lst = [(u'course', u'session'), (u'instructor', u'session'), (u'session', u'trainee'), (u'person', u'trainee'), (u'person', u'instructor'), (u'course', u'instructor')]
I've above list of tuple, I need to sort it with following logic.... each tuple's 2nd element is dependent on 1st element, e.g. (course, ses开发者_如何学运维sion) -> session is dependent on course and so on..
I want a sorted list based on priority of their dependency, less or independent object will come first so output should be like below,
lst = [course, person, instructor, session, trainee]
You're looking for what's called a topological sort. The wikipedia page shows the classic Kahn and depth-first-search algorithms for it; Python examples are here (a bit dated, but should still run fine), on pypi (stable and reusable -- you can also read the code online here) and here (Tarjan's algorithm, that kind-of also deals with cycles in the dependencies specified), just to name a few.
Conceptually, what you need to do is create a directed acyclic graph with edges determined by the contents of your list, and then do a topological sort on the graph. The algorithm to do this doesn't exist in Python's standard library (at least, not that I can think of off the top of my head), but you can find plenty of third-party implementations online, such as http://www.bitformation.com/art/python_toposort.html
The function at that website takes a list of all the strings, items
, and another list of the pairs between strings, partial_order
. Your lst
should be passed as the second argument. To generate the first argument, you can use itertools.chain.from_iterable(lst)
, so the overall function call would be
import itertools
lst = ...
ordering = topological_sort(itertools.chain.from_iterable(lst), lst)
Or you could modify the function from the website to only take one argument, and to create the nodes in the graph directly from the values in your lst
.
EDIT: Using the topsort
module Alex Martelli linked to, you could just pass lst
directly.
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