I have a list as follows:
A= [('1', 3), ('2', 7), ('3', 5), ('1', 7), ('2', 5), ('3', 1)]
From the list A
, I would like to generate the output list like this:
Average = [('1', 5), ('2', 6), ('3', 2)]
Any tips would be really grateful! =)
I have a list as follows:
A= [('1', 3), ('2', 7), ('3', 5), ('1', 7), ('2', 5), ('3', 1)]
From the list A
, I would like to generate the output list like this:
Average = [('1', 5), ('2', 6), ('3', 2)]
Any tips would be really grateful! =)
from collections import defaultdict
a = [('1', 3), ('2', 7), ('3', 5), ('1', 7), ('2', 5), ('3', 1)]
d = defaultdict(list)
for k, v in a:
d[k].append(v)
avg = [(k, sum(v) // len(v)) for k, v in d.iteritems()]
print avg
prints
[('1', 5), ('3', 3), ('2', 6)]
Note that this uses integer division to compute the averages. You might want to use floating point division instead.
sum()
function by a variable of the same name?
Nov 7, 2011 at 17:14
In a simple way :
result = {}
for key, value in A:
result.setdefault(key, []).append(value)
print [(k, sum(v) // len(v) for k,v in result.iteritems()]
setdefault
then a defaultdict
is definitely the way to go.
Do you like to abstract code and reuse patterns? If that's the case, this group
function is a useful pattern to have in your toolset. It's similar to itertools.groupby, but it works with non-consecutive elements and categorizes/maps in a single iteration (credits for the idea to Ruby Facets' map_by):
def group(seq, callback=None):
result = {}
for category, item in (callback(seq) if callback else seq):
result.setdefault(category, []).append(item)
return result
average = dict((k, sum(vs)/len(vs)) for (k, vs) in group(xs).items())
print(average)
# {'1': 5.0, '3': 3.0, '2': 6.0}
One-liner.
a= [('1', 3), ('2', 7), ('3', 5), ('1', 7), ('2', 5), ('3', 1)]
map(lambda f:(f[0][0], (lambda g:sum(g)/len(g))(f[1])), map(lambda e:zip(*e), map(lambda c:filter(lambda d:d[0]==c, a), set(map(lambda b:b[0], a)))))