from collections import Counter
def myFunction(myDict):
myMax = 0 # Keep track of the max frequence
myResult = [] # A list for return
for key in myDict:
print('The key is', key, ', The count is', myDict[key])
print('My max is:', myMax)
# Finding out the max frequence
if myDict[key] >= myMax:
if myDict[key] == myMax:
myMax = myDict[key]
myResult.append(key)
# Case when it is greater than, we will delete and append
else:
myMax = myDict[key]
del myResult[:]
myResult.append(key)
return myResult
foo = ['1', '1', '5', '2', '1', '6', '7', '10', '2', '2']
myCount = Counter(foo)
print(myCount)
print(myFunction(myCount))
Output:
The list: ['1', '1', '5', '2', '1', '6', '7', '10', '2', '2']
Counter({'1': 3, '2': 3, '10': 1, '5': 1, '7': 1, '6': 1})
The key is 10 , The count is 1
My max is: 0
The key is 1 , The count is 3
My max is: 1
The key is 2 , The count is 3
My max is: 3
The key is 5 , The count is 1
My max is: 3
The key is 7 , The count is 1
My max is: 3
The key is 6 , The count is 1
My max is: 3
['1', '2']
I wrote this simple program, I think it might also work. I was not aware of the most_common() function until I do a search. I think this will return as many most frequent element there is, it works by comparing the max frequent element, when I see a more frequent element, it will delete the result list, and append it once; or if it is the same frequency, it simply append to it. And keep going until the whole Counter is iterated through.