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This is a variation on Generator to yield gap tuples from zipped iterables .

I wish to design a generator function that:

  • Accepts an arbitrary number of iterables
  • Each input iterable yields zero or more (k, v), k not necessarily unique
  • Input keys are assumed to be sorted in ascending order
  • Output should yield (k, (v1, v2, ...))
  • Output keys are unique, and appear in the same order as the input
  • The number of output tuples is equal to the number of unique keys in the input
  • The output values correspond to all input tuples matching the output key
  • Since the inputs and outputs are potentially large, they should be treated as iterables and not loaded as an in-memory dict or list.

As an example,

i1 = ((2, 'a'), (3, 'b'), (5, 'c'))
i2 = ((1, 'd'), (2, 'e'), (3, 'f'))
i3 = ((1, 'g'), (3, 'h'), (5, 'i'), (5, 'j'))
result = sorted_merge(i1, i2, i3)
print [result]

This would output:

[(1, ('d', 'g')), (2, ('a', 'e')), (3, ('b', 'f', 'h')), (5, ('c', 'i', 'j'))]

If I'm not mistaken, there's nothing built into the Python standard library to do this out of the box.

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2 Answers 2

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While there isn't a single standard library function to do what you want, there are enough building blocks to get you most of the way:

from heapq import merge
from itertools import groupby
from operator import itemgetter

def sorted_merge(*iterables):
    for key, group in groupby(merge(*iterables), itemgetter(0)):
        yield key, [pair[1] for pair in group]    

Example:

>>> i1 = ((2, 'a'), (3, 'b'), (5, 'c'))
>>> i2 = ((1, 'd'), (2, 'e'), (3, 'f'))
>>> i3 = ((1, 'g'), (3, 'h'), (5, 'i'), (5, 'j'))
>>> result = sorted_merge(i1, i2, i3)
>>> list(result)
[(1, ['d', 'g']), (2, ['a', 'e']), (3, ['b', 'f', 'h']), (5, ['c', 'i', 'j'])]

Note that in the version of sorted_merge above, we're yielding int, list pairs for the sake of producing readable output. There's nothing to stop you changing the relevant line to

        yield key, (pair[1] for pair in group)          

if you want to yield int, <generator> pairs instead.

5
  • I think the only modification I'd do to this (in addition to your suggested generator change) is to replace itemgetter with a simple lambda.
    – Reinderien
    Sep 12, 2014 at 17:28
  • @Reinderien your choice of course, but why? This is exactly what itemgetter is for ... and it's shorter, IMO more readable, and probably faster. Sep 12, 2014 at 17:33
  • One less import, one less function for which docs must be read, and the alternative is simple enough. Only marginally, though.
    – Reinderien
    Sep 12, 2014 at 17:44
  • Fair enough ... I'll stick with my preference, but it might interest you to know that others agree with you. Sep 12, 2014 at 17:49
  • That being said, wiki.python.org/moin/PythonSpeed prefers operator for speed, apparently.
    – Reinderien
    Sep 12, 2014 at 17:52
0

Something a little different:

from collections import defaultdict

def sorted_merged(*items):
    result = defaultdict(list)
    for t in items:
        for k, v in t:
           result[k].append(v)
    return sorted(list(result.items()))

i1 = ((2, 'a'), (3, 'b'), (5, 'c'))
i2 = ((1, 'd'), (2, 'e'), (3, 'f'))
i3 = ((1, 'g'), (3, 'h'), (5, 'i'), (5, 'j'))

result = sorted_merged(i1, i2, i3)
1
  • Unfortunately the default dict will eat my memory.
    – Reinderien
    Sep 11, 2014 at 12:55

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