Help:Sortable tables

Using sortable tables
When browsing Wikipedia you may encounter tables that have been made sortable. A sortable table is identified by the arrows in one or more of its header cells. Clicking them will cause the table rows to sort in ascending order based on the selected column. A second click on the same arrow will sort in descending order. A third click will restore the original order of the whole table. For example; a third click causes List of countries by intentional homicide rate to reset to its original order by subregion.

The actual sorting process will happen on your computer using client-side JavaScript. For this reason it is only possible to use this functionality if you have JavaScript enabled in your web browser. The sorting process is also dependent on your computer and the amount of data. Sorting a very large table on a slow computer may take a long time.

Example
This is an example of a small sortable table.

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Tables with complex headers
Tables with more complex headers than before now sort correctly. For example:

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Using two or more header rows, the sort arrows are placed on the bottom header row by default. They can be placed a maximum of one row higher by setting  at the top of the bottom header row.

Tables with complex data rows
Tables can have cells spanning multiple rows, using. (See Help:Rowspan).

The number of rows must be indicated with each use of rowspan. Before any sorting can be done, the rowspan setup must be correct. The wikitext must be correct. An incorrect rowspan organization can break sorting, cause weird table formatting, move data to the wrong column, etc.

See examples below.

When sorted all the rows are filled. Tables without rowspan are much easier to maintain by less experienced editors, and by editors who are stopping by only once to edit the table.

Correct rowspan numbers and wikitext, with sorting in working order:

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Note that, after sorting, the rowspanning cells are cut into rows and their content is repeated (the year "2014" in the example). If the original order of a table is restored by clicking a third time on the same arrow, then the cells will remain repeated and not revert to the original rowspan.

See example below. The wikitext is incorrect. Line 17 should not exist. Compare to correct table above. Result in this case is an added empty column.

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Online table editors and rowspan
There is an easy online wiki table editor here:
 * wikitable.eu5.org

It makes it easy to edit the text and links in individual cells of a table. It is especially easy when there are no rowspans in the body of a table. See the previous section. Without rowspans it is easier to change the underlying framework of a table, and move stuff around. Once the wikitext framework is simpler, the online table editor is simpler too, because you don't have to edit the wikitext as much in order to edit the table.

Secondary key
If a column contains a value multiple times then sorting the column preserves the order of the rows within each subset that has the same value in that column (stable sorting). Thus sorting based on a primary, secondary, tertiary, etc. key can be done by sorting the least-significant key first, etc. For example, to sort the table below on the Text column, then the Numbers column, first click on the "Numbers" column heading (the secondary sort key), then the "Text" column heading (the primary sort key).

Another way to sort a table using multiple sort keys is to hold down the shift key while clicking on the column headings for the subsequent sort keys. For example, to sort the table below on the Text column, then the Numbers column, first click on the "Text" column heading (the primary sort key), then hold down the shift key and click on the "Numbers" column heading (the secondary sort key).

There can be a problem if the Google translation gadget is enabled in gadget preferences (in browsing section). It may seem like shift-click secondary sorting is not working because of the delay due to the translation popup for the name in the column head. There are many browser translation addons that work as well or better than the gadget. The gadget can be turned on and off from the "More" menu at the top of any page.

Vertical headers
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This template also works with headers that span rows or columns (using rowspan and colspan). Note that there is no vertical bar  between   and

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Sort under template
sort under can be used to make the sorting arrows appear underneath the header text, which may be desirable to narrow the width of a column.

Creating sortable tables
Tables can be made sortable via client-side JavaScript by adding  to their top line. These tables need to be properly formatted, with the right number of cells. Additionally you need to make sure that the headers of your column are properly indicated in the wikicode. For this the  character is used in the table syntax.

If you are using the Visual editor, you can open the properties dialog of a table and select the sortable option.

Simple example
This is the wikisource of the table shown in the first section and shows the typical way to enable table sorting: The  indicates cells that are header cells. In order for a table to be sortable, the first row(s) of a table need to be entirely made up out of these header cells. You can learn more about the basic table syntax by taking the Introduction to tables.

Initial sort order of rows
When users are first presented with a table, the rows will always appear in the same order as in the wikitext. If you want a table to appear sorted by a certain column, you must sort the wikitext itself in that order. This is usually done for the first column. The VisualEditor makes it easy to move individual table columns and rows around. For info about that, and also about putting a table in initial alphabetical order see § Initial alphabetical order.

Restrictions and exclusions
Tables can only click-to-sort vertically downwards (clicking on a topmost-column-name will cause the rows of the table to re-order themselves in their up-and-down positions). It is not possible to click-to-sort horizontally across (there is no way to click on a leftmost-row-cell so as to cause the columns of the table to re-order themselves in their left-to-right positions).

Making selected columns unsortable
If you want a specific column not to be sortable, specify  in the attributes of its header cell. If you have a sorting row then  must be in the header cell with the sorting icon.

(When using vert header, disable column sorting by omitting  in that template, which overrides anything placed before it.)

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Excluding final rows from sorting
Sometimes it is helpful to exclude the last row of a table from the sorting process. There are two methods to achieve this.

Header as a footer
You want a repeat of the header at the bottom. You do this by using the  (exclamation mark) syntax for all cells in the last row of the table. This will be recognized as a footer and the row will not be part of the sorting. This footer makes it a complex table, and so scopes help accessibility via screen readers.

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This applies to all rows at the end of the table that are consecutive and fully made up out of header cells. Those rows will not sort.

Summation footer
This can be achieved using  on the desired table row (line starting with  ).

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Rendered result This is a complex table due to the "Average" cell spanning 2 columns. "Average" is also the row heading for the last row. Using the  (exclamation mark) syntax with   causes the  correct header HTML to be generated, which aids in accessibility, e.g., for those using screen readers.

It is possible to keep multiple lines fixed at the bottom, as long as the lines are consecutive.

If the "sortbottom" rows are not consecutive, then when the original order of a table is restored by clicking a third time on the same arrow then rows with  will remain at the bottom even if they were not originally at the bottom.

Excluding top rows from sorting
This works the same as above for plain (non-header) rows at the top. This can be achieved using  on the desired table row (line starting with  ). It is possible to keep multiple lines fixed at the top, as long as the lines are consecutive.

Configuring the sorting
By default, the system tries to guess the data type in each column. It does this by looking at the first five rows and evaluating their contents. This process works most of the time but can also easily get confused if you have inconsistent values or additional specifiers that the system doesn't know about. To avoid this ambiguity you can force a particular data type or override the value of a cell. For numeric values, consider using template Val, see examples at.

Forcing a column to have a particular data type
The  attribute can be added inside the header of a column to ensure that the cells underneath are all treated as a specified type of data. It must go in the header cell with the sorting icon. It will not work in a header cell without a sorting icon. For example; when there are two rows of headers, the bottom row will always have the sorting icons.

The following (case-insensitive) values are valid for :
 * for website addresses
 * for numeric internet protocol addresses
 * for language specific standard date format
 * for dates in ISO 8601 format (i.e. YYYY-MM-DD)
 * for dates in the US format (with the month before the day)
 * for language specific standard date format
 * for dates in ISO 8601 format (i.e. YYYY-MM-DD)
 * for dates in the US format (with the month before the day)

data-sort-type=text
uses alphabetical sorting of text, but numbers are sorted numerically within that alphabetical sorting. See natural sort order.

For example:

Without  in the header, the tablesorter gets confused by the numeric titles in the first few rows into treating the entire column as numeric. This results in it wrongly sorting the non-numeric titles as zero regardless of the alphabetical ordering of their text.

Note that if a column without declared sort-type contains only numeric values within the first top 5 cells, but with a reference  immediately after the last digit of at least one number in those first 5 cells, this may cause the column to be sorted as text. This can be avoided by declaring a different sort type such as:

Default data type of a column
If you do not specify a, the sort modes (the data types, which, in addition to the choice "ascending" or "descending", determine the sorting order) are as follows:
 * date (see also below)
 * criterion: the first non-blank element is of the form "DD-MM-YYYY", "DD-MM-YY", or "DD mmm YYYY"
 * order: numeric value of YYYYMMDD; The string DDsMMsYYYY of length 10 (if characters positioned at s are equal together and are either '/' or '-' separator) is positioned as YYYYMMDD, the string DDsMMsYY of length 8 (if characters positioned at s are equal together and are either '/' or '-' separator) as 19YYMMDD if YY >= 50 and 20YYMMDD otherwise, and the string "DD mmm YYYY" with mmm an (abbreviated) month name.


 * isoDate (ISO 8601)
 * criterion: format "±YYYY-MM-DD", with 1-4 digits for year "YYYY" from -9999 to 9999, month only with digits, format "±YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss.sss±TH:TM" with time hour "hh", minutes "mm", seconds "ss.sss", and time zone offset "TH:TM, right values are optional.
 * order: numeric, with time in milliseconds after 01 January, 1970 UTC.


 * currency (this mode can be useful for other data also)
 * criterion: the first non-blank element starts with $, £, €, or ¥
 * order: numeric, ignoring these symbols and all ordinary letters and commas, but not spaces; note that scientific notation cannot be used, as e and E are removed


 * number
 * criterion: the first non-blank element consists of just digits, points, commas, spaces, "+", "-", possibly followed by "e" or "E" and a string consisting of "+", "-", digits
 * order: after removing the commas and spaces, if any, if the string starts with a number the order is numeric according to the first number in the string (parseFloat is applied); it is regarded as zero if it is empty; in other cases (parseFloat returns NaN), the element is positioned like -∞.


 * string
 * criterion: all other cases;
 * order: uses locale specific (so in this case English) ordering if your browser supports it. Alternatively after conversion of capitals to lowercase the order is ASCII – partial list showing the order: !"#$%&'*+,-./09:;<=>?@[\]^_'az{|}~é— (see also below; a blank space comes before every other character; a non-breaking space code  counts as a space; two adjacent ordinary blank spaces count as one; for multiple blank spaces one can use   or alternate   and ordinary blank spaces)

If more than one possible type matches, the first type in the above order is chosen. For example, "24-12-2007" matches as a date, so is not treated as a number. Formatting and markup tags are ignored when determining the matching type.

The sort mode is determined by the first 5 non-blank rows below the header after loading the page. This can also change after deleting a row, or adding a column. Therefore, it is wise to make sure that every element matches the criterion for the required data type. Using a row template this can be done very conveniently.

The method of making sure the sort mode of each column is as desired, is specify a, see up.

Specifying a sort key for a cell
Sometimes the value of a cell is not correctly parsed or one wants to sort the row in a special way. (e.g. a cell containing 'John Doe' should actually be sorted as 'Doe' and not as 'John'). This can be easily achieved by using, like this:

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Alternatively, you can set the  attribute:

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For example, this is handy to sort military ranks in rank-seniority order:

Wiki markup

This gives:

See also mw:Help:Sorting.

If you have a list where all the entries start with quotes ("), and you want to set a sort key for one of the entries, then you will need to use the HTML name or number for quotes at the beginning of that sort key (see also ). Lists of song titles for example sometimes have each song title in quotes. So to sort by a particular word in a song title use one of these:

Keeping some rows together
can be used to keep certain rows together. The specified order of these rows is preserved. An example is to keep "South Holland" immediately after "Netherlands", whatever the sort order or column:

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If you have rows that contain colspans, this might become a little difficult. You can also use the  on a row; it will then always be below the row just above it in the table source, wherever that row may be sorted in the table.

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Examples of datatype auto detection. First 5 cells in a column
The script sees what the first 5 cells in a column contain. The sorting mode becomes numeric if the first 5 cells contain a number only (comma and period used in number formatting are accepted as number). The numeric sorting order is maintained even when text is found in the cells that follow the 5th cell. 123,564,589.7e12 is in scientific notation and is treated as a number. An empty cell is treated as a non-number when sorting numerically. There is an empty cell initially at the bottom of each of the 2 tables just below.

Datatype auto detection is inconsistent. It is always better to add a   to the column header.

Single currency character, or single alphabetic character, does not currently change what the script determines via the first 5 cells in a column: Numerical order.

Percentage sign does not change from determination as numerical order. Number combinations with minus or divide signs within them are still detected as numbers. Their numerical ordering though is determined by the number before the minus or divide sign.

A plus sign in an empty cell among the first 5 cells breaks default numerical sorting. As does a plus sign after a number if it is in one of the first 5 cells in a column.

Numerical sorting problems

 * Note: See the section above about datatype auto detection via the first 5 cells in a column.

Most of these problems can now be fixed by manually specifying the sort mode of a column by putting  in the column header. See the example tables above and below. See also meta:Help:Sorting and the section about forcing the sort mode of a column.

To work   needs to be in the header cell that contains the sorting icon. In tables with multi-row headers, the sorting icon will be in the lowest header cells.

References  after a number in any cell (including the first five cells) no longer break numerical sorting.

Text breaks default numerical sorting if it is before or after a number in one of the first 5 cells in a column.

A colon by itself (to signify no data, for example) in one of the first 5 cells in a column breaks numerical sorting.

Even when using  in the column header, text in front of a number in any cell breaks numerical sorting of that cell. Text after a number is not a problem if the sort order of a column is specified by using.

Leading zeroes are not necessary for numerical sorting of a column. If it seems that way, then that means the column is being sorted alphabetically. Look in the first 5 cells for anything other than numbers, and correct those cells according to these rules. Better yet, add  to the column header. Later editing by other editors will not break numerical sorting.

A dash, of any kind, in a blank cell in one of the first 5 cells in a column breaks default numerical sorting of a column.

A dash in front of a number does not break numerical sorting.

Dashes are allowed anywhere in cells if  is used in the column header.

The N/A template in the first five cells of a column is inconsistent in its effect on automatic datatype detection. It is always better to specify a  in the column header.

c. for circa
"c." (circa, indicates "approximately") is often found in columns of numbers and dates. It often breaks sorting. The addition of  to the column header does not allow c. to be put in front of the number.

Using the circa template fixes sorting when c. is in front of the number, but only if the   parameter is added to the template. See: Template:Circa/doc/sortable.
 * c. NUMBER
 * c. NUMBER

Alternatively, c. can be put after the number. Or it can be moved to a different column.

Numerical ranges

 * Note: Most problems are fixed by adding   to the column header. It also prevents problems caused by later editing.

A dash after a number no longer breaks default numerical sorting of a column. Therefore, a range (30–40) now works.

A plus sign after a number breaks default numerical sorting if it is in one of the first 5 cells in a column.

A plus sign in an otherwise empty cell breaks default numerical sorting of a column. That is if the cell is one of the first 5 cells in the column.

You can also use 2 columns for a range if you want to sort by either the lower or upper range. If you want the upper range to sort best all cells need to be filled in with numbers. For example, you can use the same number in both the lower and upper range. You can also add a plus sign after the number in the upper range.

The first set of tables below do not sort correctly, except for the lower range which has no complicating factors. Note that "400+" and "400 +" do not sort correctly in their columns. These tables do not have  in their column headers.

  has fixed the sorting in the tables below. Note the sorting of 400+ and 400 +.

Date sorting problems
The Date table sorting or dts template will work with any combination of years, months, days. See example here. See template documentation and section farther down for more info.

Month names
All sorting involving month names may fail for registered users who have changed the default language setting "en - English" at Special:Preferences (reported at T126744). It affects relatively few users on the English Wikipedia and can be ignored.

Year only
Year sorting of a column works as long as the year is the first text in each cell in the column. Adding  to the column header does not change this.

Text is OK after a year in a cell. "FY" (fiscal year), for example, should go after the year. References after the year are OK. Put "c." after the year, or use "est." after the year instead.

A dash, of any kind, in a blank cell breaks year sorting of a column. Dashes after the year are OK.

Unlike for numerical sorting the N/A template in any cell in a year column does not break year sorting of that column.

If there are problems with year sorting check for any cells in the column with text or a dash (of any kind) as the first thing in a cell. Remove that text or dash, and the column should sort correctly.

Year and month
Date sorting does not work for columns with only the year before the month (no day).

Adding  or   to the column header does not help. Click each column header a couple times in the tables below to see. Note the column headed  may sort correctly in some browsers, but it is not reliable. Year and month in numerical form (YYYY-MM) works with  (see relevant section farther down).

Month and year
Date sorting does not work for columns with only the month before the year (no day). Adding   to the column header does not help.

Month, day, and year
Sorting works correctly in all the tables below. Years before 100 (for example, year 99) break sorting. If a number for a day is missing, sorting is broken.

Day, month, and year
Sorting works correctly in all cases below. Years before 100 (for example, year 99) break sorting. If a number for a day is missing, sorting is broken.

Year, month, day. Using words for months
Sorting does not work for this date order.
 * data-sort-type=date
 * data-sort-type=isoDate

The addition of any data-sort-type to the column header does not help. See examples below.

Year, month, day. Using numbers. ISO date YYYY-MM-DD
See: ISO date. "±YYYY-MM-DD", with 1 to 4 digits for year "YYYY" from -9999 to 9999. Year by itself is fine. As is the year followed by just the month. Some stuff after the date is allowed. Such as references after the date. To save header space you can add a tooltip to the "Date" column header instead of "year, month, day" below it. See: Template:Tooltip. Tooltips have been added to the tables in this section.

See section higher up:. Datatype auto detection is inconsistent. That is why ISO date sorting works best with   added to the column header. It also avoids problems when only one digit is used for the month or day. Leading zeros are no longer needed. All tables below have   added to the column headers.

Remember to leave a space in the wikitext before years that are a negative number. Otherwise,   will be used as table formatting instead of  .

"c." stands for circa (approximately). "c." before the date breaks sorting in the first table. Using the circa template fixes sorting, but only if the   parameter is added to the template. See: Template:Circa/doc/sortable. See:.

Adding BCE, CE, BC, etc. after the date does not break sorting. But adding AD before the date breaks sorting. Test additions before and after dates. Additions before the date are almost always a problem.

Years BC are a problem

 * Note. See also the section farther down about the date table sorting template. It has additional info about dealing with negative years (BC, BCE).

From this version of List of reported UFO sightings. The "Antiquity" section has a table with some hidden notes. Adapted here:

To sort the dates before AD 1000 you will need one of the following:
 * - Year. Use leading zeros, and negative for BC.
 * - Use negative for BC. See: Date table sorting.
 * - circa is AD only.

The date column it is referring to was pulled out of the larger table, simplified, and placed below. It is sorting correctly. Look at the wikitext to see the methods discussed in the hidden notes.

Date table sorting template: Day and month, Many other date formats
The simplest way to format sortable dates in a table is to use the Date table sorting template. A redirect: dts

It can be used with many date formats mixed together. Note the many formats used here. See template documentation for more info.

See example tables below. They all sort correctly. The wikitext for the first entry in each table in the first row is shown in the table header.

Note: None of the table columns use the  modifier. Using  can sometimes break sorting when used with the template. If you want the column to be narrower, you can use month abbreviations (abbr=on parameter). You can also allow the text to wrap (nowrap=off parameter). Use format=dmy or format=mdy, etc. to control output format, if desired.

Issues. Years BC, etc
For years BC,  can be used for -0062-09-23 (62 BC): Simply subtract the year BC from 10,000.
 * See also: 8226

Date sorting works by formatting dates so they can be sorted numerically. For example:

or

...for 21 July 2001. The  style can be used to hide a sortable numeric date before the displayed date. See wikitext of table just below. Alternatively, Date table sorting does this automatically, and is recommended in most cases.

You can use 2012-07-07 etc. to get sortable dates. Example, including one date with a different display format:

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Before year 100. Any date format
Sorting can be done via the hidden   using the ISO date. Combined with  

Note: The sorting wikitext is the same for the 2 tables below. Any date format can be shown to the readers.

The table below uses the same isoDate values for   as the above table. But multiple formats are used for showing the dates to the reader.

Background colors in sortable headers
Adding color with the shorthand   property in a header may cause that column to lose its sorting button – see T33755. Example with the "Name" header:

Use the more specific   to make things work correctly. Example: Produces this sortable table:

Padding
Sometimes entries are padded on the left for alignment purposes. This can adversely affect how they are sorted.

Non-breaking spaces
The effect of left-padding with non-breaking space codes  which render as blank spaces, depends on the browser: in IE they are (unlike actual blank spaces) counted for sorting as leading blank spaces, so in a list of numbers with text (for which the alphabetic sorting mode applies) they could be used to equalize the number of characters before the explicit or implicit decimal separator. However, in Firefox they are ignored for the purpose of sorting.

See also Talk:List of U.S. states and territories by population/Archive 1.

Padding with zeros
Example:
 * 000000

Formatnum can be combined with padleft:

Controlling sorting and display
Text undesired for sorting but needed for display:
 * In numeric sorting mode, text breaks numerical sorting whether the text is before or after the number. Sorting then becomes alphanumeric. Empty cell is treated as "zero" when sorting numerically.
 * In date sorting mode, this text needs to be put in a separate column; in the case of a cell containing a range of dates or numbers (e.g. from .. to ..), text in surplus of what is required for sorting is put in the extra column. If the first part of the text is used for sorting, then the extra column needs to be the following one; conversely, if the last part of the text is used for sorting, then the extra column needs to be the previous one; depending on the table format, this dividing of an item over two cells may look ugly.
 * In alphabetic sorting, any footnotes etc. do not require a separate column; they can simply be put at the end of the element.

Text undesired for display but needed for sorting:
 * can be put as hidden text in the column to be sorted

Combining the two, we can have displayed text independent of text used for sorting, by fully hiding the latter, and fully putting the former in a separate column (in date sorting mode and numeric sorting mode) or in the same column after the hidden text (in alphabetic sorting). Fully putting the displayed text in a separate column may look ugly if it is not done consistently for a whole column, but only for elements that require this (e.g. if most entries in a column are single numbers, but some are ranges).

Sorting with increase/decrease/steady templates
To enable sorting of cells with Template:Increase, Template:Decrease or Template:Steady, add a sort key, e.g. 2, 1 or. To fix an existing table, use Search and replace (right icon in the Advanced toolbar) with Treat search string as a regular expression selected to do the following replacements:
 * {| class="wikitable"

!Search for!!Replace with
 * }
 * }
 * }
 * }
 * }
 * }
 * }

Maintaining tables sorted alphabetically or by rank
It used to be difficult to maintain tables in rank order, and to keep the numbering correct. That is no longer true. Template:Static row numbers renumbers the row numbers after every change in row order. And after every addition or deletion of rows.

Putting a table in initial alphabetical order
There are fast and slow ways to do this. Unfortunately, the Visual Editor does not have a fast way to quickly alphabetize a table. You can manually move rows around one at a time. Click on a cell in a row. Then click on the arrow that shows up at the left of the row. Then click on "move above" or "move below" as needed. If this is buggy or is not working, the rows can be moved around in the wikitext by cutting and pasting rows in the wikitext.

A fast way is to launch free LibreOffice Calc, or another spreadsheet program. To see how go to Help:Creating tables. For more info see Commons:Convert tables and charts to wiki code or image files.

There is another way to alphabetize a table, and it keeps all the styling and flag links that a spreadsheet may remove. One can use NoteTab Light (freeware version of NoteTab). But for this to work, all the wikitext for a row must be on one line. That means the cells in that row are separated by double bars.

To alphabetize the list by the first column paste the table wikitext into a new NoteTab Light page. Select the rows you want to alphabetize. Then click on the "modify" menu, then "lines", then "sort", and then "ascending". That will put "A" at the top and "Z" at the bottom.

Then put back  (wikitext for row) between each line. Do that via find-and-replace by replacing  with


 * is the underlying text editor code for line breaks in NoteTab.
 * is the wikitext for a table row.

If there are blank lines between the entries replace  with

Copy the wikitext and paste it back into the article. Save the page.

Initial alphabetical sort versus initial sort by rank order
It is a good idea to keep lists and tables in some kind of initial non-random sort order. It no longer matters what method you choose. Template:Static row numbers will maintain row numbering automatically no matter what changes you make to the row order.

Removing an old rank column (1,2,3) from a table
You can remove the rank column cells quickly. It is much easier now with the table editor in the VisualEditor. Click on the header in the column you want to delete. An arrow will show up at the top of the column. Click the arrow, and then "delete column".

Then let Template:Static row numbers create the row number column.

Auto-ranking or adding a row numbering column (1,2,3)
There are Phabricator threads asking for a way to easily add static row numbers to tables. See T42618. It supersedes T42634.

In the meantime there is Template:Static row numbers. It is easy to use now. It is a template to automatically add row numbers to sortable tables. The row numbers will not be sorted when columns of data are sorted. A possible note to add above a table: ''Row numbers are static. Other columns are sortable. This allows ranking of any column.''

See list of articles transcluding. See transclusion count.

It has some subtemplates that work with it. Go to static row numbers for more details.

To see the template in use: List of U.S. states and territories by incarceration and correctional supervision rate.

Note that   is selectively used to narrow columns with wordy header text without using breaks. Header breaks annoy people using screen readers due to the pauses.

The selective use of max-width allows the state names to spread out, and stay on one row each if the screen is wide enough. This allows easier scanning down or across the rows. Yet when the screen becomes narrower and narrower, the state names will eventually wrap. This is good for cell phones. Use em unit settings instead of px. Em units expand in width as the font size is increased.

Be sure to check both mobile and desktop views (links at bottom of page). Check to see that header rows aren't being given a row number. Also check that the max-width settings aren't too tight. Mobile view may need a slightly larger max-width setting for some columns. And different desktop browsers, and different settings for them, can make some max-width settings cause some column header text to overlap into the adjacent column. So it is usually good to add some extra em units to the max-width settings.

Alphabetic sorting order
 data-sort-type:text  - Sort the following table to see an example of the alphabetic sort order.

Note that sorting is case-insensitive: the two-character entries such as A1 demonstrate that A and a are at the same position.

Numerical sorting order examples
 data-sort-type:number  - Sort the following table to see an example of the numerical sort order.