问题:sorted(list)和list.sort()有什么区别?

list.sort()对列表进行排序并替换原始列表,而sorted(list)返回列表的排序后的副本,而不更改原始列表。

  • 什么时候比另一种更好?
  • 哪个更有效?减多少
  • list.sort()执行完列表后,可以将列表还原为未排序状态吗?

list.sort() sorts the list and replaces the original list, whereas sorted(list) returns a sorted copy of the list, without changing the original list.

  • When is one preferred over the other?
  • Which is more efficient? By how much?
  • Can a list be reverted to the unsorted state after list.sort() has been performed?

回答 0

sorted()返回一个新的排序列表,而原始列表不受影响。就地list.sort()对列表进行排序,使列表索引突变,然后返回None(就像所有就地操作一样)。

sorted()适用于任何可迭代的对象,而不仅仅是列表。字符串,元组,字典(您将获得键),生成器等,返回包含所有已排序元素的列表。

  • 使用list.sort()时要变异列表中,sorted()当你想要一个新的排序的对象返回。使用sorted()时要排序的东西,是一个可迭代,而不是一个名单尚未

  • 对于列表,list.sort()它比sorted()不必创建副本要快。对于其他任何迭代,您别无选择。

  • 不,您无法检索原始位置。一旦您调用list.sort(),原始订单就消失了。

sorted() returns a new sorted list, leaving the original list unaffected. list.sort() sorts the list in-place, mutating the list indices, and returns None (like all in-place operations).

sorted() works on any iterable, not just lists. Strings, tuples, dictionaries (you’ll get the keys), generators, etc., returning a list containing all elements, sorted.

  • Use list.sort() when you want to mutate the list, sorted() when you want a new sorted object back. Use sorted() when you want to sort something that is an iterable, not a list yet.

  • For lists, list.sort() is faster than sorted() because it doesn’t have to create a copy. For any other iterable, you have no choice.

  • No, you cannot retrieve the original positions. Once you called list.sort() the original order is gone.


回答 1

sorted(list)vs和有list.sort()什么区别?

  • list.sort 原位修改列表并返回 None
  • sorted 接受所有可迭代的并返回一个已排序的新列表。

sorted 等效于此Python实现,但是CPython内置函数应该是用C编写的,因此运行起来应可测量得更快:

def sorted(iterable, key=None):
    new_list = list(iterable)    # make a new list
    new_list.sort(key=key)       # sort it
    return new_list              # return it

什么时候使用?

  • 使用list.sort时,你不希望保留原来的排序顺序(这样你就可以重新使用内存就地列表。)当你在列表的唯一所有者(如果该名单是由其他代码和你共享对其进行更改,则可以在使用该列表的地方引入错误。)
  • 使用sorted时要创建一个新的列表,只有本地代码拥有,当你想保留原来的排序顺序或。

list.sort()之后是否可以检索列表的原始位置?

否-除非您自己进行复制,否则该信息将丢失,因为该排序是就地完成的。

“哪个更快?又快多少?”

为了说明创建新列表的代价,请使用timeit模块,这是我们的设置:

import timeit
setup = """
import random
lists = [list(range(10000)) for _ in range(1000)]  # list of lists
for l in lists:
    random.shuffle(l) # shuffle each list
shuffled_iter = iter(lists) # wrap as iterator so next() yields one at a time
"""

这是我们随机排列的10000个整数的列表的结果,正如我们在此处看到的,我们已经证明了一个较旧的列表创建费用神话

Python 2.7

>>> timeit.repeat("next(shuffled_iter).sort()", setup=setup, number = 1000)
[3.75168503401801, 3.7473005310166627, 3.753129180986434]
>>> timeit.repeat("sorted(next(shuffled_iter))", setup=setup, number = 1000)
[3.702025591977872, 3.709248117986135, 3.71071034099441]

Python 3

>>> timeit.repeat("next(shuffled_iter).sort()", setup=setup, number = 1000)
[2.797430992126465, 2.796825885772705, 2.7744789123535156]
>>> timeit.repeat("sorted(next(shuffled_iter))", setup=setup, number = 1000)
[2.675589084625244, 2.8019039630889893, 2.849375009536743]

经过一番反馈,我决定采用具有不同特征的另一种测试是可取的。在这里,我为每次迭代1000次提供了相同的随机排序列表,其长度为100,000,而每次迭代的次数为1000。

import timeit
setup = """
import random
random.seed(0)
lst = list(range(100000))
random.shuffle(lst)
"""

我解释这种较大的差异是由Martijn提到的复制引起的,但是并不能支配到此处更老的答案中所指出的程度,此处的时间增加仅约10%

>>> timeit.repeat("lst[:].sort()", setup=setup, number = 10000)
[572.919036605, 573.1384446719999, 568.5923951]
>>> timeit.repeat("sorted(lst[:])", setup=setup, number = 10000)
[647.0584738299999, 653.4040515829997, 657.9457361929999]

我还以较小的类型运行了上述内容,并且看到新的sorted副本版本在1000长度的长度上仍需要大约2%的运行时间。

Poke也运行了自己的代码,这是代码:

setup = '''
import random
random.seed(12122353453462456)
lst = list(range({length}))
random.shuffle(lst)
lists = [lst[:] for _ in range({repeats})]
it = iter(lists)
'''
t1 = 'l = next(it); l.sort()'
t2 = 'l = next(it); sorted(l)'
length = 10 ** 7
repeats = 10 ** 2
print(length, repeats)
for t in t1, t2:
    print(t)
    print(timeit(t, setup=setup.format(length=length, repeats=repeats), number=repeats))

他发现长度为1000000的排序,(运行了100次)类似的结果,但时间仅增加了5%,以下是输出:

10000000 100
l = next(it); l.sort()
610.5015971539542
l = next(it); sorted(l)
646.7786222379655

结论:

sorted进行复制并进行排序的大型列表可能会主导差异,但是排序本身将主导操作,围绕这些差异组织代码将是过早的优化。我sorted需要一个新的数据排序列表list.sort时使用,而我需要就地排序列表时使用,然后由它确定我的用法。

What is the difference between sorted(list) vs list.sort()?

  • list.sort mutates the list in-place & returns None
  • sorted takes any iterable & returns a new list, sorted.

sorted is equivalent to this Python implementation, but the CPython builtin function should run measurably faster as it is written in C:

def sorted(iterable, key=None):
    new_list = list(iterable)    # make a new list
    new_list.sort(key=key)       # sort it
    return new_list              # return it

when to use which?

  • Use list.sort when you do not wish to retain the original sort order (Thus you will be able to reuse the list in-place in memory.) and when you are the sole owner of the list (if the list is shared by other code and you mutate it, you could introduce bugs where that list is used.)
  • Use sorted when you want to retain the original sort order or when you wish to create a new list that only your local code owns.

Can a list’s original positions be retrieved after list.sort()?

No – unless you made a copy yourself, that information is lost because the sort is done in-place.

“And which is faster? And how much faster?”

To illustrate the penalty of creating a new list, use the timeit module, here’s our setup:

import timeit
setup = """
import random
lists = [list(range(10000)) for _ in range(1000)]  # list of lists
for l in lists:
    random.shuffle(l) # shuffle each list
shuffled_iter = iter(lists) # wrap as iterator so next() yields one at a time
"""

And here’s our results for a list of randomly arranged 10000 integers, as we can see here, we’ve disproven an older list creation expense myth:

Python 2.7

>>> timeit.repeat("next(shuffled_iter).sort()", setup=setup, number = 1000)
[3.75168503401801, 3.7473005310166627, 3.753129180986434]
>>> timeit.repeat("sorted(next(shuffled_iter))", setup=setup, number = 1000)
[3.702025591977872, 3.709248117986135, 3.71071034099441]

Python 3

>>> timeit.repeat("next(shuffled_iter).sort()", setup=setup, number = 1000)
[2.797430992126465, 2.796825885772705, 2.7744789123535156]
>>> timeit.repeat("sorted(next(shuffled_iter))", setup=setup, number = 1000)
[2.675589084625244, 2.8019039630889893, 2.849375009536743]

After some feedback, I decided another test would be desirable with different characteristics. Here I provide the same randomly ordered list of 100,000 in length for each iteration 1,000 times.

import timeit
setup = """
import random
random.seed(0)
lst = list(range(100000))
random.shuffle(lst)
"""

I interpret this larger sort’s difference coming from the copying mentioned by Martijn, but it does not dominate to the point stated in the older more popular answer here, here the increase in time is only about 10%

>>> timeit.repeat("lst[:].sort()", setup=setup, number = 10000)
[572.919036605, 573.1384446719999, 568.5923951]
>>> timeit.repeat("sorted(lst[:])", setup=setup, number = 10000)
[647.0584738299999, 653.4040515829997, 657.9457361929999]

I also ran the above on a much smaller sort, and saw that the new sorted copy version still takes about 2% longer running time on a sort of 1000 length.

Poke ran his own code as well, here’s the code:

setup = '''
import random
random.seed(12122353453462456)
lst = list(range({length}))
random.shuffle(lst)
lists = [lst[:] for _ in range({repeats})]
it = iter(lists)
'''
t1 = 'l = next(it); l.sort()'
t2 = 'l = next(it); sorted(l)'
length = 10 ** 7
repeats = 10 ** 2
print(length, repeats)
for t in t1, t2:
    print(t)
    print(timeit(t, setup=setup.format(length=length, repeats=repeats), number=repeats))

He found for 1000000 length sort, (ran 100 times) a similar result, but only about a 5% increase in time, here’s the output:

10000000 100
l = next(it); l.sort()
610.5015971539542
l = next(it); sorted(l)
646.7786222379655

Conclusion:

A large sized list being sorted with sorted making a copy will likely dominate differences, but the sorting itself dominates the operation, and organizing your code around these differences would be premature optimization. I would use sorted when I need a new sorted list of the data, and I would use list.sort when I need to sort a list in-place, and let that determine my usage.


回答 2

主要区别是sorted(some_list)返回一个新的list

a = [3, 2, 1]
print sorted(a) # new list
print a         # is not modified

some_list.sort()将清单排序到位

a = [3, 2, 1]
print a.sort() # in place
print a         # it's modified

请注意,由于a.sort()不返回任何内容,因此print a.sort()将打印None


list.sort()之后是否可以检索列表的原始位置?

否,因为它会修改原始列表。

The main difference is that sorted(some_list) returns a new list:

a = [3, 2, 1]
print sorted(a) # new list
print a         # is not modified

and some_list.sort(), sorts the list in place:

a = [3, 2, 1]
print a.sort() # in place
print a         # it's modified

Note that since a.sort() doesn’t return anything, print a.sort() will print None.


Can a list original positions be retrieved after list.sort()?

No, because it modifies the original list.


回答 3

.sort()函数将新列表的值直接存储在list变量中;因此,第三个问题的答案为否。另外,如果使用sorted(list)进行此操作,则可以使用它,因为它没有存储在list变量中。也有时.sort()方法充当函数,或者说它在其中接受参数。

您必须将sorted(list)的值显式存储在变量中。

同样对于短数据处理,速度没有差别。但名单很长;您应该直接使用.sort()方法进行快速工作;但是您将再次面临不可逆转的行动。

The .sort() function stores the value of new list directly in the list variable; so answer for your third question would be NO. Also if you do this using sorted(list), then you can get it use because it is not stored in the list variable. Also sometimes .sort() method acts as function, or say that it takes arguments in it.

You have to store the value of sorted(list) in a variable explicitly.

Also for short data processing the speed will have no difference; but for long lists; you should directly use .sort() method for fast work; but again you will face irreversible actions.


回答 4

以下是一些简单的示例,以了解操作上的区别:

请在此处查看数字列表:

nums = [1, 9, -3, 4, 8, 5, 7, 14]

调用sorted此列表时,sorted复制该列表。(意味着您的原始列表将保持不变。)

让我们来看看。

sorted(nums)

退货

[-3, 1, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 14]

纵观nums再次

nums

我们看到原始列表(未更改且未排序)。sorted没有更改原始列表

[1, 2, -3, 4, 8, 5, 7, 14]

采用相同的nums列表并对其应用sort功能,将更改实际列表。

让我们来看看。

从我们的nums列表开始,以确保内容仍然相同。

nums

[-3, 1, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 14]

nums.sort()

现在原始的nums列表已更改,查看nums后,我们看到原始列表已更改并进行了排序。

nums
[-3, 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 8, 14]

Here are a few simple examples to see the difference in action:

See the list of numbers here:

nums = [1, 9, -3, 4, 8, 5, 7, 14]

When calling sorted on this list, sorted will make a copy of the list. (Meaning your original list will remain unchanged.)

Let’s see.

sorted(nums)

returns

[-3, 1, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 14]

Looking at the nums again

nums

We see the original list (unaltered and NOT sorted.). sorted did not change the original list

[1, 2, -3, 4, 8, 5, 7, 14]

Taking the same nums list and applying the sort function on it, will change the actual list.

Let’s see.

Starting with our nums list to make sure, the content is still the same.

nums

[-3, 1, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 14]

nums.sort()

Now the original nums list is changed and looking at nums we see our original list has changed and is now sorted.

nums
[-3, 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 8, 14]

回答 5

注意:sort()和sorted()之间最简单的区别是:sort()不返回任何值,而sorted()返回可迭代的列表。

sort()不返回任何值。

sort()方法仅按给定列表的元素以特定顺序排序-升序或降序,而不返回任何值。

sort()方法的语法为:

list.sort(key=..., reverse=...)

另外,您也可以出于相同目的使用Python的内置函数sorted()。排序函数返回排序列表

 list=sorted(list, key=..., reverse=...)

Note: Simplest difference between sort() and sorted() is: sort() doesn’t return any value while, sorted() returns an iterable list.

sort() doesn’t return any value.

The sort() method just sorts the elements of a given list in a specific order – Ascending or Descending without returning any value.

The syntax of sort() method is:

list.sort(key=..., reverse=...)

Alternatively, you can also use Python’s in-built function sorted() for the same purpose. sorted function return sorted list

 list=sorted(list, key=..., reverse=...)

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