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I would like to sort a dataframe based on week number, and day of the week.

Week number variable is a double.

Day of the week is a text (Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri, Sat, Sun).

Here is my dataframe:

week_number  |  day_of_week  |  job_count  | eff_rate
-----------------------------------------------------
1            | Fri           |  30         |  70
1            | Mon           |  50         |  80       
1            | Sat           |  340        |  20
1            | Sun           |  1          |  8
1            | Thu           |  3          |  40
1            | Tue           |  4          |  10
1            | Wed           |  50         |  70
2            | Fri           |  120        |  180
2            | Mon           |  12         |  80
2            | Sat           |  11         |  9
2            | Sun           |  80         |  11
2            | Tue           |  60         |  14
2            | Thu           |  4          |  23
2            | Wed           |  1          |  50

I think that I would need to define a function where I define how the sort should order the content of the variable. Let's say the function is called manualsort. What would manualsort() look like such that it can be used like this?

 df.sort(asc("week_number"), manualsort("day_of_week"))

The outcome would be something like this:

week_number  |  day_of_week  |  job_count  | eff_rate
-----------------------------------------------------
1            | Mon           |  50         |  80
1            | Tue           |  4          |  10       
1            | Wed           |  50         |  70
1            | Thu           |  3          |  40
1            | Fri           |  120        |  180
1            | Sat           |  340        |  20
1            | Sun           |  1          |  8
1
  • Before you get horribly downvoted, what have you tried so far? Can you show us the code that isn't working the way you want it to?
    – wheaties
    Mar 15, 2016 at 17:20

1 Answer 1

0

I'm new to Scala and not sure how to write a function

A Scala function follows the format you described; but sometimes an example is far more useful than a template

def addThem( a:Int, b:Int ) : Int = {
  var sum:Int = 0
  sum = a + b
  return sum
}

The key points:

  • Items in the parenthesis of the function are variables passed to the function.
  • The types those items must conform to are AFTER the variable name, with a colon : as a delimiter.
  • The variables passed as parameters are separated by commas.
  • If the function has a declared (instead of inferred) return type, it is the "type of the function signature" so it comes AFTER the function signature, using the same "colon constraining type" pattern (like def getName() : String)
  • the equals sign afterwards assigns a code block to the function definition. The code block must have a compatible exit type with the function signature (In this case, the code block must return something compatible with Int)
  • Variable definitions within code blocks have the same name:Type format, but occasionally types are allowed to be inferred.

With these rules, I believe you will be able to start writing a few functions. For Sorting, you effectively provide a Scala version of the Java Comparator, except that you have more ways to do it in Scala, as you don't need to wrap the function in Object-Oriented Comparator class clothing.

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