sorting-by-functions

This commit is contained in:
Mark McGranaghan 2012-10-09 12:05:43 -07:00
parent f777d74cc5
commit 5594a438c1
3 changed files with 46 additions and 49 deletions

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@ -1,54 +1,45 @@
// ## Sorting by Functions
// Sorting a slice by a function is a bit tricker in Go
// than you may be used to in other languages. Let's look
// at some examples to see how it works.
// Sometimes we'll want to sort a collection by something
// other than its natural order. For example, suppose we
// wanted to sort strings by their length instead of
// alphabetically. Here's an example of custom sorts sorts
// in Go.
package main
import "fmt"
import "sort"
import "fmt"
type Person struct {
Name string
Age int
}
type ByName []Person
func (this ByName) Len() int {
return len(this)
}
func (this ByName) Less(i, j int) bool {
return this[i].Name < this[j].Name
}
func (this ByName) Swap(i, j int) {
this[i], this[j] = this[j], this[i]
}
type ByAge []Person
func (this ByAge) Len() int {
return len(this)
}
func (this ByAge) Less(i, j int) bool {
return this[i].Age < this[j].Age
}
func (this ByAge) Swap(i, j int) {
this[i], this[j] = this[j], this[i]
// In order to sort by a custom function in Go, we need a
// corresponding type. Here we've created a `ByLength`
// type that is just an alias for the builtin `[]string`
// type.
type ByLength []string
// We implement `sort.Interface` - `Len`, `Less`, and
// `Swap` - on our type so we can use the `sort` package's
// generic `Sort` function. `Len` and `Swap`
// will usually be similar accross types and `Less` will
// hold the actual custom sorting logic. In our case we
// want to sort in order of increasing string length, so
// we use `len(s[i])` and `len(s[j])` here.
func (s ByLength) Len() int {
return len(s)
}
func (s ByLength) Swap(i, j int) {
s[i], s[j] = s[j], s[i]
}
func (s ByLength) Less(i, j int) bool {
return len(s[i]) < len(s[j])
}
// With all of this in place, we can now implement our
// custom sort by casting the original `fruits` slice to
// `ByLength`, and then use `sort.Sort` on that typed
// slice.
func main() {
kids := []Person{
{"Jack", 10},
{"Jill", 9},
{"Bob", 12},
}
fmt.Println("Original:", kids)
sort.Sort(ByName(kids))
fmt.Println("ByName: ", kids)
sort.Sort(ByAge(kids))
fmt.Println("ByAge: ", kids)
fruits := []string{"peach", "banana", "kiwi"}
sort.Sort(ByLength(fruits))
fmt.Println(fruits)
}

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@ -1,4 +1,10 @@
$ go run sorting-by-function.go
Original: [{Jack 10} {Jill 9} {Bob 12}]
ByName: [{Bob 12} {Jack 10} {Jill 9}]
ByAge: [{Jill 9} {Jack 10} {Bob 12}]
# Running our program shows a list sorted by string
# length, as desired.
$ go run sorting-by-functions.go
[kiwi peach banana]
# By following this same pattern of creating a custom
# type, implementing the three `Interface` methods on that
# type, and then calling sort.Sort on a collection of that
# custom type, we can sort Go slices by arbitrary
# functions.

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@ -30,9 +30,9 @@ func main() {
for _, sourcePath := range sourcePaths {
foundLongLine := false
lines := readLines(sourcePath)
for _, line := range lines {
for i, line := range lines {
if !foundLongLine && !todoPat.MatchString(line) && (len(line) > 58) {
fmt.Println("measure:", sourcePath)
fmt.Printf("measure: %s:%d\n", sourcePath, i+1)
foundLongLine = true
foundLongFile = true
}