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Raymond Hettinger53dbe392008-02-12 20:03:09 +00001:mod:`collections` --- Container datatypes
2==========================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003
4.. module:: collections
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -07005 :synopsis: Container datatypes
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00006.. moduleauthor:: Raymond Hettinger <python@rcn.com>
7.. sectionauthor:: Raymond Hettinger <python@rcn.com>
8
Christian Heimesfe337bf2008-03-23 21:54:12 +00009.. testsetup:: *
10
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -070011 from collections import *
12 import itertools
13 __name__ = '<doctest>'
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000014
Raymond Hettinger158c9c22011-02-22 00:41:50 +000015**Source code:** :source:`Lib/collections/__init__.py`
Raymond Hettinger10480942011-01-10 03:26:08 +000016
Raymond Hettinger4f707fd2011-01-10 19:54:11 +000017--------------
18
Raymond Hettingera6b76ba2010-08-08 00:29:08 +000019This module implements specialized container datatypes providing alternatives to
20Python's general purpose built-in containers, :class:`dict`, :class:`list`,
21:class:`set`, and :class:`tuple`.
Christian Heimes0bd4e112008-02-12 22:59:25 +000022
Raymond Hettingera6b76ba2010-08-08 00:29:08 +000023===================== ====================================================================
24:func:`namedtuple` factory function for creating tuple subclasses with named fields
25:class:`deque` list-like container with fast appends and pops on either end
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +000026:class:`ChainMap` dict-like class for creating a single view of multiple mappings
Raymond Hettingera6b76ba2010-08-08 00:29:08 +000027:class:`Counter` dict subclass for counting hashable objects
28:class:`OrderedDict` dict subclass that remembers the order entries were added
29:class:`defaultdict` dict subclass that calls a factory function to supply missing values
30:class:`UserDict` wrapper around dictionary objects for easier dict subclassing
31:class:`UserList` wrapper around list objects for easier list subclassing
32:class:`UserString` wrapper around string objects for easier string subclassing
33===================== ====================================================================
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000034
Raymond Hettinger158c9c22011-02-22 00:41:50 +000035.. versionchanged:: 3.3
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -070036 Moved :ref:`collections-abstract-base-classes` to the :mod:`collections.abc` module.
37 For backwards compatibility, they continue to be visible in this module
38 as well.
Mark Summerfield08898b42007-09-05 08:43:04 +000039
40
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +000041:class:`ChainMap` objects
42-------------------------
43
Georg Brandl283b96b2012-04-03 09:16:46 +020044.. versionadded:: 3.3
45
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +000046A :class:`ChainMap` class is provided for quickly linking a number of mappings
47so they can be treated as a single unit. It is often much faster than creating
48a new dictionary and running multiple :meth:`~dict.update` calls.
49
50The class can be used to simulate nested scopes and is useful in templating.
51
52.. class:: ChainMap(*maps)
53
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -070054 A :class:`ChainMap` groups multiple dicts or other mappings together to
55 create a single, updateable view. If no *maps* are specified, a single empty
56 dictionary is provided so that a new chain always has at least one mapping.
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +000057
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -070058 The underlying mappings are stored in a list. That list is public and can
59 accessed or updated using the *maps* attribute. There is no other state.
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +000060
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -070061 Lookups search the underlying mappings successively until a key is found. In
62 contrast, writes, updates, and deletions only operate on the first mapping.
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +000063
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -070064 A :class:`ChainMap` incorporates the underlying mappings by reference. So, if
65 one of the underlying mappings gets updated, those changes will be reflected
66 in :class:`ChainMap`.
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +000067
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -070068 All of the usual dictionary methods are supported. In addition, there is a
69 *maps* attribute, a method for creating new subcontexts, and a property for
70 accessing all but the first mapping:
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +000071
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -070072 .. attribute:: maps
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +000073
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -070074 A user updateable list of mappings. The list is ordered from
75 first-searched to last-searched. It is the only stored state and can
76 be modified to change which mappings are searched. The list should
77 always contain at least one mapping.
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +000078
Vinay Sajip1ba81ee2013-01-11 23:39:53 +000079 .. method:: new_child(m=None)
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +000080
Vinay Sajip1ba81ee2013-01-11 23:39:53 +000081 Returns a new :class:`ChainMap` containing a new map followed by
82 all of the maps in the current instance. If ``m`` is specified,
83 it becomes the new map at the front of the list of mappings; if not
84 specified, an empty dict is used, so that a call to ``d.new_child()``
85 is equivalent to: ``ChainMap({}, *d.maps)``. This method is used for
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -070086 creating subcontexts that can be updated without altering values in any
87 of the parent mappings.
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +000088
Vinay Sajip1ba81ee2013-01-11 23:39:53 +000089 .. versionchanged:: 3.4
90 The optional ``m`` parameter was added.
91
Raymond Hettinger2a61c452012-07-15 22:37:20 -070092 .. attribute:: parents
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +000093
Raymond Hettingerb22ba042012-07-16 02:07:41 -070094 Property returning a new :class:`ChainMap` containing all of the maps in
Raymond Hettinger2a61c452012-07-15 22:37:20 -070095 the current instance except the first one. This is useful for skipping
96 the first map in the search. Use cases are similar to those for the
97 :keyword:`nonlocal` keyword used in :term:`nested scopes <nested
98 scope>`. The use cases also parallel those for the built-in
99 :func:`super` function. A reference to ``d.parents`` is equivalent to:
100 ``ChainMap(*d.maps[1:])``.
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +0000101
Raymond Hettingerbfcb4292012-06-10 11:39:44 -0700102
103.. seealso::
104
105 * The `MultiContext class
Sandro Tosiea475302012-08-12 10:37:23 +0200106 <https://github.com/enthought/codetools/blob/4.0.0/codetools/contexts/multi_context.py>`_
Raymond Hettingerbfcb4292012-06-10 11:39:44 -0700107 in the Enthought `CodeTools package
108 <https://github.com/enthought/codetools>`_ has options to support
109 writing to any mapping in the chain.
110
111 * Django's `Context class
112 <http://code.djangoproject.com/browser/django/trunk/django/template/context.py>`_
113 for templating is a read-only chain of mappings. It also features
114 pushing and popping of contexts similar to the
115 :meth:`~collections.ChainMap.new_child` method and the
116 :meth:`~collections.ChainMap.parents` property.
117
118 * The `Nested Contexts recipe
119 <http://code.activestate.com/recipes/577434/>`_ has options to control
120 whether writes and other mutations apply only to the first mapping or to
121 any mapping in the chain.
122
123 * A `greatly simplified read-only version of Chainmap
124 <http://code.activestate.com/recipes/305268/>`_.
125
126
127:class:`ChainMap` Examples and Recipes
128^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
129
130This section shows various approaches to working with chained maps.
131
132
133Example of simulating Python's internal lookup chain::
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +0000134
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700135 import builtins
136 pylookup = ChainMap(locals(), globals(), vars(builtins))
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +0000137
Raymond Hettingerb2269ba2012-07-15 23:53:32 -0700138Example of letting user specified command-line arguments take precedence over
139environment variables which in turn take precedence over default values::
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +0000140
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700141 import os, argparse
Raymond Hettingerb2269ba2012-07-15 23:53:32 -0700142
143 defaults = {'color': 'red', 'user': 'guest'}
144
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700145 parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
146 parser.add_argument('-u', '--user')
147 parser.add_argument('-c', '--color')
Raymond Hettingerb2269ba2012-07-15 23:53:32 -0700148 namespace = parser.parse_args()
149 command_line_args = {k:v for k, v in vars(namespace).items() if v}
150
151 combined = ChainMap(command_line_args, os.environ, defaults)
152 print(combined['color'])
153 print(combined['user'])
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +0000154
Raymond Hettingerbfcb4292012-06-10 11:39:44 -0700155Example patterns for using the :class:`ChainMap` class to simulate nested
156contexts::
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +0000157
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700158 c = ChainMap() # Create root context
159 d = c.new_child() # Create nested child context
160 e = c.new_child() # Child of c, independent from d
161 e.maps[0] # Current context dictionary -- like Python's locals()
162 e.maps[-1] # Root context -- like Python's globals()
163 e.parents # Enclosing context chain -- like Python's nonlocals
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +0000164
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700165 d['x'] # Get first key in the chain of contexts
166 d['x'] = 1 # Set value in current context
Andrew Svetlov1a8db9c2012-10-04 19:29:25 +0300167 del d['x'] # Delete from current context
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700168 list(d) # All nested values
169 k in d # Check all nested values
170 len(d) # Number of nested values
171 d.items() # All nested items
172 dict(d) # Flatten into a regular dictionary
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +0000173
Raymond Hettingerbfcb4292012-06-10 11:39:44 -0700174The :class:`ChainMap` class only makes updates (writes and deletions) to the
175first mapping in the chain while lookups will search the full chain. However,
176if deep writes and deletions are desired, it is easy to make a subclass that
177updates keys found deeper in the chain::
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +0000178
Raymond Hettingerbfcb4292012-06-10 11:39:44 -0700179 class DeepChainMap(ChainMap):
180 'Variant of ChainMap that allows direct updates to inner scopes'
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +0000181
Raymond Hettingerbfcb4292012-06-10 11:39:44 -0700182 def __setitem__(self, key, value):
183 for mapping in self.maps:
184 if key in mapping:
185 mapping[key] = value
186 return
187 self.maps[0][key] = value
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +0000188
Raymond Hettingerbfcb4292012-06-10 11:39:44 -0700189 def __delitem__(self, key):
190 for mapping in self.maps:
191 if key in mapping:
192 del mapping[key]
193 return
194 raise KeyError(key)
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +0000195
Raymond Hettingerbfcb4292012-06-10 11:39:44 -0700196 >>> d = DeepChainMap({'zebra': 'black'}, {'elephant' : 'blue'}, {'lion' : 'yellow'})
197 >>> d['lion'] = 'orange' # update an existing key two levels down
198 >>> d['snake'] = 'red' # new keys get added to the topmost dict
199 >>> del d['elephant'] # remove an existing key one level down
200 DeepChainMap({'zebra': 'black', 'snake': 'red'}, {}, {'lion': 'orange'})
Georg Brandl4dcf4742012-03-08 20:35:08 +0100201
Raymond Hettinger9fe1ccf2011-02-26 01:02:51 +0000202
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000203:class:`Counter` objects
204------------------------
205
206A counter tool is provided to support convenient and rapid tallies.
207For example::
208
Raymond Hettinger1c62dc92009-02-04 11:41:45 +0000209 >>> # Tally occurrences of words in a list
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000210 >>> cnt = Counter()
Raymond Hettinger670eaec2009-01-21 23:14:07 +0000211 >>> for word in ['red', 'blue', 'red', 'green', 'blue', 'blue']:
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000212 ... cnt[word] += 1
213 >>> cnt
214 Counter({'blue': 3, 'red': 2, 'green': 1})
215
Raymond Hettinger1c62dc92009-02-04 11:41:45 +0000216 >>> # Find the ten most common words in Hamlet
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000217 >>> import re
Raymond Hettingerfaaba592013-03-01 03:30:20 -0800218 >>> words = re.findall(r'\w+', open('hamlet.txt').read().lower())
Raymond Hettinger0bae6622009-01-20 13:00:59 +0000219 >>> Counter(words).most_common(10)
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000220 [('the', 1143), ('and', 966), ('to', 762), ('of', 669), ('i', 631),
221 ('you', 554), ('a', 546), ('my', 514), ('hamlet', 471), ('in', 451)]
222
223.. class:: Counter([iterable-or-mapping])
224
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700225 A :class:`Counter` is a :class:`dict` subclass for counting hashable objects.
226 It is an unordered collection where elements are stored as dictionary keys
227 and their counts are stored as dictionary values. Counts are allowed to be
228 any integer value including zero or negative counts. The :class:`Counter`
229 class is similar to bags or multisets in other languages.
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000230
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700231 Elements are counted from an *iterable* or initialized from another
232 *mapping* (or counter):
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000233
Raymond Hettinger73662a52009-01-27 02:38:22 +0000234 >>> c = Counter() # a new, empty counter
235 >>> c = Counter('gallahad') # a new counter from an iterable
236 >>> c = Counter({'red': 4, 'blue': 2}) # a new counter from a mapping
237 >>> c = Counter(cats=4, dogs=8) # a new counter from keyword args
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000238
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700239 Counter objects have a dictionary interface except that they return a zero
240 count for missing items instead of raising a :exc:`KeyError`:
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000241
Raymond Hettinger94adc8e2009-01-22 05:27:37 +0000242 >>> c = Counter(['eggs', 'ham'])
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000243 >>> c['bacon'] # count of a missing element is zero
244 0
245
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700246 Setting a count to zero does not remove an element from a counter.
247 Use ``del`` to remove it entirely:
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000248
Raymond Hettinger94adc8e2009-01-22 05:27:37 +0000249 >>> c['sausage'] = 0 # counter entry with a zero count
250 >>> del c['sausage'] # del actually removes the entry
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000251
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700252 .. versionadded:: 3.1
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000253
254
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700255 Counter objects support three methods beyond those available for all
256 dictionaries:
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000257
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700258 .. method:: elements()
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000259
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700260 Return an iterator over elements repeating each as many times as its
261 count. Elements are returned in arbitrary order. If an element's count
262 is less than one, :meth:`elements` will ignore it.
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000263
Raymond Hettinger0bae6622009-01-20 13:00:59 +0000264 >>> c = Counter(a=4, b=2, c=0, d=-2)
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000265 >>> list(c.elements())
266 ['a', 'a', 'a', 'a', 'b', 'b']
267
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700268 .. method:: most_common([n])
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000269
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700270 Return a list of the *n* most common elements and their counts from the
271 most common to the least. If *n* is not specified, :func:`most_common`
272 returns *all* elements in the counter. Elements with equal counts are
273 ordered arbitrarily:
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000274
275 >>> Counter('abracadabra').most_common(3)
276 [('a', 5), ('r', 2), ('b', 2)]
277
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700278 .. method:: subtract([iterable-or-mapping])
Raymond Hettinger9c01e442010-04-03 10:32:58 +0000279
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700280 Elements are subtracted from an *iterable* or from another *mapping*
281 (or counter). Like :meth:`dict.update` but subtracts counts instead
282 of replacing them. Both inputs and outputs may be zero or negative.
Raymond Hettinger9c01e442010-04-03 10:32:58 +0000283
284 >>> c = Counter(a=4, b=2, c=0, d=-2)
285 >>> d = Counter(a=1, b=2, c=3, d=4)
286 >>> c.subtract(d)
Andrew Svetlovf6351722012-12-17 14:01:16 +0200287 >>> c
Raymond Hettinger9c01e442010-04-03 10:32:58 +0000288 Counter({'a': 3, 'b': 0, 'c': -3, 'd': -6})
289
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700290 .. versionadded:: 3.2
Ezio Melotti0be8b1c2010-04-04 06:53:44 +0000291
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700292 The usual dictionary methods are available for :class:`Counter` objects
293 except for two which work differently for counters.
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000294
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700295 .. method:: fromkeys(iterable)
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000296
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700297 This class method is not implemented for :class:`Counter` objects.
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000298
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700299 .. method:: update([iterable-or-mapping])
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000300
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700301 Elements are counted from an *iterable* or added-in from another
302 *mapping* (or counter). Like :meth:`dict.update` but adds counts
303 instead of replacing them. Also, the *iterable* is expected to be a
304 sequence of elements, not a sequence of ``(key, value)`` pairs.
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000305
306Common patterns for working with :class:`Counter` objects::
307
Raymond Hettinger73662a52009-01-27 02:38:22 +0000308 sum(c.values()) # total of all counts
309 c.clear() # reset all counts
310 list(c) # list unique elements
311 set(c) # convert to a set
312 dict(c) # convert to a regular dictionary
313 c.items() # convert to a list of (elem, cnt) pairs
314 Counter(dict(list_of_pairs)) # convert from a list of (elem, cnt) pairs
315 c.most_common()[:-n:-1] # n least common elements
Raymond Hettingerfcb393c2011-08-09 13:00:40 -0700316 +c # remove zero and negative counts
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000317
Raymond Hettinger72a95cc2009-02-25 22:51:40 +0000318Several mathematical operations are provided for combining :class:`Counter`
319objects to produce multisets (counters that have counts greater than zero).
320Addition and subtraction combine counters by adding or subtracting the counts
321of corresponding elements. Intersection and union return the minimum and
322maximum of corresponding counts. Each operation can accept inputs with signed
323counts, but the output will exclude results with counts of zero or less.
Raymond Hettinger4d2073a2009-01-20 03:41:22 +0000324
Raymond Hettingere0d1b9f2009-01-21 20:36:27 +0000325 >>> c = Counter(a=3, b=1)
326 >>> d = Counter(a=1, b=2)
Raymond Hettinger73662a52009-01-27 02:38:22 +0000327 >>> c + d # add two counters together: c[x] + d[x]
Raymond Hettinger4d2073a2009-01-20 03:41:22 +0000328 Counter({'a': 4, 'b': 3})
Raymond Hettinger73662a52009-01-27 02:38:22 +0000329 >>> c - d # subtract (keeping only positive counts)
Raymond Hettinger4d2073a2009-01-20 03:41:22 +0000330 Counter({'a': 2})
Raymond Hettinger73662a52009-01-27 02:38:22 +0000331 >>> c & d # intersection: min(c[x], d[x])
Raymond Hettinger4d2073a2009-01-20 03:41:22 +0000332 Counter({'a': 1, 'b': 1})
Raymond Hettinger73662a52009-01-27 02:38:22 +0000333 >>> c | d # union: max(c[x], d[x])
Raymond Hettinger4d2073a2009-01-20 03:41:22 +0000334 Counter({'a': 3, 'b': 2})
335
Raymond Hettingerfcb393c2011-08-09 13:00:40 -0700336Unary addition and substraction are shortcuts for adding an empty counter
337or subtracting from an empty counter.
338
339 >>> c = Counter(a=2, b=-4)
340 >>> +c
341 Counter({'a': 2})
342 >>> -c
343 Counter({'b': 4})
344
345.. versionadded:: 3.3
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700346 Added support for unary plus, unary minus, and in-place multiset operations.
Raymond Hettingerfcb393c2011-08-09 13:00:40 -0700347
Raymond Hettinger22f18852010-04-12 21:45:14 +0000348.. note::
349
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700350 Counters were primarily designed to work with positive integers to represent
351 running counts; however, care was taken to not unnecessarily preclude use
352 cases needing other types or negative values. To help with those use cases,
353 this section documents the minimum range and type restrictions.
Raymond Hettinger22f18852010-04-12 21:45:14 +0000354
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700355 * The :class:`Counter` class itself is a dictionary subclass with no
Georg Brandl2fdc0f82012-10-06 22:38:20 +0200356 restrictions on its keys and values. The values are intended to be numbers
357 representing counts, but you *could* store anything in the value field.
Raymond Hettinger22f18852010-04-12 21:45:14 +0000358
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700359 * The :meth:`most_common` method requires only that the values be orderable.
Raymond Hettinger22f18852010-04-12 21:45:14 +0000360
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700361 * For in-place operations such as ``c[key] += 1``, the value type need only
Georg Brandl2fdc0f82012-10-06 22:38:20 +0200362 support addition and subtraction. So fractions, floats, and decimals would
363 work and negative values are supported. The same is also true for
364 :meth:`update` and :meth:`subtract` which allow negative and zero values
365 for both inputs and outputs.
Raymond Hettinger22f18852010-04-12 21:45:14 +0000366
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700367 * The multiset methods are designed only for use cases with positive values.
Georg Brandl2fdc0f82012-10-06 22:38:20 +0200368 The inputs may be negative or zero, but only outputs with positive values
369 are created. There are no type restrictions, but the value type needs to
370 support addition, subtraction, and comparison.
Raymond Hettinger22f18852010-04-12 21:45:14 +0000371
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700372 * The :meth:`elements` method requires integer counts. It ignores zero and
Georg Brandl2fdc0f82012-10-06 22:38:20 +0200373 negative counts.
Raymond Hettinger22f18852010-04-12 21:45:14 +0000374
Raymond Hettingerb14043c2009-01-20 23:44:31 +0000375.. seealso::
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000376
Raymond Hettinger94adc8e2009-01-22 05:27:37 +0000377 * `Counter class <http://code.activestate.com/recipes/576611/>`_
Raymond Hettingerbfcb4292012-06-10 11:39:44 -0700378 adapted for Python 2.5 and an early `Bag recipe
379 <http://code.activestate.com/recipes/259174/>`_ for Python 2.4.
Raymond Hettinger94adc8e2009-01-22 05:27:37 +0000380
Raymond Hettingerb14043c2009-01-20 23:44:31 +0000381 * `Bag class <http://www.gnu.org/software/smalltalk/manual-base/html_node/Bag.html>`_
Raymond Hettingerbfcb4292012-06-10 11:39:44 -0700382 in Smalltalk.
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000383
Éric Araujo08c9bd52011-04-24 02:59:02 +0200384 * Wikipedia entry for `Multisets <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiset>`_.
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000385
Raymond Hettingerb14043c2009-01-20 23:44:31 +0000386 * `C++ multisets <http://www.demo2s.com/Tutorial/Cpp/0380__set-multiset/Catalog0380__set-multiset.htm>`_
Raymond Hettingerbfcb4292012-06-10 11:39:44 -0700387 tutorial with examples.
Raymond Hettingerb14043c2009-01-20 23:44:31 +0000388
Raymond Hettinger94adc8e2009-01-22 05:27:37 +0000389 * For mathematical operations on multisets and their use cases, see
Raymond Hettingerbfcb4292012-06-10 11:39:44 -0700390 *Knuth, Donald. The Art of Computer Programming Volume II,
391 Section 4.6.3, Exercise 19*.
Raymond Hettingerb14043c2009-01-20 23:44:31 +0000392
Raymond Hettinger670eaec2009-01-21 23:14:07 +0000393 * To enumerate all distinct multisets of a given size over a given set of
Raymond Hettingerbfcb4292012-06-10 11:39:44 -0700394 elements, see :func:`itertools.combinations_with_replacement`.
Raymond Hettingerb14043c2009-01-20 23:44:31 +0000395
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700396 map(Counter, combinations_with_replacement('ABC', 2)) --> AA AB AC BB BC CC
Raymond Hettingerb8baf632009-01-14 02:20:07 +0000397
398
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000399:class:`deque` objects
400----------------------
401
Georg Brandlc2a4f4f2009-04-10 09:03:43 +0000402.. class:: deque([iterable, [maxlen]])
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000403
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700404 Returns a new deque object initialized left-to-right (using :meth:`append`) with
405 data from *iterable*. If *iterable* is not specified, the new deque is empty.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000406
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700407 Deques are a generalization of stacks and queues (the name is pronounced "deck"
408 and is short for "double-ended queue"). Deques support thread-safe, memory
409 efficient appends and pops from either side of the deque with approximately the
410 same O(1) performance in either direction.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000411
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700412 Though :class:`list` objects support similar operations, they are optimized for
413 fast fixed-length operations and incur O(n) memory movement costs for
414 ``pop(0)`` and ``insert(0, v)`` operations which change both the size and
415 position of the underlying data representation.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000416
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000417
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700418 If *maxlen* is not specified or is *None*, deques may grow to an
419 arbitrary length. Otherwise, the deque is bounded to the specified maximum
420 length. Once a bounded length deque is full, when new items are added, a
421 corresponding number of items are discarded from the opposite end. Bounded
422 length deques provide functionality similar to the ``tail`` filter in
423 Unix. They are also useful for tracking transactions and other pools of data
424 where only the most recent activity is of interest.
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +0000425
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +0000426
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700427 Deque objects support the following methods:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000428
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700429 .. method:: append(x)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000430
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700431 Add *x* to the right side of the deque.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000432
433
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700434 .. method:: appendleft(x)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000435
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700436 Add *x* to the left side of the deque.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000437
438
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700439 .. method:: clear()
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000440
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700441 Remove all elements from the deque leaving it with length 0.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000442
443
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700444 .. method:: count(x)
Raymond Hettinger44459de2010-04-03 23:20:46 +0000445
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700446 Count the number of deque elements equal to *x*.
Raymond Hettinger44459de2010-04-03 23:20:46 +0000447
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700448 .. versionadded:: 3.2
Raymond Hettinger44459de2010-04-03 23:20:46 +0000449
Georg Brandl67b21b72010-08-17 15:07:14 +0000450
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700451 .. method:: extend(iterable)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000452
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700453 Extend the right side of the deque by appending elements from the iterable
454 argument.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000455
456
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700457 .. method:: extendleft(iterable)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000458
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700459 Extend the left side of the deque by appending elements from *iterable*.
460 Note, the series of left appends results in reversing the order of
461 elements in the iterable argument.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000462
463
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700464 .. method:: pop()
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000465
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700466 Remove and return an element from the right side of the deque. If no
467 elements are present, raises an :exc:`IndexError`.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000468
469
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700470 .. method:: popleft()
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000471
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700472 Remove and return an element from the left side of the deque. If no
473 elements are present, raises an :exc:`IndexError`.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000474
475
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700476 .. method:: remove(value)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000477
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700478 Removed the first occurrence of *value*. If not found, raises a
479 :exc:`ValueError`.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000480
Georg Brandl67b21b72010-08-17 15:07:14 +0000481
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700482 .. method:: reverse()
Raymond Hettingere5fdedb2009-12-10 00:47:21 +0000483
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700484 Reverse the elements of the deque in-place and then return ``None``.
Raymond Hettingere5fdedb2009-12-10 00:47:21 +0000485
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700486 .. versionadded:: 3.2
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000487
Georg Brandl67b21b72010-08-17 15:07:14 +0000488
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700489 .. method:: rotate(n)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000490
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700491 Rotate the deque *n* steps to the right. If *n* is negative, rotate to
492 the left. Rotating one step to the right is equivalent to:
493 ``d.appendleft(d.pop())``.
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +0000494
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000495
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700496 Deque objects also provide one read-only attribute:
Raymond Hettinger5bb0f0e2009-03-10 12:56:32 +0000497
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700498 .. attribute:: maxlen
Raymond Hettinger5bb0f0e2009-03-10 12:56:32 +0000499
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700500 Maximum size of a deque or *None* if unbounded.
Raymond Hettinger5bb0f0e2009-03-10 12:56:32 +0000501
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700502 .. versionadded:: 3.1
Raymond Hettinger5bb0f0e2009-03-10 12:56:32 +0000503
504
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000505In addition to the above, deques support iteration, pickling, ``len(d)``,
506``reversed(d)``, ``copy.copy(d)``, ``copy.deepcopy(d)``, membership testing with
Benjamin Peterson206e3072008-10-19 14:07:49 +0000507the :keyword:`in` operator, and subscript references such as ``d[-1]``. Indexed
508access is O(1) at both ends but slows to O(n) in the middle. For fast random
509access, use lists instead.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000510
Christian Heimesfe337bf2008-03-23 21:54:12 +0000511Example:
512
513.. doctest::
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000514
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700515 >>> from collections import deque
516 >>> d = deque('ghi') # make a new deque with three items
517 >>> for elem in d: # iterate over the deque's elements
518 ... print(elem.upper())
519 G
520 H
521 I
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000522
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700523 >>> d.append('j') # add a new entry to the right side
524 >>> d.appendleft('f') # add a new entry to the left side
525 >>> d # show the representation of the deque
526 deque(['f', 'g', 'h', 'i', 'j'])
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000527
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700528 >>> d.pop() # return and remove the rightmost item
529 'j'
530 >>> d.popleft() # return and remove the leftmost item
531 'f'
532 >>> list(d) # list the contents of the deque
533 ['g', 'h', 'i']
534 >>> d[0] # peek at leftmost item
535 'g'
536 >>> d[-1] # peek at rightmost item
537 'i'
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000538
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700539 >>> list(reversed(d)) # list the contents of a deque in reverse
540 ['i', 'h', 'g']
541 >>> 'h' in d # search the deque
542 True
543 >>> d.extend('jkl') # add multiple elements at once
544 >>> d
545 deque(['g', 'h', 'i', 'j', 'k', 'l'])
546 >>> d.rotate(1) # right rotation
547 >>> d
548 deque(['l', 'g', 'h', 'i', 'j', 'k'])
549 >>> d.rotate(-1) # left rotation
550 >>> d
551 deque(['g', 'h', 'i', 'j', 'k', 'l'])
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000552
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700553 >>> deque(reversed(d)) # make a new deque in reverse order
554 deque(['l', 'k', 'j', 'i', 'h', 'g'])
555 >>> d.clear() # empty the deque
556 >>> d.pop() # cannot pop from an empty deque
557 Traceback (most recent call last):
558 File "<pyshell#6>", line 1, in -toplevel-
559 d.pop()
560 IndexError: pop from an empty deque
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000561
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700562 >>> d.extendleft('abc') # extendleft() reverses the input order
563 >>> d
564 deque(['c', 'b', 'a'])
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000565
566
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +0000567:class:`deque` Recipes
568^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000569
570This section shows various approaches to working with deques.
571
Raymond Hettingerd2ee64d2009-03-31 22:52:48 +0000572Bounded length deques provide functionality similar to the ``tail`` filter
573in Unix::
574
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700575 def tail(filename, n=10):
576 'Return the last n lines of a file'
577 with open(filename) as f:
578 return deque(f, n)
Raymond Hettingerd2ee64d2009-03-31 22:52:48 +0000579
580Another approach to using deques is to maintain a sequence of recently
581added elements by appending to the right and popping to the left::
582
583 def moving_average(iterable, n=3):
584 # moving_average([40, 30, 50, 46, 39, 44]) --> 40.0 42.0 45.0 43.0
585 # http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moving_average
586 it = iter(iterable)
Raymond Hettingerd40285a2009-05-22 01:11:26 +0000587 d = deque(itertools.islice(it, n-1))
588 d.appendleft(0)
Raymond Hettingerd2ee64d2009-03-31 22:52:48 +0000589 s = sum(d)
Raymond Hettingerd2ee64d2009-03-31 22:52:48 +0000590 for elem in it:
591 s += elem - d.popleft()
592 d.append(elem)
593 yield s / n
594
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000595The :meth:`rotate` method provides a way to implement :class:`deque` slicing and
Ezio Melotti0639d5a2009-12-19 23:26:38 +0000596deletion. For example, a pure Python implementation of ``del d[n]`` relies on
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000597the :meth:`rotate` method to position elements to be popped::
598
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700599 def delete_nth(d, n):
600 d.rotate(-n)
601 d.popleft()
602 d.rotate(n)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000603
604To implement :class:`deque` slicing, use a similar approach applying
605:meth:`rotate` to bring a target element to the left side of the deque. Remove
606old entries with :meth:`popleft`, add new entries with :meth:`extend`, and then
607reverse the rotation.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000608With minor variations on that approach, it is easy to implement Forth style
609stack manipulations such as ``dup``, ``drop``, ``swap``, ``over``, ``pick``,
610``rot``, and ``roll``.
611
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000612
613:class:`defaultdict` objects
614----------------------------
615
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000616.. class:: defaultdict([default_factory[, ...]])
617
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700618 Returns a new dictionary-like object. :class:`defaultdict` is a subclass of the
619 built-in :class:`dict` class. It overrides one method and adds one writable
620 instance variable. The remaining functionality is the same as for the
621 :class:`dict` class and is not documented here.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000622
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700623 The first argument provides the initial value for the :attr:`default_factory`
624 attribute; it defaults to ``None``. All remaining arguments are treated the same
625 as if they were passed to the :class:`dict` constructor, including keyword
626 arguments.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000627
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000628
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700629 :class:`defaultdict` objects support the following method in addition to the
630 standard :class:`dict` operations:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000631
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700632 .. method:: __missing__(key)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000633
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700634 If the :attr:`default_factory` attribute is ``None``, this raises a
635 :exc:`KeyError` exception with the *key* as argument.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000636
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700637 If :attr:`default_factory` is not ``None``, it is called without arguments
638 to provide a default value for the given *key*, this value is inserted in
639 the dictionary for the *key*, and returned.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000640
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700641 If calling :attr:`default_factory` raises an exception this exception is
642 propagated unchanged.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000643
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700644 This method is called by the :meth:`__getitem__` method of the
645 :class:`dict` class when the requested key is not found; whatever it
646 returns or raises is then returned or raised by :meth:`__getitem__`.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000647
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700648 Note that :meth:`__missing__` is *not* called for any operations besides
649 :meth:`__getitem__`. This means that :meth:`get` will, like normal
650 dictionaries, return ``None`` as a default rather than using
651 :attr:`default_factory`.
Benjamin Peterson871b9d12012-01-27 09:14:01 -0500652
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000653
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700654 :class:`defaultdict` objects support the following instance variable:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000655
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +0000656
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700657 .. attribute:: default_factory
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +0000658
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700659 This attribute is used by the :meth:`__missing__` method; it is
660 initialized from the first argument to the constructor, if present, or to
661 ``None``, if absent.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000662
663
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000664:class:`defaultdict` Examples
665^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
666
667Using :class:`list` as the :attr:`default_factory`, it is easy to group a
Christian Heimesfe337bf2008-03-23 21:54:12 +0000668sequence of key-value pairs into a dictionary of lists:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000669
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700670 >>> s = [('yellow', 1), ('blue', 2), ('yellow', 3), ('blue', 4), ('red', 1)]
671 >>> d = defaultdict(list)
672 >>> for k, v in s:
673 ... d[k].append(v)
674 ...
675 >>> list(d.items())
676 [('blue', [2, 4]), ('red', [1]), ('yellow', [1, 3])]
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000677
678When each key is encountered for the first time, it is not already in the
679mapping; so an entry is automatically created using the :attr:`default_factory`
680function which returns an empty :class:`list`. The :meth:`list.append`
681operation then attaches the value to the new list. When keys are encountered
682again, the look-up proceeds normally (returning the list for that key) and the
683:meth:`list.append` operation adds another value to the list. This technique is
Christian Heimesfe337bf2008-03-23 21:54:12 +0000684simpler and faster than an equivalent technique using :meth:`dict.setdefault`:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000685
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700686 >>> d = {}
687 >>> for k, v in s:
688 ... d.setdefault(k, []).append(v)
689 ...
690 >>> list(d.items())
691 [('blue', [2, 4]), ('red', [1]), ('yellow', [1, 3])]
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000692
693Setting the :attr:`default_factory` to :class:`int` makes the
694:class:`defaultdict` useful for counting (like a bag or multiset in other
Christian Heimesfe337bf2008-03-23 21:54:12 +0000695languages):
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000696
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700697 >>> s = 'mississippi'
698 >>> d = defaultdict(int)
699 >>> for k in s:
700 ... d[k] += 1
701 ...
702 >>> list(d.items())
703 [('i', 4), ('p', 2), ('s', 4), ('m', 1)]
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000704
705When a letter is first encountered, it is missing from the mapping, so the
706:attr:`default_factory` function calls :func:`int` to supply a default count of
707zero. The increment operation then builds up the count for each letter.
708
709The function :func:`int` which always returns zero is just a special case of
710constant functions. A faster and more flexible way to create constant functions
711is to use a lambda function which can supply any constant value (not just
Christian Heimesfe337bf2008-03-23 21:54:12 +0000712zero):
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000713
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700714 >>> def constant_factory(value):
715 ... return lambda: value
716 >>> d = defaultdict(constant_factory('<missing>'))
717 >>> d.update(name='John', action='ran')
718 >>> '%(name)s %(action)s to %(object)s' % d
719 'John ran to <missing>'
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000720
721Setting the :attr:`default_factory` to :class:`set` makes the
Christian Heimesfe337bf2008-03-23 21:54:12 +0000722:class:`defaultdict` useful for building a dictionary of sets:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000723
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700724 >>> s = [('red', 1), ('blue', 2), ('red', 3), ('blue', 4), ('red', 1), ('blue', 4)]
725 >>> d = defaultdict(set)
726 >>> for k, v in s:
727 ... d[k].add(v)
728 ...
729 >>> list(d.items())
730 [('blue', {2, 4}), ('red', {1, 3})]
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000731
732
Guido van Rossum3d392eb2007-11-16 00:35:22 +0000733:func:`namedtuple` Factory Function for Tuples with Named Fields
Christian Heimes790c8232008-01-07 21:14:23 +0000734----------------------------------------------------------------
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000735
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000736Named tuples assign meaning to each position in a tuple and allow for more readable,
737self-documenting code. They can be used wherever regular tuples are used, and
738they add the ability to access fields by name instead of position index.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000739
Georg Brandlc2a4f4f2009-04-10 09:03:43 +0000740.. function:: namedtuple(typename, field_names, verbose=False, rename=False)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000741
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700742 Returns a new tuple subclass named *typename*. The new subclass is used to
743 create tuple-like objects that have fields accessible by attribute lookup as
744 well as being indexable and iterable. Instances of the subclass also have a
745 helpful docstring (with typename and field_names) and a helpful :meth:`__repr__`
746 method which lists the tuple contents in a ``name=value`` format.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000747
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700748 The *field_names* are a single string with each fieldname separated by whitespace
749 and/or commas, for example ``'x y'`` or ``'x, y'``. Alternatively, *field_names*
750 can be a sequence of strings such as ``['x', 'y']``.
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +0000751
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700752 Any valid Python identifier may be used for a fieldname except for names
753 starting with an underscore. Valid identifiers consist of letters, digits,
754 and underscores but do not start with a digit or underscore and cannot be
755 a :mod:`keyword` such as *class*, *for*, *return*, *global*, *pass*,
756 or *raise*.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000757
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700758 If *rename* is true, invalid fieldnames are automatically replaced
759 with positional names. For example, ``['abc', 'def', 'ghi', 'abc']`` is
760 converted to ``['abc', '_1', 'ghi', '_3']``, eliminating the keyword
761 ``def`` and the duplicate fieldname ``abc``.
Benjamin Petersona86f2c02009-02-10 02:41:10 +0000762
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700763 If *verbose* is true, the class definition is printed after it is
764 built. This option is outdated; instead, it is simpler to print the
765 :attr:`_source` attribute.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000766
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700767 Named tuple instances do not have per-instance dictionaries, so they are
768 lightweight and require no more memory than regular tuples.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000769
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700770 .. versionchanged:: 3.1
771 Added support for *rename*.
Benjamin Petersona86f2c02009-02-10 02:41:10 +0000772
Christian Heimesfe337bf2008-03-23 21:54:12 +0000773
774.. doctest::
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700775 :options: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000776
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700777 >>> # Basic example
778 >>> Point = namedtuple('Point', ['x', 'y'])
779 >>> p = Point(11, y=22) # instantiate with positional or keyword arguments
780 >>> p[0] + p[1] # indexable like the plain tuple (11, 22)
781 33
782 >>> x, y = p # unpack like a regular tuple
783 >>> x, y
784 (11, 22)
785 >>> p.x + p.y # fields also accessible by name
786 33
787 >>> p # readable __repr__ with a name=value style
788 Point(x=11, y=22)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000789
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000790Named tuples are especially useful for assigning field names to result tuples returned
791by the :mod:`csv` or :mod:`sqlite3` modules::
792
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700793 EmployeeRecord = namedtuple('EmployeeRecord', 'name, age, title, department, paygrade')
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +0000794
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700795 import csv
796 for emp in map(EmployeeRecord._make, csv.reader(open("employees.csv", "rb"))):
797 print(emp.name, emp.title)
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000798
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700799 import sqlite3
800 conn = sqlite3.connect('/companydata')
801 cursor = conn.cursor()
802 cursor.execute('SELECT name, age, title, department, paygrade FROM employees')
803 for emp in map(EmployeeRecord._make, cursor.fetchall()):
804 print(emp.name, emp.title)
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +0000805
Christian Heimes99170a52007-12-19 02:07:34 +0000806In addition to the methods inherited from tuples, named tuples support
Raymond Hettinger2ebea412011-03-23 12:52:23 -0700807three additional methods and two attributes. To prevent conflicts with
Christian Heimes2380ac72008-01-09 00:17:24 +0000808field names, the method and attribute names start with an underscore.
Christian Heimes99170a52007-12-19 02:07:34 +0000809
Benjamin Peterson0b9fb802010-07-18 14:23:36 +0000810.. classmethod:: somenamedtuple._make(iterable)
Christian Heimes99170a52007-12-19 02:07:34 +0000811
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700812 Class method that makes a new instance from an existing sequence or iterable.
Christian Heimes99170a52007-12-19 02:07:34 +0000813
Raymond Hettinger6fed9fd2012-06-11 00:38:14 -0700814 .. doctest::
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000815
Raymond Hettinger6fed9fd2012-06-11 00:38:14 -0700816 >>> t = [11, 22]
817 >>> Point._make(t)
818 Point(x=11, y=22)
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000819
Christian Heimes790c8232008-01-07 21:14:23 +0000820.. method:: somenamedtuple._asdict()
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +0000821
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700822 Return a new :class:`OrderedDict` which maps field names to their corresponding
823 values. Note, this method is no longer needed now that the same effect can
824 be achieved by using the built-in :func:`vars` function::
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +0000825
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700826 >>> vars(p)
827 OrderedDict([('x', 11), ('y', 22)])
Raymond Hettingera4f52b12009-03-02 22:28:31 +0000828
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700829 .. versionchanged:: 3.1
830 Returns an :class:`OrderedDict` instead of a regular :class:`dict`.
Christian Heimesfe337bf2008-03-23 21:54:12 +0000831
Christian Heimes790c8232008-01-07 21:14:23 +0000832.. method:: somenamedtuple._replace(kwargs)
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000833
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700834 Return a new instance of the named tuple replacing specified fields with new
Raymond Hettinger6fed9fd2012-06-11 00:38:14 -0700835 values::
Thomas Wouters8ce81f72007-09-20 18:22:40 +0000836
Raymond Hettinger6fed9fd2012-06-11 00:38:14 -0700837 >>> p = Point(x=11, y=22)
838 >>> p._replace(x=33)
839 Point(x=33, y=22)
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000840
Raymond Hettinger6fed9fd2012-06-11 00:38:14 -0700841 >>> for partnum, record in inventory.items():
842 ... inventory[partnum] = record._replace(price=newprices[partnum], timestamp=time.now())
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000843
Raymond Hettinger2ebea412011-03-23 12:52:23 -0700844.. attribute:: somenamedtuple._source
845
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700846 A string with the pure Python source code used to create the named
847 tuple class. The source makes the named tuple self-documenting.
Raymond Hettinger163e9822013-05-18 00:05:20 -0700848 It can be printed, executed using :func:`exec`, or saved to a file
849 and imported.
Raymond Hettinger2ebea412011-03-23 12:52:23 -0700850
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700851 .. versionadded:: 3.3
Raymond Hettinger2ebea412011-03-23 12:52:23 -0700852
Christian Heimes790c8232008-01-07 21:14:23 +0000853.. attribute:: somenamedtuple._fields
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000854
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700855 Tuple of strings listing the field names. Useful for introspection
856 and for creating new named tuple types from existing named tuples.
Thomas Wouters8ce81f72007-09-20 18:22:40 +0000857
Raymond Hettinger6fed9fd2012-06-11 00:38:14 -0700858 .. doctest::
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000859
Raymond Hettinger6fed9fd2012-06-11 00:38:14 -0700860 >>> p._fields # view the field names
861 ('x', 'y')
Thomas Wouters1b7f8912007-09-19 03:06:30 +0000862
Raymond Hettinger6fed9fd2012-06-11 00:38:14 -0700863 >>> Color = namedtuple('Color', 'red green blue')
864 >>> Pixel = namedtuple('Pixel', Point._fields + Color._fields)
865 >>> Pixel(11, 22, 128, 255, 0)
866 Pixel(x=11, y=22, red=128, green=255, blue=0)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000867
Christian Heimes0449f632007-12-15 01:27:15 +0000868To retrieve a field whose name is stored in a string, use the :func:`getattr`
Christian Heimesfe337bf2008-03-23 21:54:12 +0000869function:
Christian Heimes0449f632007-12-15 01:27:15 +0000870
871 >>> getattr(p, 'x')
872 11
873
Raymond Hettinger651453a2009-02-11 00:20:02 +0000874To convert a dictionary to a named tuple, use the double-star-operator
875(as described in :ref:`tut-unpacking-arguments`):
Christian Heimes99170a52007-12-19 02:07:34 +0000876
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700877 >>> d = {'x': 11, 'y': 22}
878 >>> Point(**d)
879 Point(x=11, y=22)
Christian Heimes99170a52007-12-19 02:07:34 +0000880
Guido van Rossum3d392eb2007-11-16 00:35:22 +0000881Since a named tuple is a regular Python class, it is easy to add or change
Christian Heimes043d6f62008-01-07 17:19:16 +0000882functionality with a subclass. Here is how to add a calculated field and
Christian Heimesfe337bf2008-03-23 21:54:12 +0000883a fixed-width print format:
Guido van Rossum3d392eb2007-11-16 00:35:22 +0000884
Christian Heimes043d6f62008-01-07 17:19:16 +0000885 >>> class Point(namedtuple('Point', 'x y')):
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700886 __slots__ = ()
887 @property
888 def hypot(self):
889 return (self.x ** 2 + self.y ** 2) ** 0.5
890 def __str__(self):
891 return 'Point: x=%6.3f y=%6.3f hypot=%6.3f' % (self.x, self.y, self.hypot)
Guido van Rossum3d392eb2007-11-16 00:35:22 +0000892
Georg Brandl0df79792008-10-04 18:33:26 +0000893 >>> for p in Point(3, 4), Point(14, 5/7):
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700894 print(p)
Christian Heimes25bb7832008-01-11 16:17:00 +0000895 Point: x= 3.000 y= 4.000 hypot= 5.000
896 Point: x=14.000 y= 0.714 hypot=14.018
Christian Heimes043d6f62008-01-07 17:19:16 +0000897
Georg Brandlaf5c2382009-12-28 08:02:38 +0000898The subclass shown above sets ``__slots__`` to an empty tuple. This helps
Christian Heimes679db4a2008-01-18 09:56:22 +0000899keep memory requirements low by preventing the creation of instance dictionaries.
900
Christian Heimes2380ac72008-01-09 00:17:24 +0000901Subclassing is not useful for adding new, stored fields. Instead, simply
Christian Heimesfe337bf2008-03-23 21:54:12 +0000902create a new named tuple type from the :attr:`_fields` attribute:
Christian Heimes2380ac72008-01-09 00:17:24 +0000903
Christian Heimes25bb7832008-01-11 16:17:00 +0000904 >>> Point3D = namedtuple('Point3D', Point._fields + ('z',))
Christian Heimes2380ac72008-01-09 00:17:24 +0000905
906Default values can be implemented by using :meth:`_replace` to
Christian Heimesfe337bf2008-03-23 21:54:12 +0000907customize a prototype instance:
Guido van Rossum3d392eb2007-11-16 00:35:22 +0000908
909 >>> Account = namedtuple('Account', 'owner balance transaction_count')
Christian Heimes587c2bf2008-01-19 16:21:02 +0000910 >>> default_account = Account('<owner name>', 0.0, 0)
911 >>> johns_account = default_account._replace(owner='John')
Raymond Hettingerb2d09452011-03-22 22:36:21 -0700912 >>> janes_account = default_account._replace(owner='Jane')
Guido van Rossum3d392eb2007-11-16 00:35:22 +0000913
Christian Heimese4ca8152008-05-08 17:18:53 +0000914Enumerated constants can be implemented with named tuples, but it is simpler
915and more efficient to use a simple class declaration:
916
917 >>> Status = namedtuple('Status', 'open pending closed')._make(range(3))
918 >>> Status.open, Status.pending, Status.closed
919 (0, 1, 2)
920 >>> class Status:
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700921 open, pending, closed = range(3)
Christian Heimese4ca8152008-05-08 17:18:53 +0000922
Raymond Hettinger651453a2009-02-11 00:20:02 +0000923.. seealso::
Thomas Wouters47b49bf2007-08-30 22:15:33 +0000924
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700925 * `Named tuple recipe <http://code.activestate.com/recipes/500261/>`_
Raymond Hettingerbfcb4292012-06-10 11:39:44 -0700926 adapted for Python 2.4.
Raymond Hettinger6c94e6f2011-03-31 15:46:06 -0700927
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700928 * `Recipe for named tuple abstract base class with a metaclass mix-in
Raymond Hettingerbfcb4292012-06-10 11:39:44 -0700929 <http://code.activestate.com/recipes/577629-namedtupleabc-abstract-base-class-mix-in-for-named/>`_
930 by Jan Kaliszewski. Besides providing an :term:`abstract base class` for
931 named tuples, it also supports an alternate :term:`metaclass`-based
932 constructor that is convenient for use cases where named tuples are being
933 subclassed.
Raymond Hettingere4c96ad2008-02-06 01:23:58 +0000934
935
Raymond Hettinger2d32f632009-03-02 21:24:57 +0000936:class:`OrderedDict` objects
937----------------------------
938
939Ordered dictionaries are just like regular dictionaries but they remember the
940order that items were inserted. When iterating over an ordered dictionary,
941the items are returned in the order their keys were first added.
942
943.. class:: OrderedDict([items])
944
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700945 Return an instance of a dict subclass, supporting the usual :class:`dict`
946 methods. An *OrderedDict* is a dict that remembers the order that keys
947 were first inserted. If a new entry overwrites an existing entry, the
948 original insertion position is left unchanged. Deleting an entry and
949 reinserting it will move it to the end.
Raymond Hettinger2d32f632009-03-02 21:24:57 +0000950
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700951 .. versionadded:: 3.1
Raymond Hettinger2d32f632009-03-02 21:24:57 +0000952
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700953 .. method:: popitem(last=True)
Raymond Hettingerdc879f02009-03-19 20:30:56 +0000954
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700955 The :meth:`popitem` method for ordered dictionaries returns and removes a
956 (key, value) pair. The pairs are returned in LIFO order if *last* is true
957 or FIFO order if false.
Raymond Hettinger2d32f632009-03-02 21:24:57 +0000958
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700959 .. method:: move_to_end(key, last=True)
Raymond Hettingerf45abc92010-09-06 21:26:09 +0000960
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700961 Move an existing *key* to either end of an ordered dictionary. The item
962 is moved to the right end if *last* is true (the default) or to the
963 beginning if *last* is false. Raises :exc:`KeyError` if the *key* does
964 not exist::
Raymond Hettingerf45abc92010-09-06 21:26:09 +0000965
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700966 >>> d = OrderedDict.fromkeys('abcde')
967 >>> d.move_to_end('b')
968 >>> ''.join(d.keys())
969 'acdeb'
970 >>> d.move_to_end('b', last=False)
971 >>> ''.join(d.keys())
972 'bacde'
Raymond Hettingerf45abc92010-09-06 21:26:09 +0000973
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700974 .. versionadded:: 3.2
Raymond Hettingerf45abc92010-09-06 21:26:09 +0000975
Raymond Hettingere9091502009-05-19 17:40:07 +0000976In addition to the usual mapping methods, ordered dictionaries also support
977reverse iteration using :func:`reversed`.
978
Raymond Hettinger2d32f632009-03-02 21:24:57 +0000979Equality tests between :class:`OrderedDict` objects are order-sensitive
980and are implemented as ``list(od1.items())==list(od2.items())``.
981Equality tests between :class:`OrderedDict` objects and other
982:class:`Mapping` objects are order-insensitive like regular dictionaries.
983This allows :class:`OrderedDict` objects to be substituted anywhere a
984regular dictionary is used.
985
Raymond Hettinger36180782009-04-09 22:34:23 +0000986The :class:`OrderedDict` constructor and :meth:`update` method both accept
987keyword arguments, but their order is lost because Python's function call
988semantics pass-in keyword arguments using a regular unordered dictionary.
989
Raymond Hettingerdc879f02009-03-19 20:30:56 +0000990.. seealso::
991
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -0700992 `Equivalent OrderedDict recipe <http://code.activestate.com/recipes/576693/>`_
993 that runs on Python 2.4 or later.
Raymond Hettingerdc879f02009-03-19 20:30:56 +0000994
Raymond Hettinger7bba6832011-04-15 17:43:19 -0700995:class:`OrderedDict` Examples and Recipes
996^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
997
Raymond Hettinger0e312012009-11-10 18:35:46 +0000998Since an ordered dictionary remembers its insertion order, it can be used
999in conjuction with sorting to make a sorted dictionary::
1000
1001 >>> # regular unsorted dictionary
1002 >>> d = {'banana': 3, 'apple':4, 'pear': 1, 'orange': 2}
1003
1004 >>> # dictionary sorted by key
1005 >>> OrderedDict(sorted(d.items(), key=lambda t: t[0]))
1006 OrderedDict([('apple', 4), ('banana', 3), ('orange', 2), ('pear', 1)])
1007
1008 >>> # dictionary sorted by value
1009 >>> OrderedDict(sorted(d.items(), key=lambda t: t[1]))
1010 OrderedDict([('pear', 1), ('orange', 2), ('banana', 3), ('apple', 4)])
1011
1012 >>> # dictionary sorted by length of the key string
1013 >>> OrderedDict(sorted(d.items(), key=lambda t: len(t[0])))
1014 OrderedDict([('pear', 1), ('apple', 4), ('orange', 2), ('banana', 3)])
1015
1016The new sorted dictionaries maintain their sort order when entries
1017are deleted. But when new keys are added, the keys are appended
1018to the end and the sort is not maintained.
1019
Raymond Hettinger4821ef82010-07-31 10:14:41 +00001020It is also straight-forward to create an ordered dictionary variant
Andrew Svetlovff63e7a2012-08-31 13:54:54 +03001021that remembers the order the keys were *last* inserted.
Raymond Hettinger4821ef82010-07-31 10:14:41 +00001022If a new entry overwrites an existing entry, the
1023original insertion position is changed and moved to the end::
1024
1025 class LastUpdatedOrderedDict(OrderedDict):
Georg Brandl77570e22010-12-18 16:21:58 +00001026 'Store items in the order the keys were last added'
Raymond Hettinger7bba6832011-04-15 17:43:19 -07001027
Raymond Hettinger4821ef82010-07-31 10:14:41 +00001028 def __setitem__(self, key, value):
1029 if key in self:
1030 del self[key]
1031 OrderedDict.__setitem__(self, key, value)
1032
Éric Araujo889a7dc2011-08-19 00:40:46 +02001033An ordered dictionary can be combined with the :class:`Counter` class
Raymond Hettinger7bba6832011-04-15 17:43:19 -07001034so that the counter remembers the order elements are first encountered::
1035
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -07001036 class OrderedCounter(Counter, OrderedDict):
Raymond Hettinger7bba6832011-04-15 17:43:19 -07001037 'Counter that remembers the order elements are first encountered'
1038
Raymond Hettinger7bba6832011-04-15 17:43:19 -07001039 def __repr__(self):
1040 return '%s(%r)' % (self.__class__.__name__, OrderedDict(self))
1041
1042 def __reduce__(self):
1043 return self.__class__, (OrderedDict(self),)
1044
Raymond Hettingere4c96ad2008-02-06 01:23:58 +00001045
1046:class:`UserDict` objects
Mark Summerfield8f2d0062008-02-06 13:30:44 +00001047-------------------------
Raymond Hettingere4c96ad2008-02-06 01:23:58 +00001048
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001049The class, :class:`UserDict` acts as a wrapper around dictionary objects.
1050The need for this class has been partially supplanted by the ability to
Raymond Hettingere4c96ad2008-02-06 01:23:58 +00001051subclass directly from :class:`dict`; however, this class can be easier
1052to work with because the underlying dictionary is accessible as an
1053attribute.
1054
1055.. class:: UserDict([initialdata])
1056
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -07001057 Class that simulates a dictionary. The instance's contents are kept in a
1058 regular dictionary, which is accessible via the :attr:`data` attribute of
1059 :class:`UserDict` instances. If *initialdata* is provided, :attr:`data` is
1060 initialized with its contents; note that a reference to *initialdata* will not
1061 be kept, allowing it be used for other purposes.
Raymond Hettingere4c96ad2008-02-06 01:23:58 +00001062
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -07001063 In addition to supporting the methods and operations of mappings,
1064 :class:`UserDict` instances provide the following attribute:
Raymond Hettingere4c96ad2008-02-06 01:23:58 +00001065
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -07001066 .. attribute:: data
Raymond Hettingere4c96ad2008-02-06 01:23:58 +00001067
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -07001068 A real dictionary used to store the contents of the :class:`UserDict`
1069 class.
Raymond Hettinger53dbe392008-02-12 20:03:09 +00001070
1071
1072
1073:class:`UserList` objects
1074-------------------------
1075
1076This class acts as a wrapper around list objects. It is a useful base class
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001077for your own list-like classes which can inherit from them and override
Raymond Hettinger53dbe392008-02-12 20:03:09 +00001078existing methods or add new ones. In this way, one can add new behaviors to
1079lists.
1080
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001081The need for this class has been partially supplanted by the ability to
Raymond Hettinger53dbe392008-02-12 20:03:09 +00001082subclass directly from :class:`list`; however, this class can be easier
1083to work with because the underlying list is accessible as an attribute.
1084
1085.. class:: UserList([list])
1086
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -07001087 Class that simulates a list. The instance's contents are kept in a regular
1088 list, which is accessible via the :attr:`data` attribute of :class:`UserList`
1089 instances. The instance's contents are initially set to a copy of *list*,
1090 defaulting to the empty list ``[]``. *list* can be any iterable, for
1091 example a real Python list or a :class:`UserList` object.
Raymond Hettinger53dbe392008-02-12 20:03:09 +00001092
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -07001093 In addition to supporting the methods and operations of mutable sequences,
1094 :class:`UserList` instances provide the following attribute:
Raymond Hettinger53dbe392008-02-12 20:03:09 +00001095
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -07001096 .. attribute:: data
Raymond Hettinger53dbe392008-02-12 20:03:09 +00001097
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -07001098 A real :class:`list` object used to store the contents of the
1099 :class:`UserList` class.
Raymond Hettinger53dbe392008-02-12 20:03:09 +00001100
1101**Subclassing requirements:** Subclasses of :class:`UserList` are expect to
1102offer a constructor which can be called with either no arguments or one
1103argument. List operations which return a new sequence attempt to create an
1104instance of the actual implementation class. To do so, it assumes that the
1105constructor can be called with a single parameter, which is a sequence object
1106used as a data source.
1107
1108If a derived class does not wish to comply with this requirement, all of the
1109special methods supported by this class will need to be overridden; please
1110consult the sources for information about the methods which need to be provided
1111in that case.
Raymond Hettingerb3a65f82008-02-21 22:11:37 +00001112
1113:class:`UserString` objects
Christian Heimesc3f30c42008-02-22 16:37:40 +00001114---------------------------
Raymond Hettingerb3a65f82008-02-21 22:11:37 +00001115
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001116The class, :class:`UserString` acts as a wrapper around string objects.
1117The need for this class has been partially supplanted by the ability to
Raymond Hettingerb3a65f82008-02-21 22:11:37 +00001118subclass directly from :class:`str`; however, this class can be easier
1119to work with because the underlying string is accessible as an
1120attribute.
1121
1122.. class:: UserString([sequence])
1123
Raymond Hettinger7929cfb2012-06-09 19:15:26 -07001124 Class that simulates a string or a Unicode string object. The instance's
1125 content is kept in a regular string object, which is accessible via the
1126 :attr:`data` attribute of :class:`UserString` instances. The instance's
1127 contents are initially set to a copy of *sequence*. The *sequence* can
1128 be an instance of :class:`bytes`, :class:`str`, :class:`UserString` (or a
1129 subclass) or an arbitrary sequence which can be converted into a string using
1130 the built-in :func:`str` function.