‘z‘ and ‘Z‘ characters are included in the sample, the result seems yet sranger:

$ cat /tmp/sample | sed 's/$/x/' | sort
0x
ax
Ax
 x
_x
-x
zx
Zx

.. but in the light of the correct answer, it is so because all ‘‘, ‘_‘ and ‘-‘ are whitespace in the current locale (en_US.UTF-8) and are not ignored in sorting.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T20:27:39+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 8:27 pm

    Your locale file should contain a definition of LC_COLLATE.
    This determines the sort order of characters.
    Also check the definition of LC_CTYPE, and which characters are classified as ‘space’.

    if ‘-‘ and ‘_’ are classified as space, you might find the results you have shown.

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