If anyone is curious - here's a link to my data filehttps://spreadsheets.google.com/ccc?key=0ApdmZgrVbU3GdF9QWl9Wd0EyREtzbEw2MExOUlFEakE&hl=en&authkey=COin0bsBThat one will not be updated - I'm using my local Excel file - but it gives you an idea I'm now considering "The", "A", "An", "Les", "Le" and "La" as articles, and are therefore ignored for sorting purpose.If I should add any other, let me know.
Others to consier:German:der, die and dasSpanish: el and laItalian: il, lo and la
^(?:A |An |Das |De |Den |Der |Des |Die |Een |Ein |Eine |El |I |Il |L'(?=[^ ])|La |Las |Le |Les |Los |The |Un |Una |Une )
^(?:A |An |Das |De |Den |Der |Des |Een |Ein |Eine |El |Il |L'(?=[^ ])|La |Le |Les |The |Un |Una |Une )
Probably since movies like Die Monster Die! or Die Screaming Marianne or Die You Zombie Bastards! just to name a few I own would be in the wrong spot.
Quote from: RossRoy on July 13, 2010, 03:57:42 AMYes, that means the longest movie title will almost touch the reviewers name, but that's only for one title.Is it a safe bet to think it's this one?The Incredibly Strange Creatures Who Stopped Living and Became Mixed-Up Zombies
Yes, that means the longest movie title will almost touch the reviewers name, but that's only for one title.
Or lesser known movies such as Die Hard...
Yeah... Die would be awful difficult. I have several movies that start with the word Die as well. Though it would be nice if there was a way to separate it.