26

I need to sort a list of [x,y] coordinates that looks like this:

list = [[1,2],[0,2],[2,1],[1,1],[2,2],[2,0],[0,1],[1,0],[0,0]]

The pattern I'm looking for after sorting is:

[x,y] coordinate shall be sorted by y first and then by x. The new list should look like:

list = [[0,0],[1,0],[2,0],[0,1],[1,1],[2,1],[0,2],[1,2],[2,2]]

I can't figure out how to do it and would appreciate some help.

1
  • 2
    Also the faster and cleaner answer isn't here. Which would be my_list = np.array(list) ind = np.lexsort((my_list[:,1], mylist[:,0])) sorted = my_list[ind] May 14, 2019 at 23:13

3 Answers 3

57

use sorted with key:

>>> my_list = [[1,2],[0,2],[2,1],[1,1],[2,2],[2,0],[0,1],[1,0],[0,0]]
>>> sorted(my_list , key=lambda k: [k[1], k[0]])
[[0, 0], [1, 0], [2, 0], [0, 1], [1, 1], [2, 1], [0, 2], [1, 2], [2, 2]]

It will first sort on the y value and if that's equal then it will sort on the x value.

I would also advise to not use list as a variable because it is a built-in data structure.

5
  • 1
    No problem. Nice answer! May 9, 2016 at 9:33
  • Cool, but if I want to 1) sort by y 2@ sort by x, how to do it in this? Sep 6, 2019 at 0:59
  • 2
    my_updated_list = sorted(my_list , key=lambda k: [k[1], k[0]]), you have to assign that to new variable.
    – Antti
    Jun 24, 2020 at 16:25
  • @LipingHuang That is exactly what this method does. See Antti's comment. If you wanted it the other way around, swap k[1] with k[0]. Oct 31, 2020 at 15:10
  • in python 3.10 you need to re assign the return value from sorted back to the list: my_list = sorted(...) Dec 14, 2022 at 11:41
0

you can convert list into pandas dataframe before sorting, since pandas give many buit-in functions to work on df. you will have lot more options compared to list

>>> import pandas as pd
>>> list = [[1,2],[0,2],[2,1],[1,1],[2,2],[2,0],[0,1],[1,0],[0,0]]
>>> df = pd.DataFrame(list, columns=['x','y'])
>>> df_sorted = df.sort_values(by=['y', 'x'])
>>> df_sorted
   x  y
8  0  0
7  1  0
5  2  0
6  0  1
3  1  1
2  2  1
1  0  2
0  1  2
4  2  2
-3

Define a virtual index Z = (X+Y) now perform quick sort on Z and based on index Z pick elements (X, Y). Points on circle will lead to same Z (and obviously will stick together in sort results)

1
  • 8
    this can't work because the coordinates (3,11) and (11,3) would give you the same Z when in reality they're very different points
    – Jona
    May 10, 2019 at 20:47

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