This is probably more than you wanted to know, but it does answer your question directly (how to sort and unique in one step).
It's a suggestion MeowChow posted last summer in a discussion of sorts.  It uses a hash slice to store the "transform" with the array index and an array slice to return the elements sorted on the transform key.  It does not scale well(!).
my %by; @by{ map $_->{num}, @$data } = 0 .. $#$data; @sorted_unique = @{$data}[ @by{ sort keys %by } ];

update:   Actually, I now see that the indexing is totally superfluous, so it would be:
my %by = map{ $_->{num} => $_ } @$data; @sorted_unique = @by{sort keys %by};
which actually begins to look reasonable.  On the other hand, the sure enough do-it-all-in-one-line with an anonymous hash:
@sorted_unique = @{{ map{ $_->{num} => $_ } @$d }}{ sort map $_->{num}, @$d };
goes through the array twice and also builds a hash.  And it even sorts the whole array before selecting unique elements which is the worst way to do it as khkramer demonstrates above.  It is kinda neat though.

  p

In reply to Re: Can Schwartzian transform be modified to sort an arrayref uniquely? by petral
in thread Can Schwartzian transform be modified to sort an arrayref uniquely? by corporate_gadfly

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