I want to sort a list of tuples by their second elements.
Example input:
[("Bob",3),("Terry",1)]
Example output:
[("Terry",1)("Bob",3)]
Another cool trick is to use on
from Data.Function:
import Data.Function (on)
import Data.List (sortBy)
sortBy (compare `on` snd) [...]
Not much different than comparing
but a nice trick from time to time.
on
has some nice tricks. I occasionally find equating = on (==)
to be useful. (comparing = on compare
)
Feb 16, 2012 at 23:19
You can use sortBy
and comparing
:
sortBy :: (a -> a -> Ordering) -> [a] -> [a]
comparing :: (Ord b) => (a -> b) -> a -> a -> Ordering
In this case, we want to compare by the second element. You can use comparing snd
to get a function that can compare two tuples by their second element.
myFancySort = {- implementation using ehird's hints here -}
Feb 16, 2012 at 21:28
Consider a "regular" sort
sort xs = ... a < b ...
Such sorts must make use of compare
, or its friends such as <
. So if you have implemented such a thing already, then instead of just compare a b
or a < b
, you can instead do compare (snd a) (snd b)
or snd a < snd b
.
sort xs = ... snd a < snd b ...
Of course if you get smart, you'll abstract out the "accessor", and make it an additional input to the sorting function:
sortComparingOn f xs = ... f a < f b ...
You might even abstract out the comparator altogether:
sortBy cmp xs = ... a `cmp` b ...
sortBy
is provided in Data.List, as ehird mentioned.
homework
tag.