列表去重python_python列表去重

这篇博客探讨了如何在Python中去除列表中的重复元素,并比较了几种不同的实现方式在速度和是否保持原始顺序方面的性能。通过基准测试,作者发现函数f5是最快且能保持顺序的方法,其还支持可选的转换函数。更新中还添加了更多函数进行对比测试。
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Suppose you have a list in python that looks like this:

['a','b','a']

# or like this:

[1,2,2,2,3,4,5,6,6,6,6]

and you want to remove all duplicates so you get this result:

['a','b']

# or

[1,2,3,4,5,6]

How do you do that? ...the fastest way? I wrote a couple of alternative implementations and did a quick benchmark loop on the various implementations to find out which way was the fastest. (I haven't looked at memory usage). The slowest function was 78 times slower than the fastest function.

However, there's one very important difference between the various functions. Some are order preserving and some are not. For example, in an order preserving function, apart from the duplicates, the order is guaranteed to be the same as it was inputted. Eg, uniqify([1,2,2,3])==[1,2,3]

Here are the functions:

def f1(seq):

# not order preserving

set = {}

map(set.__setitem__, seq, [])

return set.keys()

def f2(seq):

# order preserving

checked = []

for e in seq:

if e not in checked:

checked.append(e)

return checked

def f3(seq):

# Not order preserving

keys = {}

for e in seq:

keys[e] = 1

return keys.keys()

def f4(seq):

# order preserving

noDupes = []

[noDupes.append(i) for i in seq if not noDupes.count(i)]

return noDupes

def f5(seq, idfun=None):

# order preserving

if idfun is None:

def idfun(x): return x

seen = {}

result = []

for item in seq:

marker = idfun(item)

# in old Python versions:

# if seen.has_key(marker)

# but in new ones:

if marker in seen: continue

seen[marker] = 1

result.append(item)

return result

def f6(seq):

# Not order preserving

set = Set(seq)

return list(set)

And what you've all been waiting for (if you're still reading). Here are the results:

* f2 13.24

* f4 11.73

* f5 0.37

f1 0.18

f3 0.17

f6 0.19

(* order preserving)

Clearly f5 is the "best" solution. Not only is it really really fast; it's also order preserving and supports an optional transform function which makes it possible to do this:

>>> a=list('ABeeE')

>>> f5(a)

['A','B','e','E']

>>> f5(a, lambda x: x.lower())

['A','B','e']

UPDATE

From the comments I've now added a couple of more functions to the benchmark. Some which don't support uniqify a list of objects that can't be hashed unless passed with a special hashing method. So see all the functions download the file

Here are the new results:

* f5 10.1

* f5b 9.99

* f8 6.49

* f10 6.57

* f11 6.6

f1 4.28

f3 3.55

f6 4.03

f7 2.59

f9 2.58

(f2 and f4) were too slow for this testdata.

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