sorted() — Intermediate Examples
Returns a new sorted list from any iterable
sorted() with keyword arguments
Using sorted() with optional parameters and in iteration patterns.
python
# sorted() with key function words = ["banana", "Apple", "cherry", "date"] print(sorted(words)) print(sorted(words, key=str.lower)) print(sorted(words, key=len)) # Sort complex objects people = [("Alice", 30), ("Bob", 25), ("Charlie", 35)] print(sorted(people, key=lambda p: p[1]))
sorted() supports additional parameters that modify its behavior.
sorted() in real-world code
Practical patterns using sorted().
python
# Common sorted() patterns in production code print("sorted() is frequently used for data transformation") # Example: processing a list data = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] print(f"Sum: {sum(data)}") print(f"Max: {max(data)}") print(f"Sorted: {sorted(data, reverse=True)}")
These patterns show how sorted() is commonly used in production code.
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