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I made a list of lists of possible combinations of n length from a list of items, and now I want to create a dictionary where each key is one of the items from list of lists of possible combinations, so I can start counting how many times each combination occurs in a set of observations (early stages of programming an association rules engine). Here's what I have:

import itertools
stuff=(1,2,3,4)
n=1
combs=list()
while n<=len(stuff):
    combs.append(list(itertools.combinations(stuff,n)))
    n = n+1
print combs
viewers={'Jim':(1,3,4), 'Bob':(1,2,4), 'Jerry':(1,4), 'Ben':(2), 'Sal':(1,4)}  
showcount={}
for list in combs:
    for item in list:
        showcount["%s",%(item)]=0
print viewers
print showcount

How do I get the item to appear as the key in the dictionary? So for example, I'd like the combination '(1,2,4):0' to be a key value pair so I can later count the number of times '(1,2,4)' appears. I'm pretty new to Python, but I did seach around for an answer and couldn't find one. Apologies if this has been answered and I just couldn't find it.

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  • 1
    what's wrong in storing (1,2,3) as value not key. Oct 4, 2012 at 17:46
  • 1
    This is another one of those questions where you could have answered the question by trying it - tuples are fine as dictionary keys. Oct 4, 2012 at 17:48
  • The problem is not using tuples as keys, the problem is how to loop over a list of lists of tuples and get python to make a key in the dictionary for each tuple.
    – TomR
    Oct 4, 2012 at 19:16

1 Answer 1

7

You can use tuples as keys:

mydict = { (1, 2, 4): 0 }

If you want to count things, take a look at collections.Counter, it makes counting trivial, no need to initialize the keys to 0:

counts = collections.Counter()
counts[(1, 2, 4)] += 1
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  • But how do I get python to iterate through the list of lists of tuples and add each tuple as a key in the dictionary? That's the question, sorry if I phrased it poorly. showcount["%s",%(item)]=0 is the problem, as far as I can tell.
    – TomR
    Oct 4, 2012 at 19:16
  • @TomR: No, just showcount[item] += 1 is enough. There is no need for showcount[item] = 0 because Counter auto-magically sets each new key to 0 for you. You can just use item as the key, no need to turn it into a string.
    – Martijn Pieters
    Oct 4, 2012 at 19:52

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