Metadata-Version: 1.1
Name: natsort
Version: 3.4.1
Summary: Sort lists naturally
Home-page: https://github.com/SethMMorton/natsort
Author: Seth M. Morton
Author-email: drtuba78@gmail.com
License: MIT
Description: natsort
        =======
        
        .. image:: https://travis-ci.org/SethMMorton/natsort.svg?branch=master
            :target: https://travis-ci.org/SethMMorton/natsort
        
        .. image:: https://coveralls.io/repos/SethMMorton/natsort/badge.png?branch=master
            :target: https://coveralls.io/r/SethMMorton/natsort?branch=master
        
        Natural sorting for python. 
        
            - Source Code: https://github.com/SethMMorton/natsort
            - Downloads: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/natsort
            - Documentation: http://pythonhosted.org//natsort/
        
        Quick Description
        -----------------
        
        When you try to sort a list of strings that contain numbers, the normal python
        sort algorithm sorts lexicographically, so you might not get the results that you
        expect::
        
            >>> a = ['a2', 'a9', 'a1', 'a4', 'a10']
            >>> sorted(a)
            ['a1', 'a10', 'a2', 'a4', 'a9']
        
        Notice that it has the order ('1', '10', '2') - this is because the list is
        being sorted in lexicographical order, which sorts numbers like you would
        letters (i.e. 'b', 'ba', 'c').
        
        ``natsort`` provides a function ``natsorted`` that helps sort lists "naturally",
        either as real numbers (i.e. signed/unsigned floats or ints), or as versions.
        Using ``natsorted`` is simple::
        
            >>> from natsort import natsorted
            >>> a = ['a2', 'a9', 'a1', 'a4', 'a10']
            >>> natsorted(a)
            ['a1', 'a2', 'a4', 'a9', 'a10']
        
        ``natsorted`` identifies real numbers anywhere in a string and sorts them
        naturally.
        
        Sorting version numbers is just as easy with the ``versorted`` function::
        
            >>> from natsort import versorted
            >>> a = ['version-1.9', 'version-2.0', 'version-1.11', 'version-1.10']
            >>> versorted(a)
            ['version-1.9', 'version-1.10', 'version-1.11', 'version-2.0']
            >>> natsorted(a)  # natsorted tries to sort as signed floats, so it won't work
            ['version-2.0', 'version-1.9', 'version-1.11', 'version-1.10']
        
        You can mix and match ``int``, ``float``, and ``str`` (or ``unicode``) types
        when you sort::
        
            >>> a = ['4.5', 6, 2.0, '5', 'a']
            >>> natsorted(a)
            [2.0, '4.5', '5', 6, 'a']
            >>> # On Python 2, sorted(a) would return [2.0, 6, '4.5', '5', 'a']
            >>> # On Python 3, sorted(a) would raise an "unorderable types" TypeError
        
        The natsort algorithm does other fancy things like 
        
         - recursively descend into lists of lists
         - sort file paths correctly
         - allow custom sorting keys
         - exposes a natsort_key generator to pass to list.sort
        
        Please see the package documentation for more details, including 
        `examples and recipes <http://pythonhosted.org//natsort/examples.html>`_.
        
        Shell script
        ------------
        
        ``natsort`` comes with a shell script called ``natsort``, or can also be called
        from the command line with ``python -m natsort``.  The command line script is
        only installed onto your ``PATH`` if you don't install via a wheel.  There is
        apparently a known bug with the wheel installation process that will not create
        entry points.
        
        Requirements
        ------------
        
        ``natsort`` requires python version 2.6 or greater
        (this includes python 3.x). To run version 2.6, 3.0, or 3.1 the 
        `argparse <https://pypi.python.org/pypi/argparse>`_ module is required.
        
        Optional Dependency
        -------------------
        
        The most efficient sorting can occur if you install the 
        `fastnumbers <https://pypi.python.org/pypi/fastnumbers>`_ package (it helps
        with the string to number conversions.)  ``natsort`` will still run (efficiently)
        without the package, but if you need to squeeze out that extra juice it is
        recommended you include this as a dependency.  ``natsort`` will not require (or
        check) that `fastnumbers <https://pypi.python.org/pypi/fastnumbers>`_ is installed.
        
        Depreciation Notices
        --------------------
        
         - In ``natsort`` version 4.0.0, the ``natsort_key`` function will be removed
           from the public API.  All future development should use ``natsort_keygen``
           in preparation for this.
         - In ``natsort`` version 3.1.0, the shell script changed how it interpreted
           input; previously, all input was assumed to be a filepath, but as of 3.1.0
           input is just treated as a string.  For most cases the results are the same.
         
           - As of ``natsort`` version 3.4.0, a ``--path`` option has been added to
             force the shell script to interpret the input as filepaths. 
        
        Author
        ------
        
        Seth M. Morton
        
        History
        -------
        
        These are the last three entries of the changelog.  See the package documentation
        for the complete `changelog <http://pythonhosted.org//natsort/changelog.html>`_.
        
        08-12-2014 v. 3.4.1
        '''''''''''''''''''
        
            - 'natsort' will now use the 'fastnumbers' module if it is installed. This
              gives up to an extra 30% boost in speed over the previous performance
              enhancements.
            - Made documentation point to more 'natsort' resources, and also added a
              new example in the examples section.
        
        07-19-2014 v. 3.4.0
        '''''''''''''''''''
        
            - Fixed a bug that caused user's options to the 'natsort_key' to not be
              passed on to recursive calls of 'natsort_key'.
            - Added a 'natsort_keygen' function that will generate a wrapped version
              of 'natsort_key' that is easier to call.  'natsort_key' is now set to
              depreciate at natsort version 4.0.0.
            - Added an 'as_path' option to 'natsorted' & co. that will try to treat
              input strings as filepaths. This will help yield correct results for
              OS-generated inputs like
              ``['/p/q/o.x', '/p/q (1)/o.x', '/p/q (10)/o.x', '/p/q/o (1).x']``.
            - Massive performance enhancements for string input (1.8x-2.0x), at the expense
              of reduction in speed for numeric input (~2.0x).
        
              - This is a good compromise because the most common input will be strings,
                not numbers, and sorting numbers still only takes 0.6x the time of sorting
                strings.  If you are sorting only numbers, you would use 'sorted' anyway.
        
            - Added the 'order_by_index' function to help in using the output of
              'index_natsorted' and 'index_versorted'.
            - Added the 'reverse' option to 'natsorted' & co. to make it's API more
              similar to the builtin 'sorted'.
            - Added more unit tests.
            - Added auxiliary test code that helps in profiling and stress-testing.
            - Reworked the documentation, moving most of it to PyPI's hosting platform.
            - Added support for coveralls.io.
            - Entire codebase is now PyFlakes and PEP8 compliant.
        
        06-28-2014 v. 3.3.0
        '''''''''''''''''''
        
            - Added a 'versorted' method for more convenient sorting of versions.
            - Updated command-line tool --number_type option with 'version' and 'ver'
              to make it more clear how to sort version numbers.
            - Moved unit-testing mechanism from being docstring-based to actual unit tests
              in actual functions.
        
              - This has provided the ability determine the coverage of the unit tests (99%).
              - This also makes the pydoc documentation a bit more clear.
        
            - Made docstrings for public functions mirror the README API.
            - Connected natsort development to Travis-CI to help ensure quality releases.
        
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Science/Research
Classifier: Intended Audience :: System Administrators
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Information Technology
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Natural Language :: English
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.6
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Topic :: Scientific/Engineering :: Information Analysis
Classifier: Topic :: Utilities
