Open In App

Python – Reverse sort Matrix Row by Kth Column

Sometimes, while working with data, we can have a problem in which we need to perform sorting of each row of records by some of decisive factor like score. This kind of problem is common in competitive programming and web development. Lets discuss certain ways in which this task can be performed. 

Method #1 : Using sorted() + lambda + reverse The combination of above methods can be used to perform this task. In this, we sort the list in descending order using reverse by particular column using lambda function and list comprehension. 






# Python3 code to demonstrate
# Reverse sort Matrix Row by Kth Column
# using sorted() + lambda + reverse()
 
# Initializing list
test_list = [['Manjeet', 65], ['Akshat', 42], ['Akash', 38], ['Nikhil', 192]]
 
# printing original lists
print("The original list is : " + str(test_list))
 
# Initializing K
K = 1
 
# Reverse sort Matrix Row by Kth Column
# using sorted() + lambda + reverse()
res = sorted(test_list, key = lambda ele: ele[K], reverse = True)
 
# printing result
print ("List after performing sorting of matrix records : " + str(res))

Output : 

The original list is : [[‘Manjeet’, 65], [‘Akshat’, 42], [‘Akash’, 38], [‘Nikhil’, 192]] List after performing sorting of matrix records : [[‘Nikhil’, 192], [‘Manjeet’, 65], [‘Akshat’, 42], [‘Akash’, 38]]



Time complexity: O(mlogn+nlogn), because it performs the same number of iterations as the original code.
Auxiliary space: O(m*n) as well, because it creates a dictionary with m * n keys and a list of m * n elements

Method #2 : Using sort() + itemgetter() The combination of above methods can also be used to solve this problem. In this, we perform the task of lambda function using itemgetter and sort() performs sorting. 




# Python3 code to demonstrate
# Reverse sort Matrix Row by Kth Column
# using sort() + itemgetter()
from operator import itemgetter
 
# Initializing list
test_list = [['Manjeet', 65], ['Akshat', 42], ['Akash', 38], ['Nikhil', 192]]
 
# printing original lists
print("The original list is : " + str(test_list))
 
# Initializing K
K = 1
 
# Reverse sort Matrix Row by Kth Column
# using sort() + itemgetter()
test_list.sort(key = itemgetter(K), reverse = True)
 
# printing result
print ("List after performing sorting of matrix records : " + str(test_list))

Output : 

The original list is : [[‘Manjeet’, 65], [‘Akshat’, 42], [‘Akash’, 38], [‘Nikhil’, 192]] List after performing sorting of matrix records : [[‘Nikhil’, 192], [‘Manjeet’, 65], [‘Akshat’, 42], [‘Akash’, 38]]

Method 3: Using a list comprehension

Step-by-step approach:




# Initializing list
test_list = [['Manjeet', 65], ['Akshat', 42], ['Akash', 38], ['Nikhil', 192]]
 
# printing original lists
print("The original list is : " + str(test_list))
 
# Initializing K
K = 1
 
# Reverse sort Matrix Row by Kth Column
# using list comprehension
test_list = [row for _, row in sorted([(x[K], x) for x in test_list], reverse=True)]
 
# printing result
print("List after performing sorting of matrix records : " + str(test_list))

Output
The original list is : [['Manjeet', 65], ['Akshat', 42], ['Akash', 38], ['Nikhil', 192]]
List after performing sorting of matrix records : [['Nikhil', 192], ['Manjeet', 65], ['Akshat', 42], ['Akash', 38]]

Time complexity: O(n log n), where n is the number of rows in the matrix. 
Auxiliary space: O(n), where n is the number of rows in the matrix.


Article Tags :