I have a dict that looks like this
{ "keyword1":3 , "keyword2":1 , "keyword3":5 , "keyword4":2 }
And I would like to convert it DESC and create a list of just the keywords. Eg, this would return
["keyword3" , "keyword1" , "keyword4" , "keyword2"]
All examples I found use lambda and I'm not very strong with that. Is there a way I could loop through this, and sort them as I go? Thanks for any suggestions.
PS: I could create t开发者_运维问答he initial dict differently if it would help.
You could use
res = list(sorted(theDict, key=theDict.__getitem__, reverse=True))
(You don't need the list
in Python 2.x)
The theDict.__getitem__
is actually equivalent to lambda x: theDict[x]
.
(A lambda is just an anonymous function. For example
>>> g = lambda x: x + 5
>>> g(123)
128
This is equivalent to
>>> def h(x):
... return x + 5
>>> h(123)
128
)
>>> d={ "keyword1":3 , "keyword2":1 , "keyword3":5 , "keyword4":2 }
>>> sorted(d, key=d.get, reverse=True)
['keyword3', 'keyword1', 'keyword4', 'keyword2']
i always did it this way....are there advantages to using the sorted method?
keys = dict.keys()
keys.sort( lambda x,y: cmp(dict[x], dict[y]) )
whoops didnt read the part about not using lambda =(
I would come up with something like this:
[k for v, k in sorted(((v, k) for k, v in theDict.items()), reverse=True)]
But KennyTM's solution is much nicer :)
It is not possible to sort a dict, only to get a representation of a dict that is sorted. Dicts are inherently order less, but other types, such as lists and tuples, are not. So you need a sorted representation, which will be a list—probably a list of tuples. For instance,
'''
Sort the dictionary by score. if the score is same then sort them by name
{
'Rahul' : {score : 75}
'Suhas' : {score : 95}
'Vanita' : {score : 56}
'Dinesh' : {score : 78}
'Anil' : {score : 69}
'Anup' : {score : 95}
}
'''
import operator
x={'Rahul' : {'score' : 75},'Suhas' : {'score' : 95},'Vanita' : {'score' : 56},
'Dinesh' : {'score' : 78},'Anil' : {'score' : 69},'Anup' : {'score' : 95}
}
sorted_x = sorted(x.iteritems(), key=operator.itemgetter(1))
print sorted_x
output:
[('Vanita', {'score': 56}), ('Anil', {'score': 69}), ('Rahul', {'score': 75}), ('Dinesh', {'score': 78}), ('Anup', {'score': 95}), ('Suhas', {'score': 95})]
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