Re: How to sort a list of strings on a substring

2009-10-06 Thread n00m
Here you are:

LogList = [\
inbound tcp office 192.168.0.125 inside 10.1.0.91 88,
inbound tcp office 192.168.0.220 inside 10.1.0.31 2967,
inbound udp lab 172.24.0.110 inside 10.1.0.6 161,
inbound udp office 192.168.0.220 inside 10.1.0.13 53]


LogList.sort(key=lambda x: x[x.index('1'):])

for item in LogList:
print item

===

inbound udp lab 172.24.0.110 inside 10.1.0.6 161
inbound tcp office 192.168.0.125 inside 10.1.0.91 88
inbound udp office 192.168.0.220 inside 10.1.0.13 53
inbound tcp office 192.168.0.220 inside 10.1.0.31 2967
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Re: How to sort a list of strings on a substring

2009-10-05 Thread Steven D'Aprano
On Mon, 05 Oct 2009 15:45:58 -0700, n00m wrote:

 Here you are:
 
 LogList = [\
 inbound tcp office 192.168.0.125 inside 10.1.0.91 88, inbound tcp
 office 192.168.0.220 inside 10.1.0.31 2967, inbound udp lab
 172.24.0.110 inside 10.1.0.6 161, inbound udp office 192.168.0.220
 inside 10.1.0.13 53]
 
 
 LogList.sort(key=lambda x: x[x.index('1'):])


No, that's incorrect. Try it with this data and you will see it fails:


LogList = [
inbound tcp office1 192.168.0.125 inside 10.1.0.91 88,
inbound tcp office2 192.168.0.220 inside 10.1.0.31 2967,
inbound udp lab1 172.24.0.110 inside 10.1.0.6 161,
inbound udp office2 192.168.0.220 inside 10.1.0.13 53,
inbound udp lab2 172.24.0.121 inside 10.1.0.6 161,
inbound udp webby 220.96.0.2 inside 20.2.0.9 54,
]


Worse, if you delete the last item (webby), the code silently does the 
wrong thing. Code that crashes is bad, but code that silently does the 
wrong thing is a nightmare. Your test succeeded by accident -- it was a 
fluke of the data that you failed to see both failure modes.

The question asked was how to sort the list according to item 3 of the 
strings, *not* how to sort the list according to the first character '1'. 
The way to solve this correctly is by extracting item 3 and sorting on 
that, not by searching for the first character '1'. That is a hack[1] 
that just happened to work for the specific test data you tried it on.




[1] Hack in the bad sense, not in the good sense.



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Re: How to sort a list of strings on a substring

2009-10-05 Thread n00m
 No, that's incorrect. Try it with this data and you will see it fails:

Of course, you are right, but I think the topic-starter is smart
enough
to understand that I suggested only a hint, a sketch, a sample of how
to use key= with lambda, not a ready-to-apply solution.
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Re: How to sort a list of strings on a substring

2009-10-05 Thread Steven D'Aprano
On Mon, 05 Oct 2009 20:33:51 -0700, n00m wrote:

 No, that's incorrect. Try it with this data and you will see it fails:
 
 Of course, you are right, but I think the topic-starter is smart enough
 to understand that I suggested only a hint, a sketch, a sample of how to
 use key= with lambda, not a ready-to-apply solution.

Oh please. That's a ridiculous excuse. Your post started with Here you 
are -- the implication is that you thought it *was* a solution, not a 
hint. A hint would be something like Write a key function, perhaps using 
lambda, and pass it to the sort() method using the key parameter.

There's no shame at writing buggy code. There's not a person here who has 
never made a silly mistake, and most of us have done so in public too. 
Some real clangers too. What matters is how folks respond to having the 
their mistakes pointed out, and whether they learn from it.




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Re: How to sort a list of strings on a substring

2009-10-05 Thread n00m
English language is not my mother toung,
so I can't grasp many subtle nuances of it.
Maybe here you are means to me quite a
different thing than to you.
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Re: How to sort a list of strings on a substring

2009-10-05 Thread Scott
On Oct 5, 6:05 pm, MRAB pyt...@mrabarnett.plus.com wrote:
 Scott wrote:
  I create a list of logs called LogList. Here is a sample:

  LogList =
  [inbound tcp office 192.168.0.125 inside 10.1.0.91 88,
  inbound tcp office 192.168.0.220 inside 10.1.0.31 2967,
  inbound udp lab 172.24.0.110 inside 10.1.0.6 161,
  inbound udp office 192.168.0.220 inside 10.1.0.13 53]

  I want to sort the list on index 3 of each string - the first IP
  Address.

  I only need strings with similar, first IP's to be together. I don't
  need all of the IP's to be in order. For example:
  either:
  SortedList =
  [inbound udp lab 172.24.0.110 inside 10.1.0.6 161,
  inbound tcp office 192.168.0.220 inside 10.1.0.31 2967,
  inbound udp office 192.168.0.220 inside 10.1.0.13 53,
  inbound tcp office 192.168.0.125 inside 10.1.0.91 88]
  -or-
  SortedList =
  [inbound tcp office 192.168.0.220 inside 10.1.0.31 2967,
  inbound udp office 192.168.0.220 inside 10.1.0.13 53,
  inbound udp lab 172.24.0.110 inside 10.1.0.6 161,
  inbound tcp office 192.168.0.125 inside 10.1.0.91 88]
  -or-
  etc.

  would be fine.

  I'm reading a lot on sort, sorted, cmp, etc. but I'm just not getting
  how to use an element of a string as a key within a list of strings.
  I'm using Python 2.6.2.

 Forget about cmp, just use the 'key' argument of the list's 'sort'
 method or the 'sorted' function (the latter is better if you want to
 keep the original list). The 'key' argument expects a function (anything
 callable, actually) that accepts a single argument (the item) and
 returns a value to be used as the key, and the items will be sorted
 according to that key. In this case you want the items sorted by the
 fourth 'word', so split the item into words and return the one at index
 3:

 def key_word(item):
      return item.split()[3]

 SortedList = sorted(LogList, key=key_word)

 If the function is short and simple enough, lambda is often used instead
 of a named function:

 SortedList = sorted(LogList, key=lambda item: item.split()[3])

Ok, the lambda worked as advertised. THANK YOU!!

Thanks for giving both a def and lambda example. I'll be saving them.
-Scott
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Re: How to sort a list of strings on a substring

2009-10-05 Thread alex23
Steven D'Aprano ste...@remove.this.cybersource.com.au wrote:
 Oh please. That's a ridiculous excuse. Your post started with Here you
 are -- the implication is that you thought it *was* a solution, not a
 hint. A hint would be something like Write a key function, perhaps using
 lambda, and pass it to the sort() method using the key parameter.

In n00m's defense, the OP's question was I'm just not getting how to
use an element of a string as a key within a list of strings, which
n00m's post did answer, and which did work with the data set given. If
Scott had asked could someone show me how to do this, then yes, the
here you are would have been wrong.

Ah, semantics and the lack of expression in text :)
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Re: How to sort a list of strings on a substring

2009-10-05 Thread Steven D'Aprano
On Mon, 05 Oct 2009 21:16:38 -0700, n00m wrote:

 English language is not my mother toung, so I can't grasp many subtle
 nuances of it. Maybe here you are means to me quite a different thing
 than to you.

It means here is the thing you were looking for. Anyway, nothing I 
wrote was meant as an attack on you.


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Re: How to sort a list of strings on a substring

2009-10-05 Thread n00m
In my early teen, school years Let It Be by The Beatles sounded for
my
ears (incredibly clearly and obviously!) as Lia Ri Pip.
In school I studied French, English only many years later.

My inner translation of Here you are! is smth like
Catch it!, Take it!, Look at this! etc
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