4

A function returns two lists which are logically mapped one-to-one. Suppose

name = ["facebook", "twitter", "myspace"]
hits = [4000, 2500, 1800]

Therefore, hits for facebook are 4000, twitter 2500, and myspace 2500.

I want to convert these two separate lists into a list of dictionaries like

[
  {name: 'facebook',data: [4000]},
  {name: 'twitter',data: [2500]},
  {name: 'myspace',data: [1800]}
]

My solution to do this is:

data = [
    {"name":l, "data":[v]}
    for idx1, l in enumerate(labels)
    for idx2, v in enumerate(values)
    if idx1 == idx2
    ]

Is there a more elegant way of dealing with logical one-to-one mapping or is my solution precise?

4
  • 1
    zip is the little nugget of elegance you're looking for.
    – tylerl
    Dec 22, 2011 at 7:18
  • 1
    Does your example really embody a one-to-one relationship? Isn't it possible that both twitter and myspace have the same number of hits? Dec 22, 2011 at 8:22
  • @RaymondHettinger: the question illustrates a logical mapping. Meaning name [0] is mapped to hits[0] and so on
    – Zain Khan
    Dec 22, 2011 at 8:57
  • 2
    @mangobug Then your answer is as simple as name2hits = dict(zip(name, hits)). There is no need for separate name and data fields, nor for a list of values. Also, the term "one-to-one" can be dropped (as that term implies an injective mathematical function). Dec 22, 2011 at 9:10

3 Answers 3

12

You could do:

[{"name": n, "data": [h]} for n, h in zip(name, hits)]

While this does what you asked for, there's probably more data structure here than you really need. Consider:

>>> dict(zip(name, hits))
{'twitter': 2500, 'myspace': 1800, 'facebook': 4000}

This provides the same data set in an easier-to-access data structure.

1
  • This is what the OP asked for, but it is far from being the right data structure for his task. The name and data key fields are a waste and so is the inner list which isn't necessary either. Dec 23, 2011 at 18:12
4

The simplest and fastest way to handle one-to-one relationships is to make two dictionaries:

>>> name = ["facebook", "twitter", "myspace"]
>>> hits = [4000, 2500, 1800]
>>> name2hits = dict(zip(name, hits))
>>> hit2name = dict(zip(hits, name))
0

Similar but not exactly the same as Efficient bidirectional hash table in Python?

You should just use two dictionaries, and when you make an update, apply the update to both.

Also, there is a logical inconsistency here: Either your function is not one-to-one, or you have no need for keeping data: [...] in a list since there can only be one value.

If you really need to convert it into a list of dictionaries, use zip as pointed out in https://stackoverflow.com/a/8600534/711085

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