Python: Add list to set?

2019-01-07 02:57发布

问题:

Tested on Python 2.6 interpreter:

>>> a=set('abcde')
>>> a
set(['a', 'c', 'b', 'e', 'd'])
>>> l=['f','g']
>>> l
['f', 'g']
>>> a.add(l)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<pyshell#35>", line 1, in <module>
    a.add(l)
TypeError: list objects are unhashable

I think that I can't add the list to the set because there's no way Python can tell If I have added the same list twice. Is there a workaround?

EDIT: I want to add the list itself, not its elements.

回答1:

You can't add a list to a set because lists are mutable, meaning that you can change the contents of the list after adding it to the set.

You can however add tuples to the set, because you cannot change the contents of a tuple:

>>> a.add(('f', 'g'))
>>> print a
set(['a', 'c', 'b', 'e', 'd', ('f', 'g')])

Edit: some explanation: The documentation defines a set as an unordered collection of distinct hashable objects. The objects have to be hashable so that finding, adding and removing elements can be done faster than looking at each individual element every time you perform these operations. The specific algorithms used are explained in the Wikipedia article. Pythons hashing algorithms are explained on effbot.org and pythons __hash__ function in the python reference.

Some facts:

  • Set elements as well as dictionary keys have to be hashable
  • Some unhashable datatypes:
    • list: use tuple instead
    • set: use frozenset instead
    • dict: has no official counterpart, but there are some recipes
  • Object instances are hashable by default with each instance having a unique hash. You can override this behavior as explained in the python reference.


回答2:

>>> a = set('abcde')
>>> l = ['f', 'g']
>>> a |= set(l)
>>> a
set(['a', 'c', 'b', 'e', 'd', 'g', 'f'])

The union operator is much faster than add anyway.

edit: If you want the list itself and not its members, then you must use a tuple, unfortunately. Set members must be hashable.



回答3:

To add the elements of a list to a set, use update

From https://docs.python.org/2/library/sets.html

s.update(t): return set s with elements added from t

E.g.

>>> s = set([1, 2])
>>> l = [3, 4]
>>> s.update(l)
>>> s
{1, 2, 3, 4}

If you instead want to add the entire list as a single element to the set, you can't because lists aren't hashable. You could instead add a tuple, e.g. s.add(tuple(l)). See also TypeError: unhashable type: 'list' when using built-in set function for more information on that.



回答4:

Hopefully this helps:

>>> seta = set('1234')
>>> listb = ['a','b','c']
>>> seta.union(listb)
set(['a', 'c', 'b', '1', '3', '2', '4'])
>>> seta
set(['1', '3', '2', '4'])
>>> seta = seta.union(listb)
>>> seta
set(['a', 'c', 'b', '1', '3', '2', '4'])


回答5:

Please notice the function set.update(). The documentation says:

Update a set with the union of itself and others.



回答6:

list objects are unhashable. you might want to turn them in to tuples though.



回答7:

Sets can't have mutable (changeable) elements/members. A list, being mutable, cannot be a member of a set.

As sets are mutable, you cannot have a set of sets! You can have a set of frozensets though.

(The same kind of "mutability requirement" applies to the keys of a dict.)

Other answers have already given you code, I hope this gives a bit of insight. I'm hoping Alex Martelli will answer with even more details.



回答8:

You want to add a tuple, not a list:

>>> a=set('abcde')
>>> a
set(['a', 'c', 'b', 'e', 'd'])
>>> l=['f','g']
>>> l
['f', 'g']
>>> t = tuple(l)
>>> t
('f', 'g')
>>> a.add(t)
>>> a
set(['a', 'c', 'b', 'e', 'd', ('f', 'g')])

If you have a list, you can convert to the tuple, as shown above. A tuple is immutable, so it can be added to the set.



回答9:

You'll want to use tuples, which are hashable (you can't hash a mutable object like a list).

>>> a = set("abcde")
>>> a
set(['a', 'c', 'b', 'e', 'd'])
>>> t = ('f', 'g')
>>> a.add(t)
>>> a
set(['a', 'c', 'b', 'e', 'd', ('f', 'g')])


回答10:

I found I needed to do something similar today. The algorithm knew when it was creating a new list that needed to added to the set, but not when it would have finished operating on the list.

Anyway, the behaviour I wanted was for set to use id rather than hash. As such I found mydict[id(mylist)] = mylist instead of myset.add(mylist) to offer the behaviour I wanted.



回答11:

Here is how I usually do it:

def add_list_to_set(my_list, my_set):
    [my_set.add(each) for each in my_list]
return my_set


回答12:

This should do:

set(tuple(i) for i in L)


标签: python list set