Re: Getting sorting order
- From: leodp <leodp@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 30 Jun 2008 02:47:52 -0700 (PDT)
Or provide a better explanation and an example. Do you mean something like
this?
Hi Peter,
a small example:
master=[1,4,3,2]
slave1=['d','c','b','a']
slave2=[1,2,3,4]
master.sort() # this is ok, but does not return infos on how the list
was sorted
slave1.sort(key=_maybe_something_here_referring_to_master_)
slave2.sort(key=_maybe_something_here_referring_to_master_)
Then I should get:
master=[1,2,3,4]
slave1=['d','a','b','c']
slave2=[1,4,3,2]
Hope it is more clear now.
Thanks, leodp
.
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: Getting sorting order
- From: Mark Tolonen
- Re: Getting sorting order
- From: Peter Otten
- Re: Getting sorting order
- References:
- Getting sorting order
- From: leodp
- Re: Getting sorting order
- From: Peter Otten
- Getting sorting order
- Prev by Date: Re: Help with Borg design Pattern
- Next by Date: Re: Why is recursion so slow?
- Previous by thread: Re: Getting sorting order
- Next by thread: Re: Getting sorting order
- Index(es):