mirror of
https://github.com/python/cpython.git
synced 2025-10-28 12:15:13 +00:00
svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/branches/p3yk
................
r55413 | fred.drake | 2007-05-17 12:30:10 -0700 (Thu, 17 May 2007) | 1 line
fix argument name in documentation; match the implementation
................
r55430 | jack.diederich | 2007-05-18 06:39:59 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 1 line
Implements class decorators, PEP 3129.
................
r55432 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-05-18 08:09:41 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 2 lines
obsubmit.
................
r55434 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-05-18 09:39:10 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 3 lines
Fix bug in test_inspect. (I presume this is how it should be fixed;
Jack Diedrich, please verify.)
................
r55460 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-20 00:31:57 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 4 lines
Remove the imageop module. With imgfile already removed in Python 3.0 and
rgbimg gone in Python 2.6 the unit tests themselves were made worthless. Plus
third-party libraries perform the same function much better.
................
r55469 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-20 11:28:20 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 118 lines
Merged revisions 55324-55467 via svnmerge from
svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk
........
r55348 | georg.brandl | 2007-05-15 13:19:34 -0700 (Tue, 15 May 2007) | 4 lines
HTML-escape the plain traceback in cgitb's HTML output, to prevent
the traceback inadvertently or maliciously closing the comment and
injecting HTML into the error page.
........
r55372 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-15 21:33:50 -0700 (Tue, 15 May 2007) | 6 lines
Port rev 55353 from Guido:
Add what looks like a necessary call to PyErr_NoMemory() when PyMem_MALLOC()
fails.
Will backport.
........
r55377 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-15 22:06:33 -0700 (Tue, 15 May 2007) | 1 line
Mention removal of some directories for obsolete platforms
........
r55380 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-15 22:50:03 -0700 (Tue, 15 May 2007) | 2 lines
Change the maintainer of the BeOS port.
........
r55383 | georg.brandl | 2007-05-16 06:44:18 -0700 (Wed, 16 May 2007) | 2 lines
Bug #1719995: don't use deprecated method in sets example.
........
r55386 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-16 13:05:11 -0700 (Wed, 16 May 2007) | 5 lines
Fix bug in marshal where bad data would cause a segfault due to
lack of an infinite recursion check.
Contributed by Damien Miller at Google.
........
r55389 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-16 15:42:29 -0700 (Wed, 16 May 2007) | 6 lines
Remove the gopherlib module. It has been raising a DeprecationWarning since
Python 2.5.
Also remove gopher support from urllib/urllib2. As both imported gopherlib the
usage of the support would have raised a DeprecationWarning.
........
r55394 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-05-16 18:08:04 -0700 (Wed, 16 May 2007) | 1 line
calendar.py gets no benefit from xrange() instead of range()
........
r55395 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-16 19:02:56 -0700 (Wed, 16 May 2007) | 3 lines
Complete deprecation of BaseException.message. Some subclasses were directly
accessing the message attribute instead of using the descriptor.
........
r55396 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-16 23:11:36 -0700 (Wed, 16 May 2007) | 4 lines
Reduce the max stack depth to see if this fixes the segfaults on
Windows and some other boxes. If this is successful, this rev should
be backported. I'm not sure how close to the limit we should push this.
........
r55397 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-16 23:23:50 -0700 (Wed, 16 May 2007) | 4 lines
Set the depth to something very small to try to determine if the
crashes on Windows are really due to the stack size or possibly
some other problem.
........
r55398 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-17 00:04:46 -0700 (Thu, 17 May 2007) | 4 lines
Last try for tweaking the max stack depth. 5000 was the original value,
4000 didn't work either. 1000 does work on Windows. If 2000 works,
that will hopefully be a reasonable balance.
........
r55412 | fred.drake | 2007-05-17 12:29:58 -0700 (Thu, 17 May 2007) | 1 line
fix argument name in documentation; match the implementation
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r55427 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-17 22:47:16 -0700 (Thu, 17 May 2007) | 1 line
Verify neither dumps or loads overflow the stack and segfault.
........
r55446 | collin.winter | 2007-05-18 16:11:24 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 1 line
Backport PEP 3110's new 'except' syntax to 2.6.
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r55448 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-05-18 18:11:16 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 1 line
Improvements to NamedTuple's implementation, tests, and documentation
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r55449 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-05-18 18:50:11 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 1 line
Fix beginner mistake -- don't mix spaces and tabs.
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r55450 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-18 20:48:47 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 1 line
Clear data so random memory does not get freed. Will backport.
........
r55452 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-18 21:34:55 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 3 lines
Whoops, need to pay attention to those test failures.
Move the clear to *before* the first use, not after.
........
r55453 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-18 21:35:52 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 1 line
Give some clue as to what happened if the test fails.
........
r55455 | georg.brandl | 2007-05-19 11:09:26 -0700 (Sat, 19 May 2007) | 2 lines
Fix docstring for add_package in site.py.
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r55458 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-20 00:09:50 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 2 lines
Remove the rgbimg module. It has been deprecated since Python 2.5.
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r55465 | nick.coghlan | 2007-05-20 04:12:49 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 1 line
Fix typo in example (should be backported, but my maintenance branch is woefully out of date)
........
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r55472 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-20 12:06:18 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 2 lines
Remove imageop from the Windows build process.
................
r55486 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-20 23:59:52 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 1 line
Remove callable() builtin
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r55506 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-22 00:43:29 -0700 (Tue, 22 May 2007) | 78 lines
Merged revisions 55468-55505 via svnmerge from
svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk
........
r55468 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-20 11:06:27 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 1 line
rotor is long gone.
........
r55470 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-20 11:43:00 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 1 line
Update directories/files at the top-level.
........
r55471 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-20 12:05:06 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 2 lines
Try to remove rgbimg from Windows builds.
........
r55474 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-20 16:17:38 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 4 lines
Remove the macfs module. This led to the deprecation of macostools.touched();
it completely relied on macfs and is a no-op on OS X according to code
comments.
........
r55476 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-20 16:56:18 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 3 lines
Move imgfile import to the global namespace to trigger an import error ASAP to
prevent creation of a test file.
........
r55477 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-20 16:57:38 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 3 lines
Cause posixfile to raise a DeprecationWarning. Documented as deprecated since
Ptyhon 1.5.
........
r55479 | andrew.kuchling | 2007-05-20 17:03:15 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 1 line
Note removed modules
........
r55481 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-05-20 21:35:47 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 2 lines
Add Alexandre Vassalotti.
........
r55482 | george.yoshida | 2007-05-20 21:41:21 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 4 lines
fix against r55474 [Remove the macfs module]
Remove "libmacfs.tex" from Makefile.deps and mac/mac.tex.
........
r55487 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-05-21 01:13:35 -0700 (Mon, 21 May 2007) | 1 line
Replace assertion with straight error-checking.
........
r55489 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-05-21 09:40:10 -0700 (Mon, 21 May 2007) | 1 line
Allow all alphanumeric and underscores in type and field names.
........
r55490 | facundo.batista | 2007-05-21 10:32:32 -0700 (Mon, 21 May 2007) | 5 lines
Added timeout support to HTTPSConnection, through the
socket.create_connection function. Also added a small
test for this, and updated NEWS file.
........
r55495 | georg.brandl | 2007-05-21 13:34:16 -0700 (Mon, 21 May 2007) | 2 lines
Patch #1686487: you can now pass any mapping after '**' in function calls.
........
r55502 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-21 23:03:36 -0700 (Mon, 21 May 2007) | 1 line
Document new params to HTTPSConnection
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r55504 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-22 00:16:10 -0700 (Tue, 22 May 2007) | 1 line
Stop using METH_OLDARGS
........
r55505 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-22 00:16:44 -0700 (Tue, 22 May 2007) | 1 line
Stop using METH_OLDARGS implicitly
........
................
402 lines
14 KiB
TeX
402 lines
14 KiB
TeX
\section{\module{collections} ---
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High-performance container datatypes}
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\declaremodule{standard}{collections}
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\modulesynopsis{High-performance datatypes}
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\moduleauthor{Raymond Hettinger}{python@rcn.com}
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\sectionauthor{Raymond Hettinger}{python@rcn.com}
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\versionadded{2.4}
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This module implements high-performance container datatypes. Currently,
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there are two datatypes, deque and defaultdict, and one datatype factory
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function, \function{NamedTuple}.
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Future additions may include balanced trees and ordered dictionaries.
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\versionchanged[Added defaultdict]{2.5}
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\versionchanged[Added NamedTuple]{2.6}
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\subsection{\class{deque} objects \label{deque-objects}}
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\begin{classdesc}{deque}{\optional{iterable}}
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Returns a new deque object initialized left-to-right (using
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\method{append()}) with data from \var{iterable}. If \var{iterable}
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is not specified, the new deque is empty.
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Deques are a generalization of stacks and queues (the name is pronounced
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``deck'' and is short for ``double-ended queue''). Deques support
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thread-safe, memory efficient appends and pops from either side of the deque
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with approximately the same \code{O(1)} performance in either direction.
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Though \class{list} objects support similar operations, they are optimized
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for fast fixed-length operations and incur \code{O(n)} memory movement costs
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for \samp{pop(0)} and \samp{insert(0, v)} operations which change both the
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size and position of the underlying data representation.
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\versionadded{2.4}
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\end{classdesc}
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Deque objects support the following methods:
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\begin{methoddesc}{append}{x}
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Add \var{x} to the right side of the deque.
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\end{methoddesc}
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\begin{methoddesc}{appendleft}{x}
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Add \var{x} to the left side of the deque.
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\end{methoddesc}
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\begin{methoddesc}{clear}{}
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Remove all elements from the deque leaving it with length 0.
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\end{methoddesc}
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\begin{methoddesc}{extend}{iterable}
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Extend the right side of the deque by appending elements from
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the iterable argument.
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\end{methoddesc}
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\begin{methoddesc}{extendleft}{iterable}
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Extend the left side of the deque by appending elements from
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\var{iterable}. Note, the series of left appends results in
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reversing the order of elements in the iterable argument.
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\end{methoddesc}
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\begin{methoddesc}{pop}{}
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Remove and return an element from the right side of the deque.
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If no elements are present, raises an \exception{IndexError}.
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\end{methoddesc}
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\begin{methoddesc}{popleft}{}
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Remove and return an element from the left side of the deque.
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If no elements are present, raises an \exception{IndexError}.
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\end{methoddesc}
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\begin{methoddesc}{remove}{value}
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Removed the first occurrence of \var{value}. If not found,
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raises a \exception{ValueError}.
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\versionadded{2.5}
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\end{methoddesc}
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\begin{methoddesc}{rotate}{n}
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Rotate the deque \var{n} steps to the right. If \var{n} is
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negative, rotate to the left. Rotating one step to the right
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is equivalent to: \samp{d.appendleft(d.pop())}.
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\end{methoddesc}
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In addition to the above, deques support iteration, pickling, \samp{len(d)},
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\samp{reversed(d)}, \samp{copy.copy(d)}, \samp{copy.deepcopy(d)},
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membership testing with the \keyword{in} operator, and subscript references
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such as \samp{d[-1]}.
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Example:
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\begin{verbatim}
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>>> from collections import deque
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>>> d = deque('ghi') # make a new deque with three items
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>>> for elem in d: # iterate over the deque's elements
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... print elem.upper()
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G
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H
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I
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>>> d.append('j') # add a new entry to the right side
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>>> d.appendleft('f') # add a new entry to the left side
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>>> d # show the representation of the deque
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deque(['f', 'g', 'h', 'i', 'j'])
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>>> d.pop() # return and remove the rightmost item
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'j'
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>>> d.popleft() # return and remove the leftmost item
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'f'
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>>> list(d) # list the contents of the deque
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['g', 'h', 'i']
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>>> d[0] # peek at leftmost item
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'g'
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>>> d[-1] # peek at rightmost item
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'i'
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>>> list(reversed(d)) # list the contents of a deque in reverse
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['i', 'h', 'g']
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>>> 'h' in d # search the deque
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True
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>>> d.extend('jkl') # add multiple elements at once
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>>> d
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deque(['g', 'h', 'i', 'j', 'k', 'l'])
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>>> d.rotate(1) # right rotation
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>>> d
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deque(['l', 'g', 'h', 'i', 'j', 'k'])
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>>> d.rotate(-1) # left rotation
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>>> d
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deque(['g', 'h', 'i', 'j', 'k', 'l'])
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>>> deque(reversed(d)) # make a new deque in reverse order
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deque(['l', 'k', 'j', 'i', 'h', 'g'])
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>>> d.clear() # empty the deque
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>>> d.pop() # cannot pop from an empty deque
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Traceback (most recent call last):
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File "<pyshell#6>", line 1, in -toplevel-
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d.pop()
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IndexError: pop from an empty deque
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>>> d.extendleft('abc') # extendleft() reverses the input order
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>>> d
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deque(['c', 'b', 'a'])
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\end{verbatim}
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\subsubsection{Recipes \label{deque-recipes}}
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This section shows various approaches to working with deques.
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The \method{rotate()} method provides a way to implement \class{deque}
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slicing and deletion. For example, a pure python implementation of
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\code{del d[n]} relies on the \method{rotate()} method to position
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elements to be popped:
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\begin{verbatim}
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def delete_nth(d, n):
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d.rotate(-n)
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d.popleft()
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d.rotate(n)
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\end{verbatim}
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To implement \class{deque} slicing, use a similar approach applying
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\method{rotate()} to bring a target element to the left side of the deque.
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Remove old entries with \method{popleft()}, add new entries with
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\method{extend()}, and then reverse the rotation.
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With minor variations on that approach, it is easy to implement Forth style
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stack manipulations such as \code{dup}, \code{drop}, \code{swap}, \code{over},
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\code{pick}, \code{rot}, and \code{roll}.
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A roundrobin task server can be built from a \class{deque} using
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\method{popleft()} to select the current task and \method{append()}
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to add it back to the tasklist if the input stream is not exhausted:
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\begin{verbatim}
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def roundrobin(*iterables):
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pending = deque(iter(i) for i in iterables)
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while pending:
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task = pending.popleft()
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try:
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yield next(task)
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except StopIteration:
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continue
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pending.append(task)
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>>> for value in roundrobin('abc', 'd', 'efgh'):
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... print value
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a
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d
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e
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b
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f
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c
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g
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h
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\end{verbatim}
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Multi-pass data reduction algorithms can be succinctly expressed and
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efficiently coded by extracting elements with multiple calls to
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\method{popleft()}, applying the reduction function, and calling
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\method{append()} to add the result back to the queue.
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For example, building a balanced binary tree of nested lists entails
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reducing two adjacent nodes into one by grouping them in a list:
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\begin{verbatim}
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def maketree(iterable):
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d = deque(iterable)
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while len(d) > 1:
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pair = [d.popleft(), d.popleft()]
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d.append(pair)
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return list(d)
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>>> print maketree('abcdefgh')
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[[[['a', 'b'], ['c', 'd']], [['e', 'f'], ['g', 'h']]]]
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\end{verbatim}
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\subsection{\class{defaultdict} objects \label{defaultdict-objects}}
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\begin{classdesc}{defaultdict}{\optional{default_factory\optional{, ...}}}
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Returns a new dictionary-like object. \class{defaultdict} is a subclass
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of the builtin \class{dict} class. It overrides one method and adds one
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writable instance variable. The remaining functionality is the same as
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for the \class{dict} class and is not documented here.
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The first argument provides the initial value for the
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\member{default_factory} attribute; it defaults to \code{None}.
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All remaining arguments are treated the same as if they were
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passed to the \class{dict} constructor, including keyword arguments.
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\versionadded{2.5}
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\end{classdesc}
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\class{defaultdict} objects support the following method in addition to
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the standard \class{dict} operations:
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\begin{methoddesc}{__missing__}{key}
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If the \member{default_factory} attribute is \code{None}, this raises
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an \exception{KeyError} exception with the \var{key} as argument.
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If \member{default_factory} is not \code{None}, it is called without
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arguments to provide a default value for the given \var{key}, this
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value is inserted in the dictionary for the \var{key}, and returned.
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If calling \member{default_factory} raises an exception this exception
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is propagated unchanged.
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This method is called by the \method{__getitem__} method of the
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\class{dict} class when the requested key is not found; whatever it
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returns or raises is then returned or raised by \method{__getitem__}.
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\end{methoddesc}
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\class{defaultdict} objects support the following instance variable:
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\begin{memberdesc}{default_factory}
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This attribute is used by the \method{__missing__} method; it is initialized
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from the first argument to the constructor, if present, or to \code{None},
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if absent.
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\end{memberdesc}
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\subsubsection{\class{defaultdict} Examples \label{defaultdict-examples}}
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Using \class{list} as the \member{default_factory}, it is easy to group
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a sequence of key-value pairs into a dictionary of lists:
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\begin{verbatim}
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>>> s = [('yellow', 1), ('blue', 2), ('yellow', 3), ('blue', 4), ('red', 1)]
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>>> d = defaultdict(list)
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>>> for k, v in s:
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d[k].append(v)
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>>> d.items()
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[('blue', [2, 4]), ('red', [1]), ('yellow', [1, 3])]
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\end{verbatim}
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When each key is encountered for the first time, it is not already in the
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mapping; so an entry is automatically created using the
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\member{default_factory} function which returns an empty \class{list}. The
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\method{list.append()} operation then attaches the value to the new list. When
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keys are encountered again, the look-up proceeds normally (returning the list
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for that key) and the \method{list.append()} operation adds another value to
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the list. This technique is simpler and faster than an equivalent technique
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using \method{dict.setdefault()}:
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\begin{verbatim}
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>>> d = {}
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>>> for k, v in s:
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d.setdefault(k, []).append(v)
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>>> d.items()
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[('blue', [2, 4]), ('red', [1]), ('yellow', [1, 3])]
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\end{verbatim}
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Setting the \member{default_factory} to \class{int} makes the
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\class{defaultdict} useful for counting (like a bag or multiset in other
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languages):
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\begin{verbatim}
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>>> s = 'mississippi'
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>>> d = defaultdict(int)
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>>> for k in s:
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d[k] += 1
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>>> d.items()
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[('i', 4), ('p', 2), ('s', 4), ('m', 1)]
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\end{verbatim}
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When a letter is first encountered, it is missing from the mapping, so the
|
|
\member{default_factory} function calls \function{int()} to supply a default
|
|
count of zero. The increment operation then builds up the count for each
|
|
letter.
|
|
|
|
The function \function{int()} which always returns zero is just a special
|
|
case of constant functions. A faster and more flexible way to create
|
|
constant functions is to use a lambda function which can supply
|
|
any constant value (not just zero):
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
>>> def constant_factory(value):
|
|
... return lambda: value
|
|
>>> d = defaultdict(constant_factory('<missing>'))
|
|
>>> d.update(name='John', action='ran')
|
|
>>> '%(name)s %(action)s to %(object)s' % d
|
|
'John ran to <missing>'
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
|
|
Setting the \member{default_factory} to \class{set} makes the
|
|
\class{defaultdict} useful for building a dictionary of sets:
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
>>> s = [('red', 1), ('blue', 2), ('red', 3), ('blue', 4), ('red', 1), ('blue', 4)]
|
|
>>> d = defaultdict(set)
|
|
>>> for k, v in s:
|
|
d[k].add(v)
|
|
|
|
>>> d.items()
|
|
[('blue', set([2, 4])), ('red', set([1, 3]))]
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{\function{NamedTuple} datatype factory function \label{named-tuple-factory}}
|
|
|
|
\begin{funcdesc}{NamedTuple}{typename, fieldnames}
|
|
Returns a new tuple subclass named \var{typename}. The new subclass is used
|
|
to create tuple-like objects that have fields accessable by attribute
|
|
lookup as well as being indexable and iterable. Instances of the subclass
|
|
also have a helpful docstring (with typename and fieldnames) and a helpful
|
|
\method{__repr__()} method which lists the tuple contents in a \code{name=value}
|
|
format.
|
|
\versionadded{2.6}
|
|
|
|
The \var{fieldnames} are specified in a single string and are separated by spaces.
|
|
Any valid Python identifier may be used for a field name.
|
|
|
|
Example:
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
>>> Point = NamedTuple('Point', 'x y')
|
|
>>> Point.__doc__ # docstring for the new datatype
|
|
'Point(x, y)'
|
|
>>> p = Point(11, y=22) # instantiate with positional or keyword arguments
|
|
>>> p[0] + p[1] # works just like the tuple (11, 22)
|
|
33
|
|
>>> x, y = p # unpacks just like a tuple
|
|
>>> x, y
|
|
(11, 22)
|
|
>>> p.x + p.y # fields also accessable by name
|
|
33
|
|
>>> p # readable __repr__ with name=value style
|
|
Point(x=11, y=22)
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
|
|
The use cases are the same as those for tuples. The named factories
|
|
assign meaning to each tuple position and allow for more readable,
|
|
self-documenting code. Named tuples can also be used to assign field names
|
|
to tuples returned by the \module{csv} or \module{sqlite3} modules.
|
|
For example:
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
from itertools import starmap
|
|
import csv
|
|
EmployeeRecord = NamedTuple('EmployeeRecord', 'name age title department paygrade')
|
|
for record in starmap(EmployeeRecord, csv.reader(open("employees.csv", "rb"))):
|
|
print record
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
|
|
To cast an individual record stored as \class{list}, \class{tuple}, or some other
|
|
iterable type, use the star-operator to unpack the values:
|
|
|
|
\begin{verbatim}
|
|
>>> Color = NamedTuple('Color', 'name code')
|
|
>>> m = dict(red=1, green=2, blue=3)
|
|
>>> print Color(*m.popitem())
|
|
Color(name='blue', code=3)
|
|
\end{verbatim}
|
|
|
|
\end{funcdesc}
|