insert unique data in a list
Gary Herron
gherron at islandtraining.com
Sun Dec 13 13:20:29 EST 2009
mattia wrote:
> Il Sun, 13 Dec 2009 16:37:20 +0000, mattia ha scritto:
>
>
>> How can I insert non-duplicate data in a list? I mean, is there a
>> particular option in the creation of a list that permit me not to use
>> something like:
>> def append_unique(l, val):
>> if val not in l:
>> l.append(val)
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Mattia
>>
>
> Ok, so you all suggest to use a set. Now the second question, more
> interesting. Why can't I insert a list into a set? I mean, I have a
> function that returns a list. I call this function several times and
> maybe the list returned is the same as another one already returned. I
> usually put all this lists into another list. How can I assure that my
> list contains only unique lists? Using set does'n work (i.e. the python
> interpreter tells me: TypeError: unhashable type: 'list')...
>
Sets can contain *only* hashable objects, but lists are not hashable
(since they are mutable).
Perhaps, you could convert your list to a tuple first -- tuples *are*
hashable.
>>> s = set()
>>> l = [1,2,3]
>>> s.add(l)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: unhashable type: 'list'
>>> s.add(tuple(l))
>>> s
set([(1, 2, 3)])
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