In Python, taking advantage of recursion and the fact that everything is done by reference. This will take a lot of memory for very large sets, but has the advantage that the initial set can be a complex object. It will find only unique combinations.
import copy
def find_combinations( length, set, combinations = None, candidate = None ):
# recursive function to calculate all unique combinations of unique values
# from [set], given combinations of [length]. The result is populated
# into the 'combinations' list.
#
if combinations == None:
combinations = []
if candidate == None:
candidate = []
for item in set:
if item in candidate:
# this item already appears in the current combination somewhere.
# skip it
continue
attempt = copy.deepcopy(candidate)
attempt.append(item)
# sorting the subset is what gives us completely unique combinations,
# so that [1, 2, 3] and [1, 3, 2] will be treated as equals
attempt.sort()
if len(attempt) < length:
# the current attempt at finding a new combination is still too
# short, so add another item to the end of the set
# yay recursion!
find_combinations( length, set, combinations, attempt )
else:
# the current combination attempt is the right length. If it
# already appears in the list of found combinations then we'll
# skip it.
if attempt in combinations:
continue
else:
# otherwise, we append it to the list of found combinations
# and move on.
combinations.append(attempt)
continue
return len(combinations)
You use it this way. Passing 'result' is optional, so you could just use it to get the number of possible combinations... although that would be really inefficient (it's better done by calculation).
size = 3
set = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
result = []
num = find_combinations( size, set, result )
print "size %d results in %d sets" % (size, num)
print "result: %s" % (result,)
You should get the following output from that test data:
size 3 results in 10 sets
result: [[1, 2, 3], [1, 2, 4], [1, 2, 5], [1, 3, 4], [1, 3, 5], [1, 4, 5], [2, 3, 4], [2, 3, 5], [2, 4, 5], [3, 4, 5]]
And it will work just as well if your set looks like this:
set = [
[ 'vanilla', 'cupcake' ],
[ 'chocolate', 'pudding' ],
[ 'vanilla', 'pudding' ],
[ 'chocolate', 'cookie' ],
[ 'mint', 'cookie' ]
]