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Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +00001
2:mod:`sets` --- Unordered collections of unique elements
3========================================================
4
5.. module:: sets
6 :synopsis: Implementation of sets of unique elements.
Georg Brandl7f758c42007-08-15 18:41:25 +00007 :deprecated:
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +00008.. moduleauthor:: Greg V. Wilson <gvwilson@nevex.com>
9.. moduleauthor:: Alex Martelli <aleax@aleax.it>
10.. moduleauthor:: Guido van Rossum <guido@python.org>
11.. sectionauthor:: Raymond D. Hettinger <python@rcn.com>
12
13
14.. versionadded:: 2.3
15
16.. deprecated:: 2.6
17 The built-in ``set``/``frozenset`` types replace this module.
18
19The :mod:`sets` module provides classes for constructing and manipulating
20unordered collections of unique elements. Common uses include membership
21testing, removing duplicates from a sequence, and computing standard math
22operations on sets such as intersection, union, difference, and symmetric
23difference.
24
25Like other collections, sets support ``x in set``, ``len(set)``, and ``for x in
26set``. Being an unordered collection, sets do not record element position or
27order of insertion. Accordingly, sets do not support indexing, slicing, or
28other sequence-like behavior.
29
30Most set applications use the :class:`Set` class which provides every set method
31except for :meth:`__hash__`. For advanced applications requiring a hash method,
32the :class:`ImmutableSet` class adds a :meth:`__hash__` method but omits methods
33which alter the contents of the set. Both :class:`Set` and :class:`ImmutableSet`
34derive from :class:`BaseSet`, an abstract class useful for determining whether
35something is a set: ``isinstance(obj, BaseSet)``.
36
37The set classes are implemented using dictionaries. Accordingly, the
38requirements for set elements are the same as those for dictionary keys; namely,
39that the element defines both :meth:`__eq__` and :meth:`__hash__`. As a result,
40sets cannot contain mutable elements such as lists or dictionaries. However,
41they can contain immutable collections such as tuples or instances of
42:class:`ImmutableSet`. For convenience in implementing sets of sets, inner sets
43are automatically converted to immutable form, for example,
44``Set([Set(['dog'])])`` is transformed to ``Set([ImmutableSet(['dog'])])``.
45
46
47.. class:: Set([iterable])
48
49 Constructs a new empty :class:`Set` object. If the optional *iterable*
50 parameter is supplied, updates the set with elements obtained from iteration.
51 All of the elements in *iterable* should be immutable or be transformable to an
52 immutable using the protocol described in section :ref:`immutable-transforms`.
53
54
55.. class:: ImmutableSet([iterable])
56
57 Constructs a new empty :class:`ImmutableSet` object. If the optional *iterable*
58 parameter is supplied, updates the set with elements obtained from iteration.
59 All of the elements in *iterable* should be immutable or be transformable to an
60 immutable using the protocol described in section :ref:`immutable-transforms`.
61
62 Because :class:`ImmutableSet` objects provide a :meth:`__hash__` method, they
63 can be used as set elements or as dictionary keys. :class:`ImmutableSet`
64 objects do not have methods for adding or removing elements, so all of the
65 elements must be known when the constructor is called.
66
67
68.. _set-objects:
69
70Set Objects
71-----------
72
73Instances of :class:`Set` and :class:`ImmutableSet` both provide the following
74operations:
75
76+-------------------------------+------------+---------------------------------+
77| Operation | Equivalent | Result |
78+===============================+============+=================================+
79| ``len(s)`` | | cardinality of set *s* |
80+-------------------------------+------------+---------------------------------+
81| ``x in s`` | | test *x* for membership in *s* |
82+-------------------------------+------------+---------------------------------+
83| ``x not in s`` | | test *x* for non-membership in |
84| | | *s* |
85+-------------------------------+------------+---------------------------------+
86| ``s.issubset(t)`` | ``s <= t`` | test whether every element in |
87| | | *s* is in *t* |
88+-------------------------------+------------+---------------------------------+
89| ``s.issuperset(t)`` | ``s >= t`` | test whether every element in |
90| | | *t* is in *s* |
91+-------------------------------+------------+---------------------------------+
92| ``s.union(t)`` | ``s | t`` | new set with elements from both |
93| | | *s* and *t* |
94+-------------------------------+------------+---------------------------------+
95| ``s.intersection(t)`` | ``s & t`` | new set with elements common to |
96| | | *s* and *t* |
97+-------------------------------+------------+---------------------------------+
98| ``s.difference(t)`` | ``s - t`` | new set with elements in *s* |
99| | | but not in *t* |
100+-------------------------------+------------+---------------------------------+
101| ``s.symmetric_difference(t)`` | ``s ^ t`` | new set with elements in either |
102| | | *s* or *t* but not both |
103+-------------------------------+------------+---------------------------------+
104| ``s.copy()`` | | new set with a shallow copy of |
105| | | *s* |
106+-------------------------------+------------+---------------------------------+
107
108Note, the non-operator versions of :meth:`union`, :meth:`intersection`,
109:meth:`difference`, and :meth:`symmetric_difference` will accept any iterable as
110an argument. In contrast, their operator based counterparts require their
111arguments to be sets. This precludes error-prone constructions like
112``Set('abc') & 'cbs'`` in favor of the more readable
113``Set('abc').intersection('cbs')``.
114
115.. versionchanged:: 2.3.1
116 Formerly all arguments were required to be sets.
117
118In addition, both :class:`Set` and :class:`ImmutableSet` support set to set
119comparisons. Two sets are equal if and only if every element of each set is
120contained in the other (each is a subset of the other). A set is less than
121another set if and only if the first set is a proper subset of the second set
122(is a subset, but is not equal). A set is greater than another set if and only
123if the first set is a proper superset of the second set (is a superset, but is
124not equal).
125
126The subset and equality comparisons do not generalize to a complete ordering
127function. For example, any two disjoint sets are not equal and are not subsets
128of each other, so *all* of the following return ``False``: ``a<b``, ``a==b``,
129or ``a>b``. Accordingly, sets do not implement the :meth:`__cmp__` method.
130
131Since sets only define partial ordering (subset relationships), the output of
132the :meth:`list.sort` method is undefined for lists of sets.
133
134The following table lists operations available in :class:`ImmutableSet` but not
135found in :class:`Set`:
136
137+-------------+------------------------------+
138| Operation | Result |
139+=============+==============================+
140| ``hash(s)`` | returns a hash value for *s* |
141+-------------+------------------------------+
142
143The following table lists operations available in :class:`Set` but not found in
144:class:`ImmutableSet`:
145
146+--------------------------------------+-------------+---------------------------------+
147| Operation | Equivalent | Result |
148+======================================+=============+=================================+
149| ``s.update(t)`` | *s* \|= *t* | return set *s* with elements |
150| | | added from *t* |
151+--------------------------------------+-------------+---------------------------------+
152| ``s.intersection_update(t)`` | *s* &= *t* | return set *s* keeping only |
153| | | elements also found in *t* |
154+--------------------------------------+-------------+---------------------------------+
155| ``s.difference_update(t)`` | *s* -= *t* | return set *s* after removing |
156| | | elements found in *t* |
157+--------------------------------------+-------------+---------------------------------+
158| ``s.symmetric_difference_update(t)`` | *s* ^= *t* | return set *s* with elements |
159| | | from *s* or *t* but not both |
160+--------------------------------------+-------------+---------------------------------+
161| ``s.add(x)`` | | add element *x* to set *s* |
162+--------------------------------------+-------------+---------------------------------+
163| ``s.remove(x)`` | | remove *x* from set *s*; raises |
164| | | :exc:`KeyError` if not present |
165+--------------------------------------+-------------+---------------------------------+
166| ``s.discard(x)`` | | removes *x* from set *s* if |
167| | | present |
168+--------------------------------------+-------------+---------------------------------+
169| ``s.pop()`` | | remove and return an arbitrary |
170| | | element from *s*; raises |
171| | | :exc:`KeyError` if empty |
172+--------------------------------------+-------------+---------------------------------+
173| ``s.clear()`` | | remove all elements from set |
174| | | *s* |
175+--------------------------------------+-------------+---------------------------------+
176
177Note, the non-operator versions of :meth:`update`, :meth:`intersection_update`,
178:meth:`difference_update`, and :meth:`symmetric_difference_update` will accept
179any iterable as an argument.
180
181.. versionchanged:: 2.3.1
182 Formerly all arguments were required to be sets.
183
184Also note, the module also includes a :meth:`union_update` method which is an
185alias for :meth:`update`. The method is included for backwards compatibility.
186Programmers should prefer the :meth:`update` method because it is supported by
187the builtin :class:`set()` and :class:`frozenset()` types.
188
189
190.. _set-example:
191
192Example
193-------
194
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +0000195 >>> from sets import Set
196 >>> engineers = Set(['John', 'Jane', 'Jack', 'Janice'])
197 >>> programmers = Set(['Jack', 'Sam', 'Susan', 'Janice'])
198 >>> managers = Set(['Jane', 'Jack', 'Susan', 'Zack'])
199 >>> employees = engineers | programmers | managers # union
200 >>> engineering_management = engineers & managers # intersection
201 >>> fulltime_management = managers - engineers - programmers # difference
202 >>> engineers.add('Marvin') # add element
Georg Brandle8f1b002008-03-22 22:04:10 +0000203 >>> print engineers # doctest: +SKIP
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +0000204 Set(['Jane', 'Marvin', 'Janice', 'John', 'Jack'])
205 >>> employees.issuperset(engineers) # superset test
206 False
207 >>> employees.update(engineers) # update from another set
208 >>> employees.issuperset(engineers)
209 True
Georg Brandle8f1b002008-03-22 22:04:10 +0000210 >>> for group in [engineers, programmers, managers, employees]: # doctest: +SKIP
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +0000211 ... group.discard('Susan') # unconditionally remove element
212 ... print group
213 ...
214 Set(['Jane', 'Marvin', 'Janice', 'John', 'Jack'])
215 Set(['Janice', 'Jack', 'Sam'])
216 Set(['Jane', 'Zack', 'Jack'])
217 Set(['Jack', 'Sam', 'Jane', 'Marvin', 'Janice', 'John', 'Zack'])
218
219
220.. _immutable-transforms:
221
222Protocol for automatic conversion to immutable
223----------------------------------------------
224
225Sets can only contain immutable elements. For convenience, mutable :class:`Set`
226objects are automatically copied to an :class:`ImmutableSet` before being added
227as a set element.
228
Georg Brandl584265b2007-12-02 14:58:50 +0000229The mechanism is to always add a :term:`hashable` element, or if it is not
230hashable, the element is checked to see if it has an :meth:`__as_immutable__`
231method which returns an immutable equivalent.
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +0000232
233Since :class:`Set` objects have a :meth:`__as_immutable__` method returning an
234instance of :class:`ImmutableSet`, it is possible to construct sets of sets.
235
236A similar mechanism is needed by the :meth:`__contains__` and :meth:`remove`
237methods which need to hash an element to check for membership in a set. Those
238methods check an element for hashability and, if not, check for a
239:meth:`__as_temporarily_immutable__` method which returns the element wrapped by
240a class that provides temporary methods for :meth:`__hash__`, :meth:`__eq__`,
241and :meth:`__ne__`.
242
243The alternate mechanism spares the need to build a separate copy of the original
244mutable object.
245
246:class:`Set` objects implement the :meth:`__as_temporarily_immutable__` method
247which returns the :class:`Set` object wrapped by a new class
248:class:`_TemporarilyImmutableSet`.
249
250The two mechanisms for adding hashability are normally invisible to the user;
251however, a conflict can arise in a multi-threaded environment where one thread
252is updating a set while another has temporarily wrapped it in
253:class:`_TemporarilyImmutableSet`. In other words, sets of mutable sets are not
254thread-safe.
255
256
257.. _comparison-to-builtin-set:
258
259Comparison to the built-in :class:`set` types
260---------------------------------------------
261
262The built-in :class:`set` and :class:`frozenset` types were designed based on
263lessons learned from the :mod:`sets` module. The key differences are:
264
265* :class:`Set` and :class:`ImmutableSet` were renamed to :class:`set` and
266 :class:`frozenset`.
267
268* There is no equivalent to :class:`BaseSet`. Instead, use ``isinstance(x,
269 (set, frozenset))``.
270
271* The hash algorithm for the built-ins performs significantly better (fewer
272 collisions) for most datasets.
273
274* The built-in versions have more space efficient pickles.
275
276* The built-in versions do not have a :meth:`union_update` method. Instead, use
277 the :meth:`update` method which is equivalent.
278
279* The built-in versions do not have a ``_repr(sorted=True)`` method.
280 Instead, use the built-in :func:`repr` and :func:`sorted` functions:
281 ``repr(sorted(s))``.
282
283* The built-in version does not have a protocol for automatic conversion to
284 immutable. Many found this feature to be confusing and no one in the community
285 reported having found real uses for it.
286