# Grouping lists of records The [api:SS_List] class is designed to return a flat list of records. These lists can get quite long, and hard to present on a single list. [Pagination](/developer_guides/templates/how_tos/pagination) is one way to solve this problem, by splitting up the list into multiple pages. In this howto, we present an alternative to pagination: Grouping a list by various criteria, through the [api:GroupedList] class. This class is a [api:SS_ListDecorator], which means it wraps around a list, adding new functionality. It provides a `groupBy()` method, which takes a field name, and breaks up the managed list into a number of arrays, where each array contains only objects with the same value of that field. Similarly, the `GroupedBy()` method builds on this and returns the same data in a template-friendly format. ## Grouping Sets By First Letter This example deals with breaking up a [api:SS_List] into sub-headings by the first letter. Let's say you have a set of Module objects, each representing a SilverStripe module, and you want to output a list of these in alphabetical order, with each letter as a heading; something like the following list: * B * Blog * C * CMS Workflow * Custom Translations * D * Database Plumber * ... The first step is to set up the basic data model, along with a method that returns the first letter of the title. This will be used both for grouping and for the title in the template. :::php class Module extends DataObject { private static $db = array( 'Title' => 'Text' ); /** * Returns the first letter of the module title, used for grouping. * @return string */ public function getTitleFirstLetter() { return $this->Title[0]; } } The next step is to create a method or variable that will contain/return all the objects, sorted by title. For this example this will be a method on the `Page` class. :::php class Page extends SiteTree { // ... /** * Returns all modules, sorted by their title. * @return GroupedList */ public function getGroupedModules() { return GroupedList::create(Module::get()->sort('Title')); } } The final step is to render this into a template. The `GroupedBy()` method breaks up the set into a number of sets, grouped by the field that is passed as the parameter. In this case, the `getTitleFirstLetter()` method defined earlier is used to break them up. :::ss <%-- Modules list grouped by TitleFirstLetter --%>

Modules

<% loop $GroupedModules.GroupedBy(TitleFirstLetter) %>

$TitleFirstLetter

<% end_loop %> ## Grouping Sets By Month Grouping a set by month is a very similar process. The only difference would be to sort the records by month name, and then create a method on the DataObject that returns the month name, and pass that to the [api:GroupedList::GroupedBy()] call. We're reusing our example `Module` object, but grouping by its built-in `Created` property instead, which is automatically set when the record is first written to the database. This will have a method which returns the month it was posted in: :::php class Module extends DataObject { // ... /** * Returns the month name this news item was posted in. * @return string */ public function getMonthCreated() { return date('F', strtotime($this->Created)); } } The next step is to create a method that will return all records that exist, sorted by month name from January to December. This can be accomplshed by sorting by the `Created` field: :::php class Page extends SiteTree { // ... /** * Returns all news items, sorted by the month they were posted * @return GroupedList */ public function getGroupedModulesByDate() { return GroupedList::create(Module::get()->sort('Created')); } } The final step is the render this into the template using the [api:GroupedList::GroupedBy()] method. :::ss // Modules list grouped by the Month Posted

Modules

<% loop $GroupedModulesByDate.GroupedBy(MonthCreated) %>

$MonthCreated

<% end_loop %> ## Related * [Howto: "Pagination"](/developer_guides/templates/how_tos/pagination)