How do I remove duplicates from a list, while preserving order? Using a set to remove duplicates destroys the original order.
Is there a built-in or a Pythonic idiom?
Here you have some alternatives: http://www.peterbe.com/plog/uniqifiers-benchmark
Fastest one:
def f7(seq):
seen = set()
seen_add = seen.add
return [x for x in seq if not (x in seen or seen_add(x))]
Why assign seen.add to seen_add instead of just calling seen.add? Python is a dynamic language, and resolving seen.add each iteration is more costly than resolving a local variable. seen.add could have changed between iterations, and the runtime isn't smart enough to rule that out. To play it safe, it has to check the object each time.
If you plan on using this function a lot on the same dataset, perhaps you would be better off with an ordered set: http://code.activestate.com/recipes/528878/
O(1) insertion, deletion and member-check per operation.
(Small additional note: seen.add() always returns None, so the or above is there only as a way to attempt a set update, and not as an integral part of the logical test.)
The best solution varies by Python version and environment constraints:
Python 3.7+ (and most interpreters supporting 3.6, as an implementation detail):
First introduced in PyPy 2.5.0, and adopted in CPython 3.6 as an implementation detail, before being made a language guarantee in Python 3.7, plain dict is insertion-ordered, and even more efficient than the (also C implemented as of CPython 3.5) collections.OrderedDict. So the fastest solution, by far, is also the simplest:
>>> items = [1, 2, 0, 1, 3, 2]
>>> list(dict.fromkeys(items)) # Or [*dict.fromkeys(items)] if you prefer
[1, 2, 0, 3]
Like list(set(items)) this pushes all the work to the C layer (on CPython), but since dicts are insertion ordered, dict.fromkeys doesn't lose ordering. It's slower than list(set(items)) (takes 50-100% longer typically), but much faster than any other order-preserving solution (takes about half the time of hacks involving use of sets in a listcomp).
Important note: The unique_everseen solution from more_itertools (see below) has some unique advantages in terms of laziness and support for non-hashable input items; if you need these features, it's the only solution that will work.
Python 3.5 (and all older versions if performance isn't critical)
As Raymond pointed out, in CPython 3.5 where OrderedDict is implemented in C, ugly list comprehension hacks are slower than OrderedDict.fromkeys (unless you actually need the list at the end - and even then, only if the input is very short). So on both performance and readability the best solution for CPython 3.5 is the OrderedDict equivalent of the 3.6+ use of plain dict:
>>> from collections import OrderedDict
>>> items = [1, 2, 0, 1, 3, 2]
>>> list(OrderedDict.fromkeys(items))
[1, 2, 0, 3]
On CPython 3.4 and earlier, this will be slower than some other solutions, so if profiling shows you need a better solution, keep reading.
Python 3.4 and earlier, if performance is critical and third-party modules are acceptable
As #abarnert notes, the more_itertools library (pip install more_itertools) contains a unique_everseen function that is built to solve this problem without any unreadable (not seen.add) mutations in list comprehensions. This is the fastest solution too:
>>> from more_itertools import unique_everseen
>>> items = [1, 2, 0, 1, 3, 2]
>>> list(unique_everseen(items))
[1, 2, 0, 3]
Just one simple library import and no hacks.
The module is adapting the itertools recipe unique_everseen which looks like:
def unique_everseen(iterable, key=None):
"List unique elements, preserving order. Remember all elements ever seen."
# unique_everseen('AAAABBBCCDAABBB') --> A B C D
# unique_everseen('ABBCcAD', str.lower) --> A B C D
seen = set()
seen_add = seen.add
if key is None:
for element in filterfalse(seen.__contains__, iterable):
seen_add(element)
yield element
else:
for element in iterable:
k = key(element)
if k not in seen:
seen_add(k)
yield element
but unlike the itertools recipe, it supports non-hashable items (at a performance cost; if all elements in iterable are non-hashable, the algorithm becomes O(n²), vs. O(n) if they're all hashable).
Important note: Unlike all the other solutions here, unique_everseen can be used lazily; the peak memory usage will be the same (eventually, the underlying set grows to the same size), but if you don't listify the result, you just iterate it, you'll be able to process unique items as they're found, rather than waiting until the entire input has been deduplicated before processing the first unique item.
Python 3.4 and earlier, if performance is critical and third party modules are unavailable
You have two options:
Copy and paste in the unique_everseen recipe to your code and use it per the more_itertools example above
Use ugly hacks to allow a single listcomp to both check and update a set to track what's been seen:
seen = set()
[x for x in seq if x not in seen and not seen.add(x)]
at the expense of relying on the ugly hack:
not seen.add(x)
which relies on the fact that set.add is an in-place method that always returns None so not None evaluates to True.
Note that all of the solutions above are O(n) (save calling unique_everseen on an iterable of non-hashable items, which is O(n²), while the others would fail immediately with a TypeError), so all solutions are performant enough when they're not the hottest code path. Which one to use depends on which versions of the language spec/interpreter/third-party modules you can rely on, whether or not performance is critical (don't assume it is; it usually isn't), and most importantly, readability (because if the person who maintains this code later ends up in a murderous mood, your clever micro-optimization probably wasn't worth it).
In CPython 3.6+ (and all other Python implementations starting with Python 3.7+), dictionaries are ordered, so the way to remove duplicates from an iterable while keeping it in the original order is:
>>> list(dict.fromkeys('abracadabra'))
['a', 'b', 'r', 'c', 'd']
In Python 3.5 and below (including Python 2.7), use the OrderedDict. My timings show that this is now both the fastest and shortest of the various approaches for Python 3.5 (when it gained a C implementation; prior to 3.5 it's still the clearest solution, though not the fastest).
>>> from collections import OrderedDict
>>> list(OrderedDict.fromkeys('abracadabra'))
['a', 'b', 'r', 'c', 'd']
Not to kick a dead horse (this question is very old and already has lots of good answers), but here is a solution using pandas that is quite fast in many circumstances and is dead simple to use.
import pandas as pd
my_list = [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 1, 2, 3, 5]
>>> pd.Series(my_list).drop_duplicates().tolist()
# Output:
# [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
In Python 3.7 and above, dictionaries are guaranteed to remember their key insertion order. The answer to this question summarizes the current state of affairs.
The OrderedDict solution thus becomes obsolete and without any import statements we can simply issue:
>>> lst = [1, 2, 1, 3, 3, 2, 4]
>>> list(dict.fromkeys(lst))
[1, 2, 3, 4]
sequence = ['1', '2', '3', '3', '6', '4', '5', '6']
unique = []
[unique.append(item) for item in sequence if item not in unique]
unique → ['1', '2', '3', '6', '4', '5']
from itertools import groupby
[ key for key,_ in groupby(sortedList)]
The list doesn't even have to be sorted, the sufficient condition is that equal values are grouped together.
Edit: I assumed that "preserving order" implies that the list is actually ordered. If this is not the case, then the solution from MizardX is the right one.
Community edit: This is however the most elegant way to "compress duplicate consecutive elements into a single element".
I think if you wanna maintain the order,
you can try this:
list1 = ['b','c','d','b','c','a','a']
list2 = list(set(list1))
list2.sort(key=list1.index)
print list2
OR similarly you can do this:
list1 = ['b','c','d','b','c','a','a']
list2 = sorted(set(list1),key=list1.index)
print list2
You can also do this:
list1 = ['b','c','d','b','c','a','a']
list2 = []
for i in list1:
if not i in list2:
list2.append(i)`
print list2
It can also be written as this:
list1 = ['b','c','d','b','c','a','a']
list2 = []
[list2.append(i) for i in list1 if not i in list2]
print list2
Just to add another (very performant) implementation of such a functionality from an external module1: iteration_utilities.unique_everseen:
>>> from iteration_utilities import unique_everseen
>>> lst = [1,1,1,2,3,2,2,2,1,3,4]
>>> list(unique_everseen(lst))
[1, 2, 3, 4]
Timings
I did some timings (Python 3.6) and these show that it's faster than all other alternatives I tested, including OrderedDict.fromkeys, f7 and more_itertools.unique_everseen:
%matplotlib notebook
from iteration_utilities import unique_everseen
from collections import OrderedDict
from more_itertools import unique_everseen as mi_unique_everseen
def f7(seq):
seen = set()
seen_add = seen.add
return [x for x in seq if not (x in seen or seen_add(x))]
def iteration_utilities_unique_everseen(seq):
return list(unique_everseen(seq))
def more_itertools_unique_everseen(seq):
return list(mi_unique_everseen(seq))
def odict(seq):
return list(OrderedDict.fromkeys(seq))
from simple_benchmark import benchmark
b = benchmark([f7, iteration_utilities_unique_everseen, more_itertools_unique_everseen, odict],
{2**i: list(range(2**i)) for i in range(1, 20)},
'list size (no duplicates)')
b.plot()
And just to make sure I also did a test with more duplicates just to check if it makes a difference:
import random
b = benchmark([f7, iteration_utilities_unique_everseen, more_itertools_unique_everseen, odict],
{2**i: [random.randint(0, 2**(i-1)) for _ in range(2**i)] for i in range(1, 20)},
'list size (lots of duplicates)')
b.plot()
And one containing only one value:
b = benchmark([f7, iteration_utilities_unique_everseen, more_itertools_unique_everseen, odict],
{2**i: [1]*(2**i) for i in range(1, 20)},
'list size (only duplicates)')
b.plot()
In all of these cases the iteration_utilities.unique_everseen function is the fastest (on my computer).
This iteration_utilities.unique_everseen function can also handle unhashable values in the input (however with an O(n*n) performance instead of the O(n) performance when the values are hashable).
>>> lst = [{1}, {1}, {2}, {1}, {3}]
>>> list(unique_everseen(lst))
[{1}, {2}, {3}]
1 Disclaimer: I'm the author of that package.
For another very late answer to another very old question:
The itertools recipes have a function that does this, using the seen set technique, but:
Handles a standard key function.
Uses no unseemly hacks.
Optimizes the loop by pre-binding seen.add instead of looking it up N times. (f7 also does this, but some versions don't.)
Optimizes the loop by using ifilterfalse, so you only have to loop over the unique elements in Python, instead of all of them. (You still iterate over all of them inside ifilterfalse, of course, but that's in C, and much faster.)
Is it actually faster than f7? It depends on your data, so you'll have to test it and see. If you want a list in the end, f7 uses a listcomp, and there's no way to do that here. (You can directly append instead of yielding, or you can feed the generator into the list function, but neither one can be as fast as the LIST_APPEND inside a listcomp.) At any rate, usually, squeezing out a few microseconds is not going to be as important as having an easily-understandable, reusable, already-written function that doesn't require DSU when you want to decorate.
As with all of the recipes, it's also available in more-iterools.
If you just want the no-key case, you can simplify it as:
def unique(iterable):
seen = set()
seen_add = seen.add
for element in itertools.ifilterfalse(seen.__contains__, iterable):
seen_add(element)
yield element
For no hashable types (e.g. list of lists), based on MizardX's:
def f7_noHash(seq)
seen = set()
return [ x for x in seq if str( x ) not in seen and not seen.add( str( x ) )]
pandas users should check out pandas.unique.
>>> import pandas as pd
>>> lst = [1, 2, 1, 3, 3, 2, 4]
>>> pd.unique(lst)
array([1, 2, 3, 4])
The function returns a NumPy array. If needed, you can convert it to a list with the tolist method.
5 x faster reduce variant but more sophisticated
>>> l = [5, 6, 6, 1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 4]
>>> reduce(lambda r, v: v in r[1] and r or (r[0].append(v) or r[1].add(v)) or r, l, ([], set()))[0]
[5, 6, 1, 2, 3, 4]
Explanation:
default = (list(), set())
# use list to keep order
# use set to make lookup faster
def reducer(result, item):
if item not in result[1]:
result[0].append(item)
result[1].add(item)
return result
>>> reduce(reducer, l, default)[0]
[5, 6, 1, 2, 3, 4]
here is a simple way to do it:
list1 = ["hello", " ", "w", "o", "r", "l", "d"]
sorted(set(list1 ), key=list1.index)
that gives the output:
["hello", " ", "w", "o", "r", "l", "d"]
Borrowing the recursive idea used in definining Haskell's nub function for lists, this would be a recursive approach:
def unique(lst):
return [] if lst==[] else [lst[0]] + unique(filter(lambda x: x!= lst[0], lst[1:]))
e.g.:
In [118]: unique([1,5,1,1,4,3,4])
Out[118]: [1, 5, 4, 3]
I tried it for growing data sizes and saw sub-linear time-complexity (not definitive, but suggests this should be fine for normal data).
In [122]: %timeit unique(np.random.randint(5, size=(1)))
10000 loops, best of 3: 25.3 us per loop
In [123]: %timeit unique(np.random.randint(5, size=(10)))
10000 loops, best of 3: 42.9 us per loop
In [124]: %timeit unique(np.random.randint(5, size=(100)))
10000 loops, best of 3: 132 us per loop
In [125]: %timeit unique(np.random.randint(5, size=(1000)))
1000 loops, best of 3: 1.05 ms per loop
In [126]: %timeit unique(np.random.randint(5, size=(10000)))
100 loops, best of 3: 11 ms per loop
I also think it's interesting that this could be readily generalized to uniqueness by other operations. Like this:
import operator
def unique(lst, cmp_op=operator.ne):
return [] if lst==[] else [lst[0]] + unique(filter(lambda x: cmp_op(x, lst[0]), lst[1:]), cmp_op)
For example, you could pass in a function that uses the notion of rounding to the same integer as if it was "equality" for uniqueness purposes, like this:
def test_round(x,y):
return round(x) != round(y)
then unique(some_list, test_round) would provide the unique elements of the list where uniqueness no longer meant traditional equality (which is implied by using any sort of set-based or dict-key-based approach to this problem) but instead meant to take only the first element that rounds to K for each possible integer K that the elements might round to, e.g.:
In [6]: unique([1.2, 5, 1.9, 1.1, 4.2, 3, 4.8], test_round)
Out[6]: [1.2, 5, 1.9, 4.2, 3]
You can reference a list comprehension as it is being built by the symbol '_[1]'. For example, the following function unique-ifies a list of elements without changing their order by referencing its list comprehension.
def unique(my_list):
return [x for x in my_list if x not in locals()['_[1]']]
Demo:
l1 = [1, 2, 3, 4, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
l2 = [x for x in l1 if x not in locals()['_[1]']]
print l2
Output:
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
Eliminating the duplicate values in a sequence, but preserve the order of the remaining items. Use of general purpose generator function.
# for hashable sequence
def remove_duplicates(items):
seen = set()
for item in items:
if item not in seen:
yield item
seen.add(item)
a = [1, 5, 2, 1, 9, 1, 5, 10]
list(remove_duplicates(a))
# [1, 5, 2, 9, 10]
# for unhashable sequence
def remove_duplicates(items, key=None):
seen = set()
for item in items:
val = item if key is None else key(item)
if val not in seen:
yield item
seen.add(val)
a = [ {'x': 1, 'y': 2}, {'x': 1, 'y': 3}, {'x': 1, 'y': 2}, {'x': 2, 'y': 4}]
list(remove_duplicates(a, key=lambda d: (d['x'],d['y'])))
# [{'x': 1, 'y': 2}, {'x': 1, 'y': 3}, {'x': 2, 'y': 4}]
1. These solutions are fine…
For removing duplicates while preserving order, the excellent solution(s) proposed elsewhere on this page:
seen = set()
[x for x in seq if not (x in seen or seen.add(x))]
and variation(s), e.g.:
seen = set()
[x for x in seq if x not in seen and not seen.add(x)]
are indeed popular because they are simple, minimalistic, and deploy the correct hashing for optimal efficency. The main complaint about these seems to be that using the invariant None "returned" by method seen.add(x) as a constant (and therefore excess/unnecessary) value in a logical expression—just for its side-effect—is hacky and/or confusing.
2. …but they waste one hash lookup per iteration.
Surprisingly, given the amount of discussion and debate on this topic, there is actually a significant improvement to the code that seems to have been overlooked. As shown, each "test-and-set" iteration requires two hash lookups: the first to test membership x not in seen and then again to actually add the value seen.add(x). Since the first operation guarantees that the second will always be successful, there is a wasteful duplication of effort here. And because the overall technique here is so efficient, the excess hash lookups will likely end up being the most expensive proportion of what little work remains.
3. Instead, let the set do its job!
Notice that the examples above only call set.add with the foreknowledge that doing so will always result in an increase in set membership. The set itself never gets an chance to reject a duplicate; our code snippet has essentially usurped that role for itself. The use of explicit two-step test-and-set code is robbing set of its core ability to exclude those duplicates itself.
4. The single-hash-lookup code:
The following version cuts the number of hash lookups per iteration in half—from two down to just one.
seen = set()
[x for x in seq if len(seen) < len(seen.add(x) or seen)]
If you need one liner then maybe this would help:
reduce(lambda x, y: x + y if y[0] not in x else x, map(lambda x: [x],lst))
... should work but correct me if i'm wrong
MizardX's answer gives a good collection of multiple approaches.
This is what I came up with while thinking aloud:
mylist = [x for i,x in enumerate(mylist) if x not in mylist[i+1:]]
You could do a sort of ugly list comprehension hack.
[l[i] for i in range(len(l)) if l.index(l[i]) == i]
Relatively effective approach with _sorted_ a numpy arrays:
b = np.array([1,3,3, 8, 12, 12,12])
numpy.hstack([b[0], [x[0] for x in zip(b[1:], b[:-1]) if x[0]!=x[1]]])
Outputs:
array([ 1, 3, 8, 12])
l = [1,2,2,3,3,...]
n = []
n.extend(ele for ele in l if ele not in set(n))
A generator expression that uses the O(1) look up of a set to determine whether or not to include an element in the new list.
A simple recursive solution:
def uniquefy_list(a):
return uniquefy_list(a[1:]) if a[0] in a[1:] else [a[0]]+uniquefy_list(a[1:]) if len(a)>1 else [a[0]]
this will preserve order and run in O(n) time. basically the idea is to create a hole wherever there is a duplicate found and sink it down to the bottom. makes use of a read and write pointer. whenever a duplicate is found only the read pointer advances and write pointer stays on the duplicate entry to overwrite it.
def deduplicate(l):
count = {}
(read,write) = (0,0)
while read < len(l):
if l[read] in count:
read += 1
continue
count[l[read]] = True
l[write] = l[read]
read += 1
write += 1
return l[0:write]
x = [1, 2, 1, 3, 1, 4]
# brute force method
arr = []
for i in x:
if not i in arr:
arr.insert(x[i],i)
# recursive method
tmp = []
def remove_duplicates(j=0):
if j < len(x):
if not x[j] in tmp:
tmp.append(x[j])
i = j+1
remove_duplicates(i)
remove_duplicates()
One liner list comprehension:
values_non_duplicated = [value for index, value in enumerate(values) if value not in values[ : index]]
If you routinely use pandas, and aesthetics is preferred over performance, then consider the built-in function pandas.Series.drop_duplicates:
import pandas as pd
import numpy as np
uniquifier = lambda alist: pd.Series(alist).drop_duplicates().tolist()
# from the chosen answer
def f7(seq):
seen = set()
seen_add = seen.add
return [ x for x in seq if not (x in seen or seen_add(x))]
alist = np.random.randint(low=0, high=1000, size=10000).tolist()
print uniquifier(alist) == f7(alist) # True
Timing:
In [104]: %timeit f7(alist)
1000 loops, best of 3: 1.3 ms per loop
In [110]: %timeit uniquifier(alist)
100 loops, best of 3: 4.39 ms per loop
A solution without using imported modules or sets:
text = "ask not what your country can do for you ask what you can do for your country"
sentence = text.split(" ")
noduplicates = [(sentence[i]) for i in range (0,len(sentence)) if sentence[i] not in sentence[:i]]
print(noduplicates)
Gives output:
['ask', 'not', 'what', 'your', 'country', 'can', 'do', 'for', 'you']
An in-place method
This method is quadratic, because we have a linear lookup into the list for every element of the list (to that we have to add the cost of rearranging the list because of the del s).
That said, it is possible to operate in place if we start from the end of the list and proceed toward the origin removing each term that is present in the sub-list at its left
This idea in code is simply
for i in range(len(l)-1,0,-1):
if l[i] in l[:i]: del l[i]
A simple test of the implementation
In [91]: from random import randint, seed
In [92]: seed('20080808') ; l = [randint(1,6) for _ in range(12)] # Beijing Olympics
In [93]: for i in range(len(l)-1,0,-1):
...: print(l)
...: print(i, l[i], l[:i], end='')
...: if l[i] in l[:i]:
...: print( ': remove', l[i])
...: del l[i]
...: else:
...: print()
...: print(l)
[6, 5, 1, 4, 6, 1, 6, 2, 2, 4, 5, 2]
11 2 [6, 5, 1, 4, 6, 1, 6, 2, 2, 4, 5]: remove 2
[6, 5, 1, 4, 6, 1, 6, 2, 2, 4, 5]
10 5 [6, 5, 1, 4, 6, 1, 6, 2, 2, 4]: remove 5
[6, 5, 1, 4, 6, 1, 6, 2, 2, 4]
9 4 [6, 5, 1, 4, 6, 1, 6, 2, 2]: remove 4
[6, 5, 1, 4, 6, 1, 6, 2, 2]
8 2 [6, 5, 1, 4, 6, 1, 6, 2]: remove 2
[6, 5, 1, 4, 6, 1, 6, 2]
7 2 [6, 5, 1, 4, 6, 1, 6]
[6, 5, 1, 4, 6, 1, 6, 2]
6 6 [6, 5, 1, 4, 6, 1]: remove 6
[6, 5, 1, 4, 6, 1, 2]
5 1 [6, 5, 1, 4, 6]: remove 1
[6, 5, 1, 4, 6, 2]
4 6 [6, 5, 1, 4]: remove 6
[6, 5, 1, 4, 2]
3 4 [6, 5, 1]
[6, 5, 1, 4, 2]
2 1 [6, 5]
[6, 5, 1, 4, 2]
1 5 [6]
[6, 5, 1, 4, 2]
In [94]:
Today I had an interview and I was asked to print a list of list into one single list without using any for or while loop but you can use other built in function.
Here is the list:
>>> myList = [[[1,2,3],[4,5],[6,7,8,9]]]
>>> myList
[[[1, 2, 3], [4, 5], [6, 7, 8, 9]]]
>>>
The output will be [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9].
Any idea how to go about this?
Three options:
You could sum the nested lists; sum() takes a second argument, a starting value, set that to an empty list:
>>> sum(myList[0], [])
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
This works because sum() is essentially implemented as a loop:
def sum(values, start=0):
total = start
for value in values:
total += value
return total
which works with list concatenation, provided the start value is a list object itself. 0 + [1, 2, 3] would not work, but [] + [1, 2, 3] works just fine.
You could use reduce() with operator.add(), which is essentially the same as sum(), minus the requirement to give a start value:
from operator import add
reduce(add, myList[0])
operator.add() could be replaced with lambda a, b: a + b or with list.__add__ if imports are to be avoided at all cost.
As the nested input list grows, operator.iadd() (in-place add, for lists the equivalent of list.extend()) will rapidly become a faster option:
from operator import iadd
reduce(add, myList[0], [])
but this does need an empty list to start with.
You could chain the lists using itertools.chain.from_iterable():
>>> from itertools import chain
>>> list(chain.from_iterable(myList[0]))
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
All three solutions require that you use indexing to remove the outermost list, although you can also pass the one element in myList as a single argument to chain.from_iterable() with list(chain.from_iterable(*myList)) as well.
Of these options, reduce(add, ...) is the fastest:
>>> timeit.timeit("sum(myList[0], [])", 'from __main__ import myList')
1.2761731147766113
>>> timeit.timeit("reduce(add, myList[0])", 'from __main__ import myList; from operator import add')
1.0545191764831543
>>> timeit.timeit("reduce(lambda a, b: a.extend(b) or a, myList[0], [])", 'from __main__ import myList')
2.225532054901123
>>> timeit.timeit("list(chain.from_iterable(myList[0]))", 'from __main__ import myList; from itertools import chain')
2.0208170413970947
and comparing iadd versus add:
>>> timeit.timeit("reduce(add, myList[0])", 'from __main__ import myList; from operator import add')
0.9298770427703857
>>> timeit.timeit("reduce(iadd, myList[0], [])", 'from __main__ import myList; from operator import iadd')
1.178157091140747
>>> timeit.timeit("reduce(add, myListDoubled)", 'from __main__ import myList; myListDoubled = myList[0] + myList[0]; from operator import add')
2.3597090244293213
>>> timeit.timeit("reduce(iadd, myListDoubled, [])", 'from __main__ import myList; myListDoubled = myList[0] + myList[0]; from operator import iadd')
1.730151891708374
You could use recursion to avoid using a loop, to make this work for arbitrarily nested lists:
def flatten(lst):
try:
return flatten(sum(lst, []))
except TypeError:
return lst
Demo:
>>> flatten(myList)
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
>>> flatten(myList + myList)
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
If we assume no imports allowed and that we are still on 2.7.x,
reduce(lambda x,y:x+y,*myList)
A quick search show that this question, making a flat list out of lists, has been analyzed in depth: Making a flat list out of list of lists in Python and although in that thread there is no restriction on what functions you can use, they answer goes into great detail about the time complexity of using different methods. This is quite important, as it could be the follow up question in an interview.
myList = [[[1,2,3],[4,5],[6,7,8,9]]]
sum(myList[0], [])
Output
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
Use itertools.chain.from_iterable:
In [34]: from itertools import chain
In [35]: list(chain.from_iterable(myList[0]))
Out[35]: [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
try this
import itertools
list(itertools.chain(*mylist))
I'd like to cycle through a list repeatedly (N times) via an iterator, so as not to actually store N copies of the list in memory. Is there a built-in or elegant way to do this without writing my own generator?
Ideally, itertools.cycle(my_list) would have a second argument to limit how many times it cycles... alas, no such luck.
import itertools
it = itertools.chain.from_iterable(itertools.repeat([1, 2, 3], 5))
print(list(it))
# [1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3]
Itertools is a wonderful library. :)
As pointed out in the comments, if you are using iterators (instead of lists or similar collections), iterators are exhausted after the first iteration, and so you have to use a slightly different approach to get the expected result. Note that infinite or excessively long iterators can't be reasonably handled, as you would have to cache the result (requiring infinite or excessive amounts of memory).
This may not be the most efficient implementation (tee stores N copies of the iterable's contents):
import itertools
it = itertools.chain(*itertools.tee(iter([1, 2, 3]), 5))
print(list(it))
# [1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3]
All the other answers are excellent. Another solution would be to use islice. This allows you to interrupt the cycle at any point:
>>> from itertools import islice, cycle
>>> l = [1, 2, 3]
>>> list(islice(cycle(l), len(l) * 3))
[1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3]
>>> list(islice(cycle(l), 7))
[1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1]
itertools.chain.from_iterable(iter(L) for x in range(N))
For the special case where you need to iterate over a list several times, this is not too bad.
It does create a list of n references to my_list, so if n is very large it is better to use Darthfelt's answer
>>> import itertools as it
>>> it.chain(*[my_list]*n)
You said that you don't want to write your own generator, but a generator expression would probably be the easiest and most efficient way to accomplish what you're after. It doesn't require any function calls or importing of any modules. itertools is a great module, but maybe not necessary in this case?
some_list = [1, 2, 3]
cycles = 3
gen_expr = (elem for _ in xrange(cycles) for elem in some_list)
or just
(elem for _ in xrange(3) for elem in [1, 2, 3])
or
for elem in (e for _ in xrange(3) for e in [1, 2, 3]):
print "hoo-ray, {}!".format(elem)
#Darthfett's answer is documented as an itertools recipes:
from itertools import chain, repeat
def ncycles(iterable, n):
"Returns the sequence elements n times"
return chain.from_iterable(repeat(tuple(iterable), n))
list(ncycles(["a", "b"], 3))
# ['a', 'b', 'a', 'b', 'a', 'b']
For convenience, I add that the more_itertools library implements this recipe (and many others) for you:
import more_itertools as mit
list(mit.ncycles(["a", "b"], 3))
# ['a', 'b', 'a', 'b', 'a', 'b']