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Python 3 has a number of built-in data structures, including tuples, dictionaries, and lists. Data structures provide us with a way to organize and store data. The collections
module helps us populate and manipulate data structures efficiently.
In this tutorial, we’ll go through three classes in the collections
module to help you work with tuples, dictionaries, and lists. We’ll use namedtuples
to create tuples with named fields, defaultdict
to concisely group information in dictionaries, and deque
to efficiently add elements to either side of a list-like object.
For this tutorial, we’ll be working primarily with an inventory of fish that we need to modify as fish are added to or removed from a fictional aquarium.
To get the most out of this tutorial, it is recommended to have some familiarity with the tuple, dictionary, and list data types, both with their syntax, and how to retrieve data from them. You can review these tutorials for the necessary background information:
Python tuples are an immutable, or unchangeable, ordered sequence of elements. Tuples are frequently used to represent columnar data; for example, lines from a CSV file or rows from a SQL database. An aquarium might keep track of its inventory of fish as a series of tuples.
An individual fish tuple:
("Sammy", "shark", "tank-a")
This tuple is composed of three string elements.
While useful in some ways, this tuple does not clearly indicate what each of its fields represents. In actuality, element 0
is a name, element 1
is a species, and element 2
is the holding tank.
Explanation of fish tuple fields:
name | species | tank |
---|---|---|
Sammy | shark | tank-a |
This table makes it clear that each of the tuple’s three elements has a clear meaning.
namedtuple
from the collections
module lets you add explicit names to each element of a tuple to make these meanings clear in your Python program.
Let’s use namedtuple
to generate a class that clearly names each element of the fish tuple:
from collections import namedtuple
Fish = namedtuple("Fish", ["name", "species", "tank"])
from collections import namedtuple
gives your Python program access to the namedtuple
factory function. The namedtuple()
function call returns a class that is bound to the name Fish
. The namedtuple()
function has two arguments: the desired name of our new class "Fish"
and a list of named elements ["name", "species", "tank"]
.
We can use the Fish
class to represent the fish tuple from earlier:
sammy = Fish("Sammy", "shark", "tank-a")
print(sammy)
If we run this code, we’ll see the following output:
OutputFish(name='Sammy', species='shark', tank='tank-a')
sammy
is instantiated using the Fish
class. sammy
is a tuple with three clearly named elements.
sammy
’s fields can be accessed by their name or with a traditional tuple index:
print(sammy.species)
print(sammy[1])
If we run these two print
calls, we’ll see the following output:
Outputshark
shark
Accessing .species
returns the same value as accessing the second element of sammy
using [1]
.
Using namedtuple
from the collections
module makes your program more readable while maintaining the important properties of a tuple (that they’re immutable and ordered).
In addition, the namedtuple
factory function adds several extra methods to instances of Fish
.
Use ._asdict()
to convert an instance to a dictionary:
print(sammy._asdict())
If we run print
, you’ll see output like the following:
Output{'name': 'Sammy', 'species': 'shark', 'tank': 'tank-a'}
Calling .asdict()
on sammy
returns a dictionary mapping each of the three field names to their corresponding values.
Python versions older than 3.8 might output this line slightly differently. You might, for example, see an OrderedDict
instead of the plain dictionary shown here.
Note: In Python, methods with leading underscores are usually considered “private.” Additional methods provided by namedtuple
(like _asdict()
, ._make()
, ._replace()
, etc.), however, are public.
It is often useful to collect data in Python dictionaries. defaultdict
from the collections
module can help us assemble information in dictionaries quickly and concisely.
defaultdict
never raises a KeyError
. If a key isn’t present, defaultdict
just inserts and returns a placeholder value instead:
from collections import defaultdict
my_defaultdict = defaultdict(list)
print(my_defaultdict["missing"])
If we run this code, we’ll see output like the following:
Output[]
defaultdict
inserts and returns a placeholder value instead of throwing a KeyError
. In this case we specified the placeholder value as a list.
Regular dictionaries, in contrast, will throw a KeyError
on missing keys:
my_regular_dict = {}
my_regular_dict["missing"]
If we run this code, we’ll see output like the following:
OutputTraceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
KeyError: 'missing'
The regular dictionary my_regular_dict
raises a KeyError
when we try to access a key that is not present.
defaultdict
behaves differently than a regular dictionary. Instead of raising a KeyError
on a missing key, defaultdict
calls the placeholder value with no arguments to create a new object. In this case list()
to create an empty list.
Continuing with our fictional aquarium example, let’s say we have a list of fish tuples representing an aquarium’s inventory:
fish_inventory = [
("Sammy", "shark", "tank-a"),
("Jamie", "cuttlefish", "tank-b"),
("Mary", "squid", "tank-a"),
]
Three fish exist in the aquarium—their name, species, and holding tank are noted in these three tuples.
Our goal is to organize our inventory by tank—we want to know the list of fish present in each tank. In other words, we want a dictionary that maps "tank-a"
to ["Sammy", "Mary"]
and "tank-b"
to ["Jamie"]
.
We can use defaultdict
to group fish by tank:
from collections import defaultdict
fish_inventory = [
("Sammy", "shark", "tank-a"),
("Jamie", "cuttlefish", "tank-b"),
("Mary", "squid", "tank-a"),
]
fish_names_by_tank = defaultdict(list)
for name, species, tank in fish_inventory:
fish_names_by_tank[tank].append(name)
print(fish_names_by_tank)
Running this code, we’ll see the following output:
Outputdefaultdict(<class 'list'>, {'tank-a': ['Sammy', 'Mary'], 'tank-b': ['Jamie']})
fish_names_by_tank
is declared as a defaultdict
that defaults to inserting list()
instead of throwing a KeyError
. Since this guarantees that every key in fish_names_by_tank
will point to a list
, we can freely call .append()
to add names to each tank’s list.
defaultdict
helps you here because it reduces the chance of unexpected KeyErrors
. Reducing the unexpected KeyErrors
means your program can be written more clearly and with fewer lines. More concretely, the defaultdict
idiom lets you avoid manually instantiating an empty list for every tank.
Without defaultdict
, the for
loop body might have looked more like this:
...
fish_names_by_tank = {}
for name, species, tank in fish_inventory:
if tank not in fish_names_by_tank:
fish_names_by_tank[tank] = []
fish_names_by_tank[tank].append(name)
Using just a regular dictionary (instead of a defaultdict
) means that the for
loop body always has to check for the existence of the given tank
in fish_names_by_tank
. Only after we’ve verified that tank
is already present in fish_names_by_tank
, or has just been initialized with a []
, can we append the fish name.
defaultdict
can help cut down on boilerplate code when filling up dictionaries because it never raises a KeyError
.
Python lists are a mutable, or changeable, ordered sequence of elements. Python can append to lists in constant time (the length of the list has no effect on the time it takes to append), but inserting at the beginning of a list can be slower—the time it takes increases as the list gets bigger.
In terms of Big O notation, appending to a list is a constant time O(1)
operation. Inserting at the beginning of a list, in contrast, is slower with O(n)
performance.
Note: Software engineers often measure the performance of procedures using something called “Big O” notation. When the size of an input has no effect on the time it takes to perform a procedure, it is said to run in constant time or O(1)
(“Big O of 1”). As you learned above, Python can append to lists with constant time performance, otherwise known as O(1)
.
Sometimes, the size of an input directly affects the amount of time it takes to run a procedure. Inserting at the beginning of a Python list, for example, runs slower the more elements there are in the list. Big O notation uses the letter n
to represent the size of the input. This means that adding items to the beginning of a Python list runs in “linear time” or O(n)
(“Big O of n”).
In general, O(1)
procedures are faster than O(n)
procedures.
We can insert at the beginning of a Python list:
favorite_fish_list = ["Sammy", "Jamie", "Mary"]
# O(n) performance
favorite_fish_list.insert(0, "Alice")
print(favorite_fish_list)
If we run the following, we will see output like the following:
Output['Alice', 'Sammy', 'Jamie', 'Mary']
The .insert(index, object)
method on list allows us to insert "Alice"
at the beginning of favorite_fish_list
. Notably, though, inserting at the beginning of a list has O(n)
performance. As the length of favorite_fish_list
grows, the time to insert a fish at the beginning of the list will grow proportionally and take longer and longer.
deque
(pronounced “deck”) from the collections
module is a list-like object that allows us to insert items at the beginning or end of a sequence with constant time (O(1)
) performance.
Insert an item at the beginning of a deque
:
from collections import deque
favorite_fish_deque = deque(["Sammy", "Jamie", "Mary"])
# O(1) performance
favorite_fish_deque.appendleft("Alice")
print(favorite_fish_deque)
Running this code, we will see the following output:
Outputdeque(['Alice', 'Sammy', 'Jamie', 'Mary'])
We can instantiate a deque
using a preexisting collection of elements, in this case a list of three favorite fish names. Calling favorite_fish_deque
’s appendleft
method allows us to insert an item at the beginning of our collection with O(1)
performance. O(1)
performance means that the time it takes to add an item to the beginning of favorite_fish_deque
will not grow even if favorite_fish_deque
has thousands or millions of elements.
Note: Although deque
adds entries to the beginning of a sequence more efficiently than a list, deque
does not perform all of its operations more efficiently than a list. For example, accessing a random item in a deque
has O(n)
performance, but accessing a random item in a list has O(1)
performance. Use deque
when it is important to insert or remove elements from either side of your collection quickly. A full comparison of time performance is available on Python’s wiki.
The collections
module is a powerful part of the Python standard library that lets you work with data concisely and efficiently. This tutorial covered three of the classes provided by the collections
module including namedtuple
, defaultdict
, and deque
.
From here, you can use the collection
module’s documentation to learn more about other available classes and utilities. To learn more about Python in general, you can read our How To Code in Python 3 tutorial series.
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