I have a set of maps something like this:
#{
{:name "a" :value "b" ... more stuff here}
{:name "b" :value "b" ... more stuff here}
{:name "b" :value "b" ... more stuff here}
{:name "a" :value "b" ... more stuff here}
{:name "c" :value "b" ... more stuff here}
{:name "a" :value "b" ... more stuff here}
}
: and I want to get to an ordered list, much like sql order-by name:
[
{:name "a" :value "b" ... more stuff here}
{:name "a" :value "b" ... more stuff here}
{:name "a" :value "b" 开发者_JAVA百科... more stuff here}
{:name "b" :value "b" ... more stuff here}
{:name "b" :value "b" ... more stuff here}
{:name "c" :value "b" ... more stuff here}
]
: how can I do this?
Function sort-by is what you're looking for:
(def s
#{
{:name "d" :value "b" }
{:name "b" :value "b" }
{:name "c" :value "b" }
})
(sort-by :name s)
sort-by is a great answer, and makes the code a lot better in the simple cases where it works. Additionally the sort function can take a function to extract the comparason key from each map incase you need to do some processing on each item. In this example i use a sort function that extracts each name and then does a string compare on them.
(sort #(compare (:name %1) (:name %2)) data)
=> ({:name "a", :value "b"} {:name "b", :value "b"} {:name "c", :value "b"})
this is useful if your collections had different names to be compared:
(sort #(compare (:value %1) (:name %2)) data)
=> ({:name "a", :value "b"} {:name "c", :value "b"} {:name "b", :value "b"})
the compare
function is a better version of java's .compareto() because it properly handles nil and compares clojure collections properly. is is basically a short cut for using the . opperator in most cases
(sort #(. (:name %1) (compareTo (:name %2))) data)
=> ({:name "a", :value "b"} {:name "b", :value "b"} {:name "c", :value "b"})
(def set-of-maps #{{:name "d"}, {:name "b"}, {:name "a"}})
-> clojure.core/sort-by
(sort-by :name set-of-maps)
; => ({:name "a", :value "b"} {:name "c", :value "b"} {:name "d", :value "b"})
sort-by
is what you want, but please post snippets that are actually valid code; I wasted a fair bit of time trying to figure out a problem that wound up being because #{{:name "a" :value "b"} {:name "a" :value "b"}}
makes the reader barf.
I believe the snippet from the joy of clojure is the neatest.
(def plays [{:band "Burial", :plays 979, :loved 9}
{:band "Eno", :plays 2333, :loved 15}
{:band "Bill Evans", :plays 979, :loved 9}
{:band "Magma", :plays 2665, :loved 31}])
(def sort-by-loved-ratio (partial sort-by #(/ (:plays %) (:loved %))))
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