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.