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Newbie here. Writing function that prints out all the subsets of a set using generator (yield statement). The problem is, I cannot make it so that it uses yield and works for sets of all lenghts, not only three, like in my code below. I can make it work for 4 and 5 obviously, but the ladder gets bigger, which is just ridiculous, let alone pythonic and elegant.

ABC = ['a', 'b', 'c']

def subsets(group):
    for i in [group[0], []]:
        for j in [group[1], []]:
            for k in [group[2], []]:
                yield filter(None, [i, j, k])

for element in subsets(ABC):
    print element

The output (for this 3-item list) should be:

['a', 'b', 'c']
['a', 'b']
['a', 'c']
['a']
['b', 'c']
['b']
['c']
[]
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  • Briefly: loop over range(1, len(ABC)+1) and use itertools.combinations. Jan 25, 2016 at 23:30
  • Thanks, but the point is to make it using a generator, I'm learning this stuff.
    – Victor
    Jan 25, 2016 at 23:36
  • def subsets(group): for counter in range(1, len(group)+1): for subset in itertools.combinations(group, counter): yield subset? That's just this particular answer's method, with yield instead of print, making a nice little generator. Jan 25, 2016 at 23:42
  • The logic behind the itertools module is hidden from me. I need to write this code w/o imports, this is the point of the lesson. I can't nail it and wanted good people to help me see what i'm doing wrong making that horrible ladder, which I can't avoid. I tried to change indeces in "[group[0], []]" with a variable, but then I don't what to yield (see my code). I'm stuck on that =\
    – Victor
    Jan 26, 2016 at 1:01
  • Then that would be this question instead. Jan 26, 2016 at 1:06

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