Let's say I have a list of names that I want to sort. However, because of
inconsistency in how the data was entered, sometimes those names are capitalized
and other times they are not. Using
methodcaller,
I can normalize the sorting key used when comparing list items.
First, let's look at calling sorted with the list and no key:
>>> sorted(["butler", "Jemisin", "le guin", "Erdrich"])
['Erdrich', 'Jemisin', 'butler', 'le guin']butler which starts with a b gets moved to the 3rd position because it is
lowercase.
To sort this list using a normalized comparison, we will use methodcaller to
create a callable out of lower which is then passed as the sort key:
>>> from operator import methodcaller
>>> sorted(["butler", "Jemisin", "le guin", "Erdrich"], key=methodcaller("lower"))
['butler', 'Erdrich', 'Jemisin', 'le guin']That's the sort order I was originally hoping for.
What methodcaller is doing is creating a callable function that will invoke
lower with each string instance as the target. Conceptually similar to
"Erdrich".lower() or even getattr("Erdrich", "lower")() (notice this needs
to be immediately invoked).