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sorting - In Python, how can I naturally sort a list of alphanumeric strings such that alpha characters sort ahead of numeric characters?

This is a fun little challenge that confronted me recently. I'll provide my answer below, but I'm curious to see whether there are more elegant or efficient solutions.

A delineation of the requirements as they were presented to me:

  1. Strings are alphanumeric (see test dataset below)
  2. Strings should be sorted naturally (see this question for explanation)
  3. Alpha characters should be sorted ahead of numeric characters (i.e. 'abc' before '100')
  4. Uppercase instances of alpha chars should be sorted ahead of lowercase instances (i.e. 'ABc', 'Abc', 'abc')

Here's a test dataset:

test_cases = [
    # (unsorted list, sorted list)
    (list('bca'), ['a', 'b', 'c']),
    (list('CbA'), ['A', 'b', 'C']),
    (list('r0B9a'), ['a', 'B', 'r', '0', '9']),
    (['a2', '1a', '10a', 'a1', 'a100'], ['a1', 'a2', 'a100', '1a', '10a']),
    (['GAM', 'alp2', 'ALP11', '1', 'alp100', 'alp10', '100', 'alp1', '2'],
        ['alp1', 'alp2', 'alp10', 'ALP11', 'alp100', 'GAM', '1', '2', '100']),
    (list('ra0b9A'), ['A', 'a', 'b', 'r', '0', '9']),
    (['Abc', 'abc', 'ABc'], ['ABc', 'Abc', 'abc']),
]

Bonus Test Case

This is inspired by Janne Karila's comment below that the selected answer currently fails (but wouldn't really be a practical concern in my case):

(['0A', '00a', 'a', 'A', 'A0', '00A', '0', 'a0', '00', '0a'],
        ['A', 'a', 'A0', 'a0', '0', '00', '0A', '00A', '0a', '00a'])
See Question&Answers more detail:os

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1 Answer

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re_natural = re.compile('[0-9]+|[^0-9]+')

def natural_key(s):
    return [(1, int(c)) if c.isdigit() else (0, c.lower()) for c in re_natural.findall(s)] + [s]

for case in test_cases:
    print case[1]
    print sorted(case[0], key=natural_key)

['a', 'b', 'c']
['a', 'b', 'c']
['A', 'b', 'C']
['A', 'b', 'C']
['a', 'B', 'r', '0', '9']
['a', 'B', 'r', '0', '9']
['a1', 'a2', 'a100', '1a', '10a']
['a1', 'a2', 'a100', '1a', '10a']
['alp1', 'alp2', 'alp10', 'ALP11', 'alp100', 'GAM', '1', '2', '100']
['alp1', 'alp2', 'alp10', 'ALP11', 'alp100', 'GAM', '1', '2', '100']
['A', 'a', 'b', 'r', '0', '9']
['A', 'a', 'b', 'r', '0', '9']
['ABc', 'Abc', 'abc']
['ABc', 'Abc', 'abc']

Edit: I decided to revisit this question and see if it would be possible to handle the bonus case. It requires being more sophisticated in the tie-breaker portion of the key. To match the desired results, the alpha parts of the key must be considered before the numeric parts. I also added a marker between the natural section of the key and the tie-breaker so that short keys always come before long ones.

def natural_key2(s):
    parts = re_natural.findall(s)
    natural = [(1, int(c)) if c.isdigit() else (0, c.lower()) for c in parts]
    ties_alpha = [c for c in parts if not c.isdigit()]
    ties_numeric = [c for c in parts if c.isdigit()]
    return natural + [(-1,)] + ties_alpha + ties_numeric

This generates identical results for the test cases above, plus the desired output for the bonus case:

['A', 'a', 'A0', 'a0', '0', '00', '0A', '00A', '0a', '00a']

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