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Home/ Questions/Q 8771249
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 13, 20262026-06-13T17:44:16+00:00 2026-06-13T17:44:16+00:00

I’d like to generate a URL where the p=1 query param appears at the

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I’d like to generate a URL where the “p=1” query param appears at the end of the URL, like:

/path?foo=X&bar=Y&p=1

Is it possible to control the ordering of query parameters when generating URLs via:

url_for(params.merge({ p: page_num }))

?

Update:

I tried ChuckE’s suggestion below. It turns out that in Ruby 1.9 Hashes are already ordered, so the code in ActiveSupport::OrderedHash is effectively no-op’d. You can verify with Ruby 1.9 that order is preserved:

>> h = {one: 1, two: 2, three: 3 }
{:one=>1, :two=>2, :three=>3}
>> f = h.except(:one)
{:two=>2, :three=>3}
>> f[:one] = 1
1
>> f
{:two=>2, :three=>3, :one=>1}

However, url_for still puts the “p” param first. It seems that any potential solution will need to address how url_for iterates the hash.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-13T17:44:17+00:00Added an answer on June 13, 2026 at 5:44 pm

    After further digging, I see that what’s happening is that url_for is actually sorting the parameters by key lexicographically, independent of their insertion order in the hash. Apparently this is being done to aid caching, since URL params are often used for page cache keys.

    In short, you can’t do it without patching Hash, specifically, you need to override activesupport/core_ext/object/to_param.rb so that Hash#to_param does not call .sort on the return value.

    Related question: How to generate custom sorted query string URL in Rails link_to?.

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