This module provides support for maintaining a list in sorted order without having to sort the list after each insertion. For long lists of items with expensive comparison operations, this can be an improvement over the more common approach. The module is called bisect because it uses a basic bisection algorithm to do its work. The source code may be most useful as a working example of the algorithm (the boundary conditions are already right!).
The following functions are provided:
The bisect() function is generally useful for categorizing numeric data. This example uses bisect() to look up a letter grade for an exam total (say) based on a set of ordered numeric breakpoints: 85 and up is an ‘A’, 75..84 is a ‘B’, etc.
>>> grades = "FEDCBA" >>> breakpoints = [30, 44, 66, 75, 85] >>> from bisect import bisect >>> def grade(total): ... return grades[bisect(breakpoints, total)] ... >>> grade(66) 'C' >>> map(grade, [33, 99, 77, 44, 12, 88]) ['E', 'A', 'B', 'D', 'F', 'A']
array — Efficient arrays of numeric values
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