I am using itertools.groupby to parse a short tab-delimited textfile. the text file has several columns and all I want to do is group all the entries that have a particular value x in a particular column. The code below does this for a column called name2, looking for the value in variable x. I tried to do this using csv.DictReader and itertools.groupby. In the table, there are 8 rows that match this criteria so 8 entries should be returned. Instead groupby returns two sets of entries, one with a single entry and another with 7, which seems like the wrong behavior. I do the matching manually below on the same data and get the right result:
import itertools, operator, csv
col_name = "name2"
x = "ENSMUSG00000002459"
print "looking for entries with value %s in column %s" %(x, col_name)
print "groupby gets it wrong: "
data = csv.DictReader(open(f), delimiter="\t", fieldnames=fieldnames)
for name, entries in itertools.groupby(data, key=operator.itemgetter(col_name)):
if name == "ENSMUSG00000002459":
wrong_result = [e for e in entries]
print "wrong result has %d entries" %(len(wrong_result))
print "manually grouping entries is correct: "
data = csv.DictReader(open(f), delimiter="\t", fieldnames=fieldnames)
correct_result = []
for row in data:
if row[col_name] == "ENSMUSG00000002459":
correct_result.append(row)
print "correct result has %d entries" %(len(correct_result))
The output I get is:
looking for entries with value ENSMUSG00000002459 in column name2
groupby gets it wrong:
wrong result has 7 entries
wrong result has 1 entries
manually grouping entries is correct:
correct result has 8 entries
what is going on here? If groupby is really grouping, it seems like I should only get one set of entries per x, but instead it returns two. I cannot figure this out. EDIT: Ah got it it should be sorted.

groupby()works, but it is the documented behaviour, I suggest you read the docs a little more closely. – Lattyware Oct 24 '12 at 0:10