Like g_sequence_insert_sorted(), but uses
a #GSequenceIterCompareFunc instead of a #GCompareDataFunc as
the compare function.
@iter_cmp is called with two iterators pointing into @seq.
It should return 0 if the iterators are equal, a negative
value if the first iterator comes before the second, and a
positive value if the second iterator comes before the first.
It is called with two iterators pointing into @seq. It should
return 0 if the iterators are equal, a negative value if the
first iterator comes before the second, and a positive value
if the second iterator comes before the first.
Like g_sequence_insert_sorted(), but uses a #GSequenceIterCompareFunc instead of a #GCompareDataFunc as the compare function.
@iter_cmp is called with two iterators pointing into @seq. It should return 0 if the iterators are equal, a negative value if the first iterator comes before the second, and a positive value if the second iterator comes before the first.
It is called with two iterators pointing into @seq. It should return 0 if the iterators are equal, a negative value if the first iterator comes before the second, and a positive value if the second iterator comes before the first.