2

I am just a beginner in python. I have document score= {1:0.98876, 8:0.12245, 13:0.57689} which is stored in dictionary. The keys are corresponding to a series of document id and the values are corresponding to the score for each document id. How do I rank the document based on the scores?

inverse=[(value, key) for key, value in score.items()]
fmax=max(inverse)

I already found the maximum values by using the method above which return:

(0.98876,1)

But what I want is to rank the documents and store in a list:

{(0.98876,1),(0.57689,13),(0.12245,8)}
1
  • your output structure is a set, not a list. Jun 29, 2010 at 17:13

6 Answers 6

3
sorted(score.items(), key=lambda x:-x[1])

should do the trick

The order of the elements in a dictionary is not defined, so the result of the sorting has to be stored in a list (or an OrderedDict).

You should convert it to a list of tuples using items(). With sorted() you can sort them, the key parameter tells it to sort according to the inverse of the second tuple element.

Full example:

>>> score= {1:0.98876, 8:0.12245, 13:0.57689}
>>> sorted(score.items(), key=lambda x:-x[1])
[(1, 0.98875999999999997), (13, 0.57689000000000001), (8, 0.12245)]
>>> print [(y,x) for (x,y) in _]
[(0.98875999999999997, 1), (0.57689000000000001, 13), (0.12245, 8)]

This also shows how to reverse the elements in the tuple if you really want to do that.

2
  • dictionary cannot be sorted, that's something new, try sorted(score). Also sorted takes any iterable not necessarily a list, so .iteritems would do just fine in python-2.x Jun 29, 2010 at 17:24
  • sorted(score) returns a sorted list of keys. With "can not be sorted" I meant that a dictionary has no defined order, so the result of the sorting has to be a list. That was a bit sloppy of me. Jun 29, 2010 at 17:30
2

if you want to modify original list inverse then use inverse.sort(reverse=True).
If you want to produce a new list and leave original list untouched, use sorted(inverse, reverse=True).

You don't need an intermediate list, however, just use score:

>>> sorted(score.items(), key=lambda x: x[1], reverse=True)
[(1, 0.98876), (13, 0.57689), (8, 0.12245)]
0

After your inverse method, this would do the trick:

ranked = inverse.sort()

And here's some more info on sorting in python: http://wiki.python.org/moin/HowTo/Sorting/

0

Sort the inverse list:

inverse.sort()

This will return the list in ascending order, if you want it in reverse order, reverse it also:

inverse.reverse()
0

use this: inverse.sort(reverse=True)

have a look here for more info on sorting

0

if you want rank itens in dict:

score = {1:0.98876, 8:0.12245, 13:0.57689}
# get a list of items...
list = score.items()
print list
[(8, 0.12245), (1, 0.98875999999999997), (13, 0.57689000000000001)]

# Sort items.
list.sort()
print list 
[(1, 0.98875999999999997), (8, 0.12245), (13, 0.57689000000000001)]
# reverse order
list.reverse()
print list
[(13, 0.57689000000000001), (8, 0.12245), (1, 0.98875999999999997)]

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.