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I want to store actual index of Two or more duplicate characters in a list. For that i used index() but it returns the same index of all the duplicate characters. Any other solution for this problem.

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2 Answers 2

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Let our list and our desired element be defined as follows:

my_list = [1, 3, 2, 4, 3, 3, 5, 3]
desired_element = 3

Then you can use a nice built-in of Python, enumerate():

indexes = [index for index, element in enumerate(my_list) if element == desired_element]
print(indexes)

The output is, as expected [1, 4, 5, 7].


Or, in a nicer format:

def indexes(my_list, desired_element):
    return [index for index, element in enumerate(my_list) if element == desired_element]

And then just call it using indexes(list, element).


If you are looking for efficiency (I doubt you are):

def indexes2(my_list, desired_element):
    for index, element in enumerate(my_list):
        if element == desired_element:
            yield index

For large lists (as far as I have tested), this is 4-5 times faster. Note that this returns a generator, and in order to visualise the result, you must convert it to a list using list(...).

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Using pandas we can read this to a pd series and do some operations in one go.

import pandas as pd

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

d = (pd.Series(l)[pd.Series(l).duplicated(keep=False)]
     .reset_index()
     .groupby(0)['index']
     .apply(list)
     .to_dict())

d

Returns:

{'a': [0, 3], 'b': [1, 4]}

Or this:

d = (pd.Series(l)
     .reset_index()
     .groupby(0)['index']
     .apply(lambda x: list(x) if len(list(x)) > 1 else None)
     .dropna()
     .to_dict())

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