[Tutor] generating unique set of dicts from a list of dicts
Dave Angel
d at davea.name
Tue Jan 10 21:49:27 CET 2012
On 01/10/2012 03:24 PM, bruce wrote:
> <SNIP>
> Since dict_hash returns a string, which is immutable, you can now use
> a dictionary to find the unique elements:
>
> uniques_map = {}
> for d in list_of_dicts:
> uniques[dict_hash(d)] = d
> unique_dicts = uniques_map.values()
>
>>>>> *** not sure what the "uniqes" is, or what/how it should be defined....
Don't know about the rest of the message, but I think there's a typo in
the above fragment. On the third line, it should be uniques_map, not
uniques that you're adding an item to.
And unless you have a really long (and strong) hash, you still have to
check for actually equal. In otherwords, the above solution will throw
out a dict that happens to have the same hash as one already in the
uniques_map.
Do you trust the "equals" method for your dicts ? If not, that's your
first problem. If you do, then you can simply do
unique_dicts = []
for d in list_of_dicts:
if d not in unique_dicts:
unique_dicts.append(d)
Do it, then decide if performance is inadequate. Only then should you
worry about faster methods, especially if the faster method is broken.
--
DaveA
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