import itertools
A = {'E2': {'5', '7'}, 'E3': {'4', '8'}, 'E5': {'5', '7'}, 'E8': {'4', '8'}}
def key(x):
# List supports ordering
return sorted(list(x[1]))
def gen():
for (group_key, group) in itertools.groupby(sorted(A.items(), key=key), key=key):
gl = list(group)
yield (tuple(x[0] for x in gl),
gl[0][1] # group_key is a list, but we want original set
)
print(dict(gen()))
If you are ready to convince yourself that set->list->set conversion is safe then you can make one-liner instead of generator:
print(dict((tuple(g[0] for g in group), set(group_key)) for
(group_key, group) in
itertools.groupby(sorted(A.items(), key=key), key=key)))
UPD: So, what exactly is going on here?
First of all we are converting dict to iterable of tuples by calling .items()
.
We want to group together items of this iterable which has the same second element (with index 1, or the former dict value).
This is exactly what itertools.groupby
does. The arguments is an iterable and key by which we will group. It would seem, key=lambda kv: kv[1]
is way to go. Unfortunately not. We can compare sets for equality, but the docs say that iterable should be ordered. And sorted
function requires key comparable for order. Sets cannot be compared for order by lists can. We can safely create a list that contain the same elements as set, but we should sort it (equal sets can produce lists with different order, {5, 7} == {7, 5}
, but [5, 7] != [7, 5]
).
Now, after sorting and grouping we have the following data structure:
[
(key_dict_value as list, iterable of (dict_key, dict_value) that has dict_value == key_dict_value),
...
]
Now we can iterate over this iterable and create another iterable of tuples. We take second element (iterable, with index 1) of each tuple and convert it to a tuple (this is the key of our future dictionary). The value of our future dictionary is a value from original dictionary. We can take it either from some element of the second element of the tuple (this iterable cannot be empty since groupby
cannot produce empty groups, see the first snippet) or from key_dict_value
by converting it back to list (it is safe because this list was produced from the set, so it does not have equal elements, see the second snippet).
UPD2
While I was writing explanation I figured out that key for equality is not fine for sorted
but fine for groupby
, so here is even simpler solution without defining key
function and converting list back to set:
print(dict((tuple(g[0] for g in group), group_key) for
(group_key, group) in itertools.groupby(sorted(A.items(),
key=lambda x: sorted(list(x[1]))),
key=lambda x: x[1])))