189

I know that this sounds trivial but I did not realize that the sort() function of Python was weird. I have a list of "numbers" that are actually in string form, so I first convert them to ints, then attempt a sort.

list1=["1","10","3","22","23","4","2","200"]
for item in list1:
    item=int(item)

list1.sort()
print list1

Gives me:

['1', '10', '2', '200', '22', '23', '3', '4']

What I want is

['1','2','3','4','10','22','23','200']

I've looked around for some of the algorithms associated with sorting numeric sets, but the ones I found all involve sorting alphanumeric sets.

I know this is probably a no brainer problem but google and my textbook don't offer anything more or less useful than the .sort() function.

4
  • 13
    Note that your for loop does not do what I suspect that you think it does.
    – deinst
    Aug 6, 2010 at 17:21
  • 1
    At no time did you update list1. What made you think list was being updated?
    – S.Lott
    Aug 6, 2010 at 17:23
  • The similar problem raise when list1 = ['1', '1.10', '1.11', '1.1', '1.2'] is provided as input. Instead of getting output as ['1', '1.1', '1.2', '1.10', '1.11'], I am getting ['1', '1.1', '1.10', '1.11', '1.2']
    – sathish
    May 20, 2016 at 3:46
  • 2
    in python 3 you may want to use sorted(mylist)
    – Akin Hwan
    Dec 23, 2018 at 15:02

14 Answers 14

223

You haven't actually converted your strings to ints. Or rather, you did, but then you didn't do anything with the results. What you want is:

list1 = ["1","10","3","22","23","4","2","200"]
list1 = [int(x) for x in list1]
list1.sort()

If for some reason you need to keep strings instead of ints (usually a bad idea, but maybe you need to preserve leading zeros or something), you can use a key function. sort takes a named parameter, key, which is a function that is called on each element before it is compared. The key function's return values are compared instead of comparing the list elements directly:

list1 = ["1","10","3","22","23","4","2","200"]
# call int(x) on each element before comparing it
list1.sort(key=int)
# or if you want to do it all in the same line
list1 = sorted([int(x) for x in list1]) 
4
  • 8
    when I try key=int in 2.7 I get None
    – KI4JGT
    Jan 28, 2013 at 5:48
  • 1
    This works if the list element is stored as "integer", how shall be handled in case of float values? Eg., list1 = [1, 1.10, 1.11, 1.1, 1.2]
    – sathish
    May 19, 2016 at 9:01
  • 3
    @KI4JGT the sort method modifies the list and returns None. So instead of list1 = list1.sort(key=int), use just list1.sort(key=int) and list1 will already be sorted. Jun 20, 2018 at 16:41
  • 4
    @KI4JGT .sort() is an in place operator, it returns None, it sorts the list, you may want to use sorted()
    – sherpya
    Nov 14, 2018 at 15:31
75

I approached the same problem yesterday and found a module called natsort, which solves your problem. Use:

from natsort import natsorted # pip install natsort

# Example list of strings
a = ['1', '10', '2', '3', '11']

[In]  sorted(a)
[Out] ['1', '10', '11', '2', '3']

[In]  natsorted(a)
[Out] ['1', '2', '3', '10', '11']

# Your array may contain strings
[In]  natsorted(['string11', 'string3', 'string1', 'string10', 'string100'])
[Out] ['string1', 'string3', 'string10', 'string11', 'string100']

It also works for dictionaries as an equivalent of sorted.

0
44

You could pass a function to the key parameter to the .sort method. With this, the system will sort by key(x) instead of x.

list1.sort(key=int)

BTW, to convert the list to integers permanently, use the map function

list1 = list(map(int, list1))   # you don't need to call list() in Python 2.x

or list comprehension

list1 = [int(x) for x in list1]
1
  • list1.sort(key=int) works in place and also doesn't change the list content, great !
    – abdelgha4
    Jun 15, 2022 at 14:30
32

In case you want to use sorted() function: sorted(list1, key=int)

It returns a new sorted list.

1
  • 2
    Works with sets too!
    – M T
    May 16, 2020 at 16:11
21

You can also use:

import re

def sort_human(l):
    convert = lambda text: float(text) if text.isdigit() else text
    alphanum = lambda key: [convert(c) for c in re.split('([-+]?[0-9]*\.?[0-9]*)', key)]
    l.sort(key=alphanum)
    return l

This is very similar to other stuff that you can find on the internet but also works for alphanumericals like [abc0.1, abc0.2, ...].

2
  • You should probably either return a new list or modify the list, not both. The above code modifies the list and then returns it. Use sorted() to make a new list instead. Nov 17, 2020 at 19:15
  • 1
    Unfortunately this only works when letters and numbers don't appear in the same order; e.g. ["abc123", "123abc"]: TypeError: '<' not supported between instances of 'float' and 'str'. Solution: replace the covert function with (float(text), "") if text.isdigit() else (float("inf"), text). It will always return a (float, str) tuple, so comparison will always work.
    – Claude
    Feb 26 at 10:55
14

Python's sort isn't weird. It's just that this code:

for item in list1:
   item=int(item)

isn't doing what you think it is - item is not replaced back into the list, it is simply thrown away.

Anyway, the correct solution is to use key=int as others have shown you.

0
9

Seamus Campbell's answer doesn't work on Python 2.x.

list1 = sorted(list1, key=lambda e: int(e)) using lambda function works well.

3

Try this, it’ll sort the list in-place in descending order (there’s no need to specify a key in this case):

Process

listB = [24, 13, -15, -36, 8, 22, 48, 25, 46, -9]
listC = sorted(listB, reverse=True) # listB remains untouched
print listC

output:

 [48, 46, 25, 24, 22, 13, 8, -9, -15, -36]
1

The most recent solution is right. You are reading solutions as a string, in which case the order is 1, then 100, then 104 followed by 2 then 21, then 2001001010, 3 and so forth.

You have to CAST your input as an int instead:

sorted strings:

stringList = (1, 10, 2, 21, 3)

sorted ints:

intList = (1, 2, 3, 10, 21)

To cast, just put the stringList inside int ( blahblah ).

Again:

stringList = (1, 10, 2, 21, 3)

newList = int (stringList)

print newList

=> returns (1, 2, 3, 10, 21) 
3
  • 1
    TypeError: int() argument must be a string or a number, not 'tuple' Apr 14, 2014 at 14:56
  • Also, the strings in your stringList should have quotes.
    – Teepeemm
    Nov 20, 2015 at 18:01
  • 3
    That's a helluva prediction to make: "the most recent solution is right" ;) Feb 29, 2016 at 1:13
1

real problem is that sort sorts things alphanumerically. So if you have a list ['1', '2', '10', '19'] and run sort you get ['1', '10'. '19', '2']. ie 10 comes before 2 because it looks at the first character and sorts starting from that. It seems most methods in python return things in that order. For example if you have a directory named abc with the files labelled as 1.jpg, 2.jpg etc say up to 15.jpg and you do file_list=os.listdir(abc) the file_list is not ordered as you expect but rather as file_list=['1.jpg', '11.jpg'---'15.jpg', '2.jpg]. If the order in which files are processed is important (presumably that's why you named them numerically) the order is not what you think it will be. You can avoid this by using "zeros" padding. For example if you have a list alist=['01', '03', '05', '10', '02','04', '06] and you run sort on it you get the order you wanted. alist=['01', '02' etc] because the first character is 0 which comes before 1. The amount of zeros padding you need is determined by the largest value in the list.For example if the largest is say between 100 and 1000 you need to pad single digits as 001, 002 ---010,011--100, 101 etc.

0

If you want to use strings of the numbers better take another list as shown in my code it will work fine.

list1=["1","10","3","22","23","4","2","200"]

k=[]    
for item in list1:    
    k.append(int(item))

k.sort()
print(k)
# [1, 2, 3, 4, 10, 22, 23, 200]
0

Simple way to sort a numerical list

numlists = ["5","50","7","51","87","97","53"]
results = list(map(int, numlists))
results.sort(reverse=False)
print(results)
0
0

may be not the best python, but for string lists like ['1','1.0','2.0','2', '1.1', '1.10', '1.11', '1.2','7','3','5']with the expected target ['1', '1.0', '1.1', '1.2', '1.10', '1.11', '2', '2.0', '3', '5', '7'] helped me...

unsortedList = ['1','1.0','2.0','2', '1.1', '1.10', '1.11', '1.2','7','3','5']
sortedList = []
sortDict = {}
sortVal = []
#set zero correct (integer): examp: 1.000 will be 1 and breaks the order
zero = "000"
for i in sorted(unsortedList):
  x = i.split(".")
  if x[0] in sortDict:
    if len(x) > 1:
        sortVal.append(x[1])
    else:
        sortVal.append(zero)
    sortDict[x[0]] = sorted(sortVal, key = int)
  else:
    sortVal = []
    if len(x) > 1:
        sortVal.append(x[1])
    else:
        sortVal.append(zero)
    sortDict[x[0]] = sortVal
for key in sortDict:
  for val in sortDict[key]:
    if val == zero:
       sortedList.append(str(key))
    else:
       sortedList.append(str(key) + "." + str(val))
print(sortedList)
1
  • 2
    Welcome to SO! When you are about to answer an old question (this one is over 10 years old) that already has an accepted answer (that is the case here) please ask yourself: Do I really have a substantial improvement to offer? If not, consider refraining from answering.
    – Timus
    Oct 23, 2020 at 10:38
-5
scores = ['91','89','87','86','85']
scores.sort()
print (scores)

This worked for me using python version 3, though it didn't in version 2.

1
  • 6
    Try sorting with '11 and '100' there, that's when things get interesting.
    – Penz
    Jan 5, 2017 at 18:09

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.