Entirely possible, Shannon! It's IIS/Windows, but I'll check the scope and
see what happens.

Thanks,
Beverly

On 11/3/08 1:56 PM, "Shannon Henderson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in whole
or in part:

> It does sort the array in place.
> 
> Is it possible that you're running into the scope bug?  I'm not sure
> whether it is platform specific, but for our mac and linux boxes
> sorts will work in the request scope but not the user scope. You
> might find additional info in the list archives.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> Shannon Henderson
> Web Support Services
> Reed College
> Portland, OR 97202-8199
> 503.517.7745
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> 
> 
> On Nov 3, 2008, at 10:44 AM, Beverly Voth wrote:
> 
>> I have a large solution that worked well until "SORTING" a list was
>> requested.
>> 
>> We make the SQL query and it's stored in an array (because it's far to
>> complex to requery to get the "next 15" set of records for the list
>> display).
>> 
>> So a link on the list page is passing the sortType to be performed
>> and an
>> @IF tests for the sortType. It then performs an <@SORT ARRAY....>
>> on the
>> columns requested.
>> 
>> It "seems" to work the first time you sort. However, from there
>> it's too
>> strange. Is the SORT actually re-arranging the ARRAY? And why would
>> it not
>> allow more than one sort action on the same array?
>> 
>> Thanks,
>> Beverly
>> 
>> ______________________________________________________________________
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> 
> 
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