bpo-35020: Link to sorting examples from list.sort() (GH-9931)

This commit is contained in:
Xtreak 2018-10-21 03:09:03 +05:30 committed by Raymond Hettinger
parent eeab510bb7
commit 890a4b9293
2 changed files with 14 additions and 2 deletions

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@ -145,6 +145,17 @@ ascending *age*, do the *age* sort first and then sort again using *grade*:
>>> sorted(s, key=attrgetter('grade'), reverse=True) # now sort on primary key, descending
[('dave', 'B', 10), ('jane', 'B', 12), ('john', 'A', 15)]
This can be abstracted out into a wrapper function that can take a list and
tuples of field and order to sort them on multiple passes.
>>> def multisort(xs, specs):
... for key, reverse in reversed(specs):
... xs.sort(key=attrgetter(key), reverse=reverse)
... return xs
>>> multisort(list(student_objects), (('grade', True), ('age', False)))
[('dave', 'B', 10), ('jane', 'B', 12), ('john', 'A', 15)]
The `Timsort <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timsort>`_ algorithm used in Python
does multiple sorts efficiently because it can take advantage of any ordering
already present in a dataset.
@ -246,7 +257,7 @@ To convert to a key function, just wrap the old comparison function:
.. testsetup::
from functools import cmp_to_key
>>> from functools import cmp_to_key
.. doctest::

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@ -1201,6 +1201,8 @@ application).
--- this is helpful for sorting in multiple passes (for example, sort by
department, then by salary grade).
For sorting examples and a brief sorting tutorial, see :ref:`sortinghowto`.
.. impl-detail::
While a list is being sorted, the effect of attempting to mutate, or even
@ -4752,4 +4754,3 @@ types, where they are relevant. Some of these are not reported by the
.. [5] To format only a tuple you should therefore provide a singleton tuple whose only
element is the tuple to be formatted.