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Feature #12648

open

`Enumerable#sort_by` with descending option

Added by sawa (Tsuyoshi Sawada) over 8 years ago. Updated over 2 years ago.

Status:
Open
Assignee:
-
Target version:
-
[ruby-core:76660]

Description

I would like to pass an optional argument to Enumerable#sort_by or Enumerable#sort_by! to allow descending sort. When the sort key is singular, this could be done by passing a single optinal boolean variable that represents ascending when false (default) and descending when true:

[3, 1, 2].sort_by(&:itself)        # => [1, 2, 3]
[3, 1, 2].sort_by(false, &:itself) # => [1, 2, 3]
[3, 1, 2].sort_by(true, &:itself)  # => [3, 2, 1]

When there are multiple sort keys, corresponding numbers of arguments should be passed:

[3, 1, 2, 0].sort_by{|e| [e % 2, e]}               # => [0, 2, 1, 3]
[3, 1, 2, 0].sort_by(false, false){|e| [e % 2, e]} # => [0, 2, 1, 3]
[3, 1, 2, 0].sort_by(false, true){|e| [e % 2, e]}  # => [2, 0, 3, 1]
[3, 1, 2, 0].sort_by(true, false){|e| [e % 2, e]}  # => [1, 3, 0, 2]
[3, 1, 2, 0].sort_by(true, true){|e| [e % 2, e]}   # => [3, 1, 2, 0]

Related issues 1 (0 open1 closed)

Related to Ruby master - Feature #15725: Proposal: Add Array#reverse_sort, #revert_sort!, #reverse_sort_by, and #reverse_sort_by!RejectedActions

Updated by sawa (Tsuyoshi Sawada) over 8 years ago

When the number of arguments passed is less than the sort keys, sort should be ascended or descended at a higher array level.

[3, 1, 2, 0].sort_by{|e| [e % 2, e]}        # => [0, 2, 1, 3]
[3, 1, 2, 0].sort_by(false){|e| [e % 2, e]} # => [0, 2, 1, 3]
[3, 1, 2, 0].sort_by(true){|e| [e % 2, e]}  # => [3, 1, 2, 0]

In the last two examples above, the single argument false or true should describe ascending or descending sort of the array [e % 2, e] as a whole.

Updated by duerst (Martin Dürst) over 8 years ago

On 2016/08/02 18:57, wrote:

Issue #12648 has been reported by Tsuyoshi Sawada.

Feature #12648: Enumerable#sort_by with descending option
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/12648

I have felt the need for such an additional argument (or something
similar) quite recently. But the examples with numbers aren't very
convincing, just changing

array.sort_by { |e| e }

to

array.sort_by { |e| -e }

will do the job. But there are many cases where that's not possible,
starting with strings.

Updated by nobu (Nobuyoshi Nakada) over 8 years ago

I prefer more descriptive option, e.g., enum.sort_by(:descend) {|e| e}.

https://github.com/ruby/ruby/compare/trunk...nobu:feature/12648-sort_by-order

Updated by sawa (Tsuyoshi Sawada) over 8 years ago

Nobuyoshi Nakada wrote:

I prefer more descriptive option, e.g., enum.sort_by(:descend) {|e| e}.

https://github.com/ruby/ruby/compare/trunk...nobu:feature/12648-sort_by-order

That's good too.

Updated by knu (Akinori MUSHA) over 8 years ago

Maybe the shorter forms :asc / :desc like in SQL would sound more familiar.

Updated by sawa (Tsuyoshi Sawada) over 8 years ago

Akinori MUSHA wrote:

Maybe the shorter forms :asc / :desc like in SQL would sound more familiar.

Actually, I also had that in mind as one way to go.

Updated by MSP-Greg (Greg L) over 8 years ago

In concept, I agree, but, although it's common to return an array from the block, any object can be returned that supports <=>.

Hence, a better solution might be adding a method like sort_keys or sort_key, where an array is returned by the block, and an array is used as the single parameter for ascending/descending info. I might suggest, rather than true / false, or :asc / :desc, use 1 for ascending and -1 for descending.

If the parameter array is shorter, remaining keys could default to ascending, if it's longer, it's truncated.

Or (and maybe better), it could just raise an error if the arrays are different length.

Updated by nobu (Nobuyoshi Nakada) over 8 years ago

Greg L wrote:

Hence, a better solution might be adding a method like sort_keys or sort_key, where an array is returned by the block, and an array is used as the single parameter for ascending/descending info.

Could you make clear what object these sort_key/sort_keys methods belong to?
The array to be sorted?
Or the returned object (it may not be an array) from the block?

I might suggest, rather than true / false, or :asc / :desc, use 1 for ascending and -1 for descending.

If the parameter array is shorter, remaining keys could default to ascending, if it's longer, it's truncated.

Or (and maybe better), it could just raise an error if the arrays are different length.

Do you mean enum.sort_by(-1) {...} for descending?

Updated by MSP-Greg (Greg L) over 8 years ago

Nobuyoshi Nakada wrote:

Greg L wrote:

Hence, a better solution might be adding a method like sort_keys or sort_key, where an array is returned by the block, and an array is used as the single parameter for ascending/descending info.

Could you make clear what object these sort_key/sort_keys methods belong to?
The array to be sorted?
Or the returned object (it may not be an array) from the block?

I mentioned the fact that an array is often not returned by the block, hence, my suggestion for adding a new method.

Sorry, I should have shown a signature, below would be a possibility. The example shows three sort keys, 1st and 3rd are ascending, 2nd is descending.

t = enum.sort_key([1, -1, 1]) { |x| [f(x), g(x), h(x)] }

Do you mean enum.sort_by(-1) {...} for descending?

Yes, but in an array, as above. IOW, both the block return and the single parameter must be arrays.

Updated by MSP-Greg (Greg L) over 8 years ago

Taking a step back, we are using arrays simply because that is a object that allows sorting via multiple criteria (if criteria a is equal, test with criteria b, etc).

It is also my understanding that sort_by creates arrays of [enum_item, sort_value], and we are also using an array for sort_value.

I'm not much for writing (or reading) c, but it would seem that a new method could use whatever structures were most efficient, regardless of the fact that arrays are used for the parameter and the block return.

Updated by matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto) over 8 years ago

I think we are talking about two things at once.

First, adding reverse (or descending) option to sort_by.
I think it may be useful for some cases, but it's only slightly better than sort_by().reverse.

Second, adding secondary key sort order to sort_by.
It may be useful too for some cases, but it should be a separate method.
Do you have any name suggestion?

Matz.

Updated by MSP-Greg (Greg L) over 8 years ago

Yukihiro Matsumoto wrote:

I think we are talking about two things at once.

First, adding reverse (or descending) option to sort_by.
I think it may be useful for some cases, but it's only slightly better than sort_by().reverse.

I would concur.

Second, adding secondary key sort order to sort_by.

Just to clarify, I'm not sure what you mean by 'adding secondary key sort order', key word being 'secondary'. Original poster (Tsuyoshi Sawada) stated 'When there are multiple sort keys', so (hopefully) sort key limit of more than two...

It may be useful too for some cases, but it should be a separate method.
Do you have any name suggestion?

Maybe something like

sort_keys([sort order values]) { |x| [f(x), g(x), ...] }

where [sort order values] is an array of composed of 1 or -1 values. Most people would associate 1 with ascending and -1 with descending. I think true and false don't convey an order as well. As to 'rules' for whether the two arrays must be identical in length, or if not, what occurs, that's a lot of options.

At a minimum, I think [sort order values] should be optional, in which case all keys would sort ascending. As to length, it might be easiest to raise an error unless both are the same length.

Sorry for the delay.

Updated by knu (Akinori MUSHA) over 7 years ago

How does sort_r_by sound when we already have grep_v?

Updated by stomar (Marcus Stollsteimer) over 7 years ago

Personally, I really do not like grep_v, or generally using options from command line tools in method names.

Updated by knu (Akinori MUSHA) about 7 years ago

Something like this can be a solution for sorting with multiple keys with separate ordering directions.

module Comparable
  class SortableTuple < Array
    include Comparable

    attr_reader :orderings

    def initialize(orderings)
      # Adding keyword options like `allow_nil` (`:first`/`:last`) would be great.
      replace orderings.map { |key, dir|
        desc =
          case dir
          when :desc
            true
          when :asc
            false
          else
            raise ArgumentError, "direction must be either :asc or :desc: #{dir.inspect}"
          end
        [key, desc]
      }
    end

    def <=>(other)
      if other.instance_of?(self.class)
        other.each_with_index { |(b, desc), i|
          a, = self[i]
          case cmp = a <=> b
          when Integer
            return desc ? -cmp : cmp unless cmp.zero?
          else
            return cmp
          end
        }
      end
    end
  end

  def self.[](*args)
    SortableTuple.new(*args)
  end
end

require 'pp'
require 'time'

pp [
  ["banana", Date.parse("2017-10-03")],
  ["apple",  Date.parse("2017-10-03")],
  ["grape",  Date.parse("2017-10-02")],
  ["melon",  Date.parse("2017-10-02")],
  ["orange", Date.parse("2017-10-01")],
  ["cherry", Date.parse("2017-10-01")],
].sort_by { |name, date| Comparable[date => :asc, name => :desc] }
# [["apple", #<Date: 2017-10-03 ((2458030j,0s,0n),+0s,2299161j)>],
#  ["banana", #<Date: 2017-10-03 ((2458030j,0s,0n),+0s,2299161j)>],
#  ["grape", #<Date: 2017-10-02 ((2458029j,0s,0n),+0s,2299161j)>],
#  ["melon", #<Date: 2017-10-02 ((2458029j,0s,0n),+0s,2299161j)>],
#  ["cherry", #<Date: 2017-10-01 ((2458028j,0s,0n),+0s,2299161j)>],
#  ["orange", #<Date: 2017-10-01 ((2458028j,0s,0n),+0s,2299161j)>]]

Updated by knu (Akinori MUSHA) about 7 years ago

Another path could be to introduce the sense of "reversed object".

I don't yet have a good name for the method that wouldn't cause name clash, but here it goes.

module Comparable
  class ReversedObject
    include Comparable

    def initialize(object)
      @object = object
    end

    attr_reader :object

    def <=>(other)
      other.object <=> object if other.instance_of?(self.class)
    end
  end

  def reversed
    ReversedObject.new(self)
  end
end

p ["aaa", "bbb", "ccc"].sort_by(&:reversed)
# ["ccc", "bbb", "aaa"]

require 'pp'
require 'time'

pp [
  ["banana", Date.parse("2017-10-03")],
  ["apple",  Date.parse("2017-10-03")],
  ["grape",  Date.parse("2017-10-02")],
  ["melon",  Date.parse("2017-10-02")],
  ["orange", Date.parse("2017-10-01")],
  ["cherry", Date.parse("2017-10-01")],
].sort_by { |name, date| [date, name.reversed] }
# [["apple", #<Date: 2017-10-03 ((2458030j,0s,0n),+0s,2299161j)>],
#  ["banana", #<Date: 2017-10-03 ((2458030j,0s,0n),+0s,2299161j)>],
#  ["grape", #<Date: 2017-10-02 ((2458029j,0s,0n),+0s,2299161j)>],
#  ["melon", #<Date: 2017-10-02 ((2458029j,0s,0n),+0s,2299161j)>],
#  ["cherry", #<Date: 2017-10-01 ((2458028j,0s,0n),+0s,2299161j)>],
#  ["orange", #<Date: 2017-10-01 ((2458028j,0s,0n),+0s,2299161j)>]]
Actions #17

Updated by mame (Yusuke Endoh) over 5 years ago

  • Related to Feature #15725: Proposal: Add Array#reverse_sort, #revert_sort!, #reverse_sort_by, and #reverse_sort_by! added

Updated by ttanimichi (Tsukuru Tanimichi) over 2 years ago

It's a lot of work to write sort_by { -1 * _1.created_at.to_f } when the target objects are Time instances.

['foo', 'bar', 'baz'].map { search(_1) }.flatten.sort_by { -1 * _1.created_at.to_f }

def search(query)
  client = Twitter::REST::Client.new do |config|
    config.consumer_key        = "YOUR_CONSUMER_KEY"
    config.consumer_secret     = "YOUR_CONSUMER_SECRET"
    config.access_token        = "YOUR_ACCESS_TOKEN"
    config.access_token_secret = "YOUR_ACCESS_SECRET"
  end
  
  client.search(query, result_type: "recent").take(10)
end
$ ruby -e "-1 * Time.now"
-e:1:in `*': Time can't be coerced into Integer (TypeError)
	from -e:1:in `<main>'
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