I have a list of dicts and would like to design a function to output a new dict which contains the sum for each unique key across all the dicts in the list.
For the list:
[
{
'apples': 1,
'oranges': 1,
'grapes': 2
},
{
'apples': 3,
'oranges': 5,
'grapes': 8
},
{
'apples': 13,
'oranges': 21,
'grapes': 34
}
]
So far so good, this can be done with a counter:
def sumDicts(listToProcess):
c = Counter()
for entry in listToProcess:
c.update(entry)
return (dict(c))
Which correctly returns:
{'apples': 17, 'grapes': 44, 'oranges': 27}
The trouble comes when the dicts in my list start to contain nested dicts:
[
{
'fruits': {
'apples': 1,
'oranges': 1,
'grapes': 2
},
'vegetables': {
'carrots': 6,
'beans': 3,
'peas': 2
},
'grains': 4,
'meats': 1
},
{
'fruits': {
'apples': 3,
'oranges': 5,
'grapes': 8
},
'vegetables': {
'carrots': 7,
'beans': 4,
'peas': 3
},
'grains': 3,
'meats': 2
},
{
'fruits': {
'apples': 13,
'oranges': 21,
'grapes': 34
},
'vegetables': {
'carrots': 8,
'beans': 5,
'peas': 4
},
'grains': 2,
'meats': 3
},
]
Now the same function will give a TypeError because the counter can't add two Dicts.
The desired result would be:
{
'fruits': {
'apples': 17,
'oranges': 27,
'grapes': 44
},
'vegetables': {
'carrots': 21,
'beans': 12,
'peas': 9
},
'grains': 9,
'meats': 6
}
Any ideas on how to do this in a reasonably efficient, Pythonic, generalizable way?