--- title: Sort and limit data with Flux seotitle: Sort and limit data in InfluxDB with Flux description: > This guide walks through sorting and limiting data with Flux and outlines how it shapes your data in the process. v2.0/tags: [sort, limit] menu: v2_0: name: Sort and limit data parent: How-to guides weight: 206 --- The [`sort()`function](/v2.0/reference/flux/functions/built-in/transformations/sort) orders the records within each table. The following example orders system uptime first by region, then host, then value. ```js from(bucket:"example-bucket") |> range(start:-12h) |> filter(fn: (r) => r._measurement == "system" and r._field == "uptime" ) |> sort(columns:["region", "host", "_value"]) ``` The [`limit()` function](/v2.0/reference/flux/functions/built-in/transformations/limit) limits the number of records in output tables to a fixed number, `n`. The following example shows up to 10 records from the past hour. ```js from(bucket:"example-bucket") |> range(start:-1h) |> limit(n:10) ``` You can use `sort()` and `limit()` together to show the top N records. The example below returns the 10 top system uptime values sorted first by region, then host, then value. ```js from(bucket:"example-bucket") |> range(start:-12h) |> filter(fn: (r) => r._measurement == "system" and r._field == "uptime" ) |> sort(columns:["region", "host", "_value"]) |> limit(n:10) ``` You now have created a Flux query that sorts and limits data. Flux also provides the [`top()`](/v2.0/reference/flux/functions/built-in/transformations/selectors/top) and [`bottom()`](/v2.0/reference/flux/functions/built-in/transformations/selectors/bottom) functions to perform both of these functions at the same time.