Example 1: how do i sort list in python
my_list = [9, 3, 1, 5, 88, 22, 99]
# sort in decreasing order
my_list = sorted(my_list, reverse=True)
print(my_list)
# sort in increasing order
my_list = sorted(my_list, reverse=False)
print(my_list)
# another way to sort using built-in methods
my_list.sort(reverse=True)
print(my_list)
# sort again using slice indexes
print(my_list[::-1])
# Output
# [99, 88, 22, 9, 5, 3, 1]
# [1, 3, 5, 9, 22, 88, 99]
# [99, 88, 22, 9, 5, 3, 1]
# [1, 3, 5, 9, 22, 88, 99]
Example 2: python sort list in reverse
#1 Changes list
list.sort(reverse=True)
#2 Returns sorted list
sorted(list, reverse=True)
Example 3: python sort list
# sort() will change the original list into a sorted list
vowels = ['e', 'a', 'u', 'o', 'i']
vowels.sort()
# Output:
# ['a', 'e', 'i', 'o', 'u']
# sorted() will sort the list and return it while keeping the original
sortedVowels = sorted(vowels)
# Output:
# ['a', 'e', 'i', 'o', 'u']
Example 4: python sort
>>> student_tuples = [
... ('john', 'A', 15),
... ('jane', 'B', 12),
... ('dave', 'B', 10),
... ]
>>> sorted(student_tuples, key=lambda student: student[2]) # sort by age
[('dave', 'B', 10), ('jane', 'B', 12), ('john', 'A', 15)]
Example 5: sorted list python
sorted(iterable, key=None, reverse=False)
type(sorted(iterable, key=None, reverse=False)) = list
Example 6: how to sort a list descending python
# defning A as a list
A.sort(reverse = True)