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I'm looking for an easy (and quick) way to determine if two lists contain the same elements:

example:

['one', 'two', 'three'] == ['one', 'two', 'three'] :  true
['one', 'two', 'three'] == ['one', 'three', 'two'] :  true
['one', 'two', 'three'] == ['one', 'two', 'three', 'three'] :  false
['one', 'two', 'three'] == ['one', 'two', 'three', 'four'] :  false
['one', 'two', 'three'] == ['one', 'two', 'four'] :  false
['one', 'two', 'three'] == ['one'] :  false

I'm hoping to do this w/out doing a map

My python skills are nascent at best so I'm hoping theres' a tight way of doing this.

Thanks,

Paul

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4 Answers

up vote 24 down vote accepted

Python has a built-in datatype for an unordered collection of (hashable) things, called a set. If you convert both lists to sets, the comparison will be unordered.

set(x) == set(y)

Documentation on set


EDIT: @mdwhatcott points out that you want to check for duplicates. set ignores these, so you need a similar data structure that also keeps track of the number of items in each list. This is called a multiset; the best approximation in the standard library is a collections.Counter:

>>> import collections
>>> compare = lambda x, y: collections.Counter(x) == collections.Counter(y)
>>> 
>>> compare([1,2,3], [1,2,3,3])
False
>>> compare([1,2,3], [1,2,3])
True
>>> compare([1,2,3,3], [1,2,2,3])
False
>>> 
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6  
+1 for giving where to learn more. "Give a man an answer, you solve his problems for a day; give a man the docs, you solve his problems forever." Or something like that. – Buttons840 Mar 8 '12 at 18:53
4  
CAUTION: Because using set() removes duplicates this solution returns True instead of False for the third example provided. – mdwhatcott Mar 8 '12 at 18:59
Thanks guys. Like I said, my skills are nascent. Thanks for the patience – Paul Mar 8 '12 at 19:00

If elements are always nearly sorted as in your example then builtin .sort() (timsort) should be fast:

>>> a = [1,1,2]
>>> b = [1,2,2]
>>> a.sort()
>>> b.sort()
>>> a == b
False

If you don't want to sort inplace you could use sorted().

In practice it might always be faster then collections.Counter() (despite asymptotically O(n) time being better then O(n*log(n)) for .sort()). Measure it; If it is important.

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You want to see if they contain the same elements, but don't care about the order.

You can use a set:

>>> set(['one', 'two', 'three']) == set(['two', 'one', 'three'])
True

But the set object itself will only contain one instance of each unique value, and will not preserve order.

>>> set(['one', 'one', 'one']) == set(['one'])
True

So, if tracking duplicates/length is important, you probably want to also check the length:

def are_eq(a, b):
    return set(a) == set(b) and len(a) == len(b)
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2  
+1 Good point, I didn't notice that! On the other hand, it doesn't suffice just to check the length (otherwise [1,1,2]==[1,2,2]) -- you have to count up all the objects. – katrielalex Mar 8 '12 at 19:01

if you do not want to use the collections library, you can always do something like this: given that a and b are your lists, the following returns the number of matching elements (it considers the order).

sum([1 for i,j in zip(a,b) if i==j])

Therefore,

len(a)==len(b) and len(a)==sum([1 for i,j in zip(a,b) if i==j])

will be True if both lists are the same, contain the same elements and in the same order. False otherwise.

So, you can define the compare function like the first response above,but without the collections library.

compare = lambda a,b: len(a)==len(b) and len(a)==sum([1 for i,j in zip(a,b) if i==j])

and

>>> compare([1,2,3], [1,2,3,3])
False
>>> compare([1,2,3], [1,2,3])
True
>>> compare([1,2,3], [1,2,4])
False
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