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I need to print out the listdir of current directory, but sorted by file type. Something like this:

ASCII text:
 text
bzip2 compressed data, block size = 900k:
 strace_4.5.20.orig.tar.bz2
gzip compressed data, extra field, from Unix:
 openssh_5.8p1.orig.tar.gz
gzip compressed data, from Unix, last modified:
 eglibc_2.11.2.orig.tar.gz
 strace_4.5.20-2.debian.tar.gz
gzip compressed data, from Unix, max compression:
 openssh_5.8p1-2.debian.tar.gz
PDF document, version 1.0:
 attestazione.pdf
PDF document, version 1.2:
 risPP.9dic03.pdf
 risparz.7nov03.pdf

All this in python. On linux there's file command. How about in python?

2 Answers 2

1

Use the os module, get the extension of a file using os.path.splitext and then use list.sort.

import os
files = os.listdir(path)
def func(x):
   return os.path.splitext(x)[::-1]
files.sort(key = func)

Demo:

>>> lis = ['file1.zip', 'file2.zip', 'inotify.c', 'cmpsource.c', 'myfile.h']
>>> def func(x):
       return os.path.splitext(x)[::-1]
>>> lis.sort(key = func)
>>> lis
['cmpsource.c', 'inotify.c', 'myfile.h', 'file1.zip', 'file2.zip']
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  • It seems ok but when i try it on a real list of files, i get a non ordered list by extension. Jul 10, 2013 at 13:34
  • @AntonioFalcone add that real list of files in question body along with expected output. Jul 10, 2013 at 13:38
  • the problem is that 'path' is only the current directory path (/home in this case) and not the real path of every file. Jul 10, 2013 at 13:40
  • @AntonioFalcone os.listdir returns a list of all files from a particular directory, path to each file is not required. Jul 10, 2013 at 13:42
  • @AntonioFalcone If you want to sort by name as well then replace this line : return os.path.splitext(x)[-1] with return os.path.splitext(x)[::] Jul 10, 2013 at 13:46
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Got it. The right sorting method was:

files = os.listdir(folder)

files.sort(key=lambda f: os.path.splitext(f)[1])
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  • This is exactly what I was doing, btw this will not sort by file name. i.e file2.txt may come before file1.txt. Jul 10, 2013 at 14:02

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