I have a partially sorted tuple in Python 2.x.
Why Python reverse it instead of sort it?
>>> data = (u'a', (1,), 'b ', u'b', (2,), 'c ', u'c', (3,), 'd ', u'd', (4,), 'e')
>>> sorted(data) == list(reversed(data))
True
I look forward to Python 3.
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I have a partially sorted tuple in Python 2.x. Why Python reverse it instead of sort it?
I look forward to Python 3. |
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It fails because the sorting algorithm depends on a total ordering of the elements, which implies transitive The ordering of unicode strings, tuples, and strings isn't transitive:
I.e., there exists no valid sort for your list. At least not with the default comparator. |
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