If I understand you correctly, this should do what you want:
>>> stats = {'a': {'email1':4, 'email2':3},
... 'the': {'email1':2, 'email3':4},
... 'or': {'email1':2, 'email3':1}}
>>> chi = {'a': 7, 'the':6, 'or':3}
>>> sorted(stats, key=chi.get)
['or', 'the', 'a']
Let me know if this works for you. Also, as Boud mentioned above, you should consider numpy
/scipy
, which would probably provide better performance -- and would definitely provide lots of built-in functionality.
Since you say this doesn't work -- for reasons you haven't yet explained -- here's a more general example of how to use the key
argument. This shows that get
works with Counter
objects as well as standard dicts, but also how to create a function that does something :
>>> stats = {'a': {'email1':4, 'email2':3},
... 'the': {'email1':2, 'email3':4},
... 'or': {'email1':2, 'email3':1}}
>>> wordlists = ([k] * sum(d.itervalues()) for k, d in stats.iteritems())
>>> chi = collections.Counter(word for seq in wordlists for word in seq)
>>> sorted(stats, key=chi.get)
['or', 'the', 'a']
>>> sorted(stats, key=lambda x: chi[x] + 3)
['or', 'the', 'a']
>>> sorted(stats, key=chi.get, reverse=True)
['a', 'the', 'or']
I still don't completely understand what you're looking for, but perhaps you mean to get a sorted list of key, value tuples?
>>> sorted(stats.iteritems(), key=lambda x: chi[x[0]])
[('or', {'email3': 1, 'email1': 2}),
('the', {'email3': 4, 'email1': 2}),
('a', {'email2': 3, 'email1': 4})]
I would actually recommend splitting this up though:
>>>> sorted_keys = sorted(stats, key=chi.get)
>>>> [(k, stats[k]) for k in sorted_keys]
[('or', {'email3': 1, 'email1': 2}), ('the', {'email3': 4, 'email1': 2}), ('a', {'email2': 3, 'email1': 4})]
You said you want something sorted by the values in chi
, but "with the same structure as stats." That's not possible because dictionaries don't have an order; the closest you can come is a sorted list of tuples, or an OrderedDict
(in 2.7+).
>>>> collections.OrderedDict((k, stats[k]) for k in sorted_keys)
OrderedDict([('or', {'email3': 1, 'email1': 2}), ('the', {'email3': 4, 'email1': 2}), ('a', {'email2': 3, 'email1': 4})])
If you have to frequently reorder the dictionary, this method is kind of pointless.
scipy
package, modulescipy.stats
wherechisquare
function is