I have a list of tuples that looks something like this:
[('abc', 121),('abc', 231),('abc', 148), ('abc',221)]
I want to sort this list in ascending order by the integer value inside the tuples. Is it possible?
Try using the key
keyword with sorted()
.
sorted([('abc', 121),('abc', 231),('abc', 148), ('abc',221)], key=lambda x: x[1])
key
should be a function that identifies how to retrieve the comparable element from your data structure. In your case, it is the second element of the tuple, so we access [1]
.
For optimization, see jamylak's response using itemgetter(1)
, which is essentially a faster version of lambda x: x[1]
.
>>> from operator import itemgetter
>>> data = [('abc', 121),('abc', 231),('abc', 148), ('abc',221)]
>>> sorted(data,key=itemgetter(1))
[('abc', 121), ('abc', 148), ('abc', 221), ('abc', 231)]
IMO using itemgetter
is more readable in this case than the solution by @cheeken. It is
also faster since almost all of the computation will be done on the c
side (no pun intended) rather than through the use of lambda
.
>python -m timeit -s "from operator import itemgetter; data = [('abc', 121),('abc', 231),('abc', 148), ('abc',221)]" "sorted(data,key=itemgetter(1))"
1000000 loops, best of 3: 1.22 usec per loop
>python -m timeit -s "data = [('abc', 121),('abc', 231),('abc', 148), ('abc',221)]" "sorted(data,key=lambda x: x[1])"
1000000 loops, best of 3: 1.4 usec per loop
The fact that the sort values in the OP are integers isn't relevant to the question per se. In other words, the accepted answer would work if the sort value was text. I bring this up to also point out that the sort can be modified during the sort (for example, to account for upper and lower case).
>>> sorted([(121, 'abc'), (231, 'def'), (148, 'ABC'), (221, 'DEF')], key=lambda x: x[1])
[(148, 'ABC'), (221, 'DEF'), (121, 'abc'), (231, 'def')]
>>> sorted([(121, 'abc'), (231, 'def'), (148, 'ABC'), (221, 'DEF')], key=lambda x: str.lower(x[1]))
[(121, 'abc'), (148, 'ABC'), (231, 'def'), (221, 'DEF')]