I have a list
of filenames in python and I would want to construct a set
out of all the filenames.
filelist=[]
for filename in filelist:
set(filename)
This does not seem to work. How can do this?
If you have a list of hashable objects (filenames would probably be strings, so they should count):
lst = ['foo.py', 'bar.py', 'baz.py', 'qux.py', Ellipsis]
you can construct the set directly:
s = set(lst)
In fact, set
will work this way with any iterable object! (Isn't duck typing great?)
If you want to do it iteratively:
s = set()
for item in iterable:
s.add(item)
But there's rarely a need to do it this way. I only mention it because the set.add
method is quite useful.
y = set(x)
s = {'foo.py', 'bar.py', 'baz.py', 'qux.py', Ellipsis}
?
Commented
Sep 7, 2021 at 12:20
The most direct solution is this:
s = set(filelist)
The issue in your original code is that the values weren't being assigned to the set. Here's the fixed-up version of your code:
s = set()
for filename in filelist:
s.add(filename)
print(s)
You can do
my_set = set(my_list)
or, in Python 3,
my_set = {*my_list}
to create a set from a list. Conversely, you can also do
my_list = list(my_set)
or, in Python 3,
my_list = [*my_set]
to create a list from a set.
Just note that the order of the elements in a list is generally lost when converting the list to a set since a set is inherently unordered. (One exception in CPython, though, seems to be if the list consists only of non-negative integers, but I assume this is a consequence of the implementation of sets in CPython and that this behavior can vary between different Python implementations.)
Here is another solution:
>>>list1=["C:\\","D:\\","E:\\","C:\\"]
>>>set1=set(list1)
>>>set1
set(['E:\\', 'D:\\', 'C:\\'])
In this code I have used the set method in order to turn it into a set and then it removed all duplicate values from the list
All the above answers are correct but if you want to preserve the order of your list you'll need to proceed as follow
list(dict.fromkeys(your_list))
One general way to construct set in iterative way like this:
aset = {e for e in alist}