34

What is the best way to split a dictionary in half?

d = {'key1': 1, 'key2': 2, 'key3': 3, 'key4': 4, 'key5': 5}

I'm looking to do this:

d1 = {'key1': 1, 'key2': 2, 'key3': 3}
d2 = {'key4': 4, 'key5': 5}

It does not matter which keys/values go into each dictionary. I am simply looking for the simplest way to divide a dictionary into two.

1
  • 3
    What is your definition of in two, do you mean half the keys in each dictionary? Oct 20, 2012 at 12:22

9 Answers 9

40

This would work, although I didn't test edge-cases:

>>> d = {'key1': 1, 'key2': 2, 'key3': 3, 'key4': 4, 'key5': 5}
>>> d1 = dict(d.items()[len(d)/2:])
>>> d2 = dict(d.items()[:len(d)/2])
>>> print d1
{'key1': 1, 'key5': 5, 'key4': 4}
>>> print d2
{'key3': 3, 'key2': 2}

In python3:

d = {'key1': 1, 'key2': 2, 'key3': 3, 'key4': 4, 'key5': 5}
d1 = dict(list(d.items())[len(d)//2:])
d2 = dict(list(d.items())[:len(d)//2])

Also note that order of items is not guaranteed

12
  • 3
    Edge cases aren't a problem; out-of-range slices just return empty lists and calling dict on an empty list returns an empty dictionary. HOWEVER: docs.python.org/library/stdtypes.html#dict.items seems to indicate that the Python specification does not guarantee that calls to items() will return the pairs in the same order every time! Perhaps, to be theoretically correct, we should be storing the result of a call to items() and then slicing that stored result?
    – Mark Amery
    Oct 20, 2012 at 12:36
  • @MarkAmery I believe that they are guaranteed to be stable, that is they will return in the same order so long as nothing changes the dictionary, although that order is arbitrary, so that should make this all right. Oct 20, 2012 at 12:37
  • 5
    Stable or not - calling items() twice is hardly a good idea.
    – georg
    Oct 20, 2012 at 15:10
  • 3
    I know this is ages old, but as a heads up for people reading this: items() will likely change the order in current versions of Python. Use collections.OrderedDict if you need to.
    – zvyn
    Jun 30, 2016 at 9:25
  • 2
    python3> TypeError: 'dict_items' object is not subscriptable Nov 14, 2018 at 5:32
9

Here's a way to do it using an iterator over the items in the dictionary and itertools.islice:

import itertools

def splitDict(d):
    n = len(d) // 2          # length of smaller half
    i = iter(d.items())      # alternatively, i = d.iteritems() works in Python 2

    d1 = dict(itertools.islice(i, n))   # grab first n items
    d2 = dict(i)                        # grab the rest

    return d1, d2
7
d1 = {key: value for i, (key, value) in enumerate(d.viewitems()) if i % 2 == 0}
d2 = {key: value for i, (key, value) in enumerate(d.viewitems()) if i % 2 == 1}
3
  • 3
    +1, but {key:d[key] for i, key in enumerate(d) etc. would be even simpler.
    – georg
    Oct 20, 2012 at 15:08
  • AttributeError: 'dict' object has no attribute 'viewitems' Sep 10, 2021 at 9:29
  • Replace with 'items' Oct 27, 2021 at 14:50
4

If you use python +3.3, and want your splitted dictionaries to be the same across different python invocations, do not use .items, since the hash-values of the keys, which determines the order of .items() will change between python invocations. See Hash randomization


4

The answer by jone did not work for me. I had to cast to a list before I could index the result of the .items() call. (I am running Python 3.6 in the example)

d = {'one':1, 'two':2, 'three':3, 'four':4, 'five':5}
split_idx = 3
d1 = dict(list(d.items())[:split_idx])
d2 = dict(list(d.items())[split_idx:])

"""
output:
d1
{'one': 1, 'three': 3, 'two': 2}
d2
{'five': 5, 'four': 4}
"""

Note the dicts are not necessarily stored in the order of creation so the indexes may be mixed up.

3

Here is the function which can be used to split a dictionary to any divisions.

def linch_dict_divider(raw_dict, num):
    list_result = []
    len_raw_dict = len(raw_dict)
    if len_raw_dict > num:
        base_num = int(len_raw_dict / num)
        addr_num = int(len_raw_dict % num)
        for i in range(num):
            this_dict = dict()
            keys = list()
            if addr_num > 0:
                keys = list(raw_dict.keys())[:base_num + 1]
                addr_num -= 1
            else:
                keys = list(raw_dict.keys())[:base_num]
            for key in keys:
                this_dict[key] = raw_dict[key]
                del raw_dict[key]
            list_result.append(this_dict)

    else:
        for d in raw_dict:
            this_dict = dict()
            this_dict[d] = raw_dict[d]
            list_result.append(this_dict)

    return list_result

myDict = {'key1': 1, 'key2': 2, 'key3': 3, 'key4': 4, 'key5': 5}
print(myDict)
myList = linch_dict_divider(myDict, 2)
print(myList)
2

Here's a function that I use in Python 3.8 that can split a dict into a list containing the desired number of parts. If you specify more parts than elements, you'll get some empty dicts in the resulting list.

def split_dict(input_dict: dict, num_parts: int) -> list:
    list_len: int = len(input_dict)
    return [dict(list(input_dict.items())[i * list_len // num_parts:(i + 1) * list_len // num_parts])
        for i in range(num_parts)]

Output:

>>> d = {'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 3, 'd': 4, 'e': 5}
>>> split_dict(d, 2)
[{'a': 1, 'b': 2}, {'c': 3, 'd': 4, 'e': 5}]
>>> split_dict(d, 3)
[{'a': 1}, {'b': 2, 'c': 3}, {'d': 4, 'e': 5}]
>>> split_dict(d, 7)
[{}, {'a': 1}, {'b': 2}, {}, {'c': 3}, {'d': 4}, {'e': 5}]
1

We can do this efficiently with itertools.zip_longest() (note this is itertools.izip_longest() in 2.x):

from itertools import zip_longest
d = {'key1': 1, 'key2': 2, 'key3': 3, 'key4': 4, 'key5': 5}
items1, items2 = zip(*zip_longest(*[iter(d.items())]*2))
d1 = dict(item for item in items1 if item is not None)
d2 = dict(item for item in items2 if item is not None)

Which gives us:

>>> d1
{'key3': 3, 'key1': 1, 'key4': 4}
>>> d2
{'key2': 2, 'key5': 5}
0
0

If you used numpy, then you could do this :

def divide_dict(dictionary, chunk_size):

'''
Divide one dictionary into several dictionaries

Return a list, each item is a dictionary
'''

import numpy, collections

count_ar = numpy.linspace(0, len(dictionary), chunk_size+1, dtype= int)
group_lst = []
temp_dict = collections.defaultdict(lambda : None)
i = 1
for key, value in dictionary.items():
    temp_dict[key] = value
    if i in count_ar:
        group_lst.append(temp_dict)
        temp_dict = collections.defaultdict(lambda : None)
    i += 1
return group_lst

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