Sequences

This functions are aimed at manipulating finite and infinite sequences of values. Some functions have two flavors: one returning list and other returning possibly infinite iterator, the latter ones follow convention of prepending i before list-returning function name.

When working with sequences, see also itertools standard module. Funcy reexports and aliases some functions from it.

Generate

repeat(item[, n])

Makes an iterator yielding item for n times or indefinitely if n is omitted. repeat() simply repeat given value, when you need to reevaluate something repeatedly use repeatedly() instead.

When you just need a length n list or tuple of item you can use:

[item] * n
# or
(item,) * n
count(start=0, step=1)

Makes infinite iterator of values: start, start + step, start + 2*step, ....

Could be used to generate sequence:

imap(lambda x: x ** 2, count(1))
# -> 1, 4, 9, 16, ...

Or annotate sequence using zip() or izip():

zip(count(), 'abcd')
# -> [(0, 'a'), (1, 'b'), (2, 'c'), (3, 'd')]

# print code with BASIC-style numbered lines
for line in izip(count(10, 10), code.splitlines()):
    print '%d %s' % line

See also enumerate() and original itertools.count() documentation.

cycle(seq)

Cycles passed seq indefinitely returning its elements one by one.

Useful when you need to cyclically decorate some sequence:

for n, parity in izip(count(), cycle(['even', 'odd'])):
    print '%d is %s' % (n, parity)
repeatedly(f[, n])

Takes a function of no args, presumably with side effects, and returns an infinite (or length n if supplied) iterator of calls to it.

For example, this call can be used to generate 10 random numbers:

repeatedly(random.random, 10)

Or one can create a length n list of freshly-created objects of same type:

repeatedly(list, n)
iterate(f, x)

Returns an infinite iterator of x, f(x), f(f(x)), ... etc.

Most common use is to generate some recursive sequence:

iterate(inc, 5)
# -> 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, ...

iterate(lambda x: x * 2, 1)
# -> 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, ...

step = lambda ((a, b)): (b, a + b)
imap(first, iterate(step, (0, 1)))
# -> 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, ... (Fibonacci sequence)

Manipulate

This section provides some robust tools for sequence slicing. Consider Slicings or itertools.islice() for more generic cases.

take(n, seq)

Returns a list of the first n items in the sequence, or all items if there are fewer than n.

take(3, [2, 3, 4, 5]) # [2, 3, 4]
take(3, count(5))     # [5, 6, 7]
take(3, 'ab')         # ['a', 'b']
drop(n, seq)

Skips first n items in the sequence, returning iterator yielding rest of its items.

drop(3, [2, 3, 4, 5]) # iter([5])
drop(3, count(5))     # count(8)
drop(3, 'ab')         # empty iterator
first(seq)

Returns the first item in the sequence. Returns None if the sequence is empty. Typical usage is choosing first of some generated variants:

# Get a text message of first failed validation rule
fail = first(rule.text for rule in rules if not rule.test(instance))

# Use simple pattern matching to construct form field widget
TYPE_TO_WIDGET = (
    [lambda f: f.choices,           lambda f: Select(choices=f.choices)],
    [lambda f: f.type == 'int',     lambda f: TextInput(coerce=int)],
    [lambda f: f.type == 'string',  lambda f: TextInput()],
    [lambda f: f.type == 'text',    lambda f: Textarea()],
    [lambda f: f.type == 'boolean', lambda f: Checkbox(f.label)],
)
return first(do(field) for cond, do in TYPE_TO_WIDGET if cond(field))

Other common use case is passing to map() or imap(). See last example in iterate() for such example.

second(seq)

Returns the second item in given sequence. Returns None if there are less than two items in it.

Could come in handy with sequences of pairs, e.g. dict.items(). Following code extract values of a dict sorted by keys:

map(second, sorted(some_dict.items()))

And this line constructs an ordered by value dict from a plain one:

OrderedDict(sorted(plain_dict.items(), key=second))
nth(n, seq)

Returns nth item in sequence or None if no one exists. Items are counted from 0, so it’s like indexed access but works for iterators. E.g. here is how one can get 6th line of some_file:

nth(5, repeatedly(open('some_file').readline))
last(seq)

Returns the last item in the sequence. Returns None if the sequence is empty. Tries to be efficient when sequence supports indexed or reversed access and fallbacks to iterating over it if not.

rest(seq)

Skips first item in the sequence, returning iterator starting just after it. A shortcut for drop(1, seq).

butlast(seq)

Returns an iterator of all elements of the sequence but last.

ilen(seq)

Calculates length of iterator. Will consume it or hang up if it’s infinite.

Especially useful in conjunction with filtering or slicing functions, for example, this way one can find common start length of two strings:

ilen(takewhile(lambda (x, y): x == y, zip(s1, s2)))

Unite

concat(*seqs)
iconcat(*seqs)

Concats several sequences into one. iconcat() returns an iterator yielding concatenation.

iconcat() is an alias for itertools.chain().

cat(seqs)
icat(seqs)

Concatenates passed sequences. Useful when dealing with sequence of sequences, see concat() or iconcat() to join just a few sequences.

Flattening of various nested sequences is most common use:

# Flatten two level deep list
cat(list_of_lists)

# Get a flat html of errors of a form
errors = icat(inline.errors() for inline in form)
error_text = '<br>'.join(errors)

# Brace expansion on product of sums
# (a + b)(t + pq)x == atx + apqx + btx + bpqx
terms = [['a', 'b'], ['t', 'pq'], ['x']]
map(cat, product(*terms))
# [list('atx'), list('apqx'), list('btx'), list('bpqx')]

icat() is an alias for itertools.chain.from_iterable().

flatten(seq, follow=is_seqcont)
iflatten(seq, follow=is_seqcont)

Flattens arbitrary nested sequence of values and other sequences. follow argument determines whether to unpack each item. By default it dives into lists, tuples and iterators, see is_seqcont() for further explanation.

See also cat() or icat() if you need to flatten strictly two-level sequence of sequences.

tree_leaves(root, follow=is_seqcont, children=iter)
itree_leaves(root, follow=is_seqcont, children=iter)

A way to list or iterate over all the tree leaves. E.g. this is how you can list all descendants of a class:

tree_leaves(Base, children=type.__subclasses__, follow=type.__subclasses__)
tree_nodes(root, follow=is_seqcont, children=iter)
itree_nodes(root, follow=is_seqcont, children=iter)

A way to list or iterate over all the tree nodes. E.g. this is how you can list all classes in hierarchy:

tree_nodes(Base, children=type.__subclasses__, follow=type.__subclasses__)
interleave(*seqs)

Returns an iterator yielding first item in each sequence, then second and so on until some sequence ends. Numbers of items taken from all sequences are always equal.

interpose(sep, seq)

Returns an iterator yielding elements of seq separated by sep.

Helpful when str.join() is not good enough. This code is a part of translator working with operation node:

def visit_BoolOp(self, node):
    # ... do generic visit
    node.code = mapcat(translate, interpose(node.op, node.values))

Transform and filter

Most of functions in this section support Extended function semantics. Among other things it allows to rewrite examples using re_tester() and re_finder() tighter.

map(f, seq)
imap(f, seq)

Extended versions of map() and imap().

filter(pred, seq)
ifilter(pred, seq)

Extended versions of filter() and ifilter().

remove(pred, seq)
iremove(pred, seq)

Return a list or an iterator of items of seq that result in false when passed to pred. The results of this functions complement results of standard filter() and ifilter().

A handy use is passing re_tester() result as pred. For example, this code removes any whitespace-only lines from list:

remove(re_tester('^\s+$'), lines)

Note, you can rewrite it shorter using Extended function semantics:

remove('^\s+$', lines)
keep([f, ]seq)
ikeep([f, ]seq)

Maps seq with given function and then filters out falsy elements. Simply filters seq when f is absent. In fact these functions are just handy shortcuts:

keep(f, seq)  == filter(bool, map(f, seq))
keep(seq)     == filter(bool, seq)

ikeep(f, seq) == ifilter(bool, imap(f, seq))
ikeep(seq)    == ifilter(bool, seq)

Natural use case for keep() is data extraction or recognition that could eventually fail:

# Extract numbers from words
keep(re_finder(r'\d+'), words)

# Recognize as many colors by name as possible
keep(COLOR_BY_NAME.get, color_names)

An iterator version can be useful when you don’t need or not sure you need the whole sequence. For example, you can use first() - ikeep() combo to find out first match:

first(ikeep(COLOR_BY_NAME.get, color_name_candidates))

Alternatively, you can do the same with some() and imap().

One argument variant is a simple tool to keep your data free of falsy junk. This one returns non-empty description lines:

keep(description.splitlines())

Other common case is using generator expression instead of mapping function. Consider these two lines:

keep(f.name for f in fields)     # sugar generator expression
keep(attrgetter('name'), fields) # pure functions
mapcat(f, *seqs)
imapcat(f, *seqs)

Maps given sequence(s) and then concatenates results, essentially a shortcut for cat(map(f, *seqs)). Come in handy when extracting multiple values from every sequence item or transforming nested sequences:

# Get all the lines of all the texts in single flat list
mapcat(str.splitlines, bunch_of_texts)

# Extract all numbers from strings
mapcat(partial(re_all, r'\d+'), bunch_of_strings)
without(seq, *items)
iwithout(seq, *items)

Returns sequence without items specified, preserves order. Designed to work with a few items, this allows removing unhashable objects:

no_empty_lists = without(lists, [])

In case of large amount of unwanted elements one can use remove():

remove(set(unwanted_elements), seq)

Or simple set difference if order of sequence is irrelevant.

Split and chunk

split(pred, seq)
isplit(pred, seq)

Splits sequence items which pass predicate from the ones that don’t, essentially returning a tuple filter(pred, seq), remove(pred, seq).

For example, this way one can separate private attributes of an instance from public ones:

private, public = split(re_tester('^_'), dir(instance))

Split absolute and relative urls using extended predicate semantics:

absolute, relative = split(r'^http://', urls)
split_at(n, seq)
isplit_at(n, seq)

Splits sequence at given position, returning a tuple of its start and tail.

split_by(pred, seq)
isplit_by(pred, seq)

Splits start of sequence, consisting of items passing predicate, from the rest of it. Works similar to takewhile(pred, seq), dropwhile(pred, seq), but returns lists and works with iterator seq correctly:

split_by(bool, iter([-2, -1, 0, 1, 2]))
# [-2, -1], [0, 1, 2]
takewhile([pred, ]seq)

Yeilds elements of seq as long as they pass pred. Stops on first one which makes predicate falsy:

# Extract first paragraph of text
takewhile(re_tester(r'\S'), text.splitlines())

# Build path from node to tree root
takewhile(bool, iterate(attrgetter('parent'), node))
dropwhile([pred, ]seq)

This is a mirror of takewhile(). Skips elements of given sequence while pred is true and yields the rest of it:

# Skip leading whitespace-only lines
dropwhile(re_tester('^\s*$'), text_lines)
group_by(f, seq)

Groups elements of seq keyed by the result of f. The value at each key will be a list of the corresponding elements, in the order they appear in seq. Returns defaultdict(list).

stats = group_by(len, ['a', 'ab', 'b'])
stats[1] # -> ['a', 'b']
stats[2] # -> ['ab']
stats[3] # -> [], since stats is defaultdict

One can use split() when grouping by boolean predicate. See also itertools.groupby().

group_by_keys(get_keys, seq)

Groups elements of seq having multiple keys each into defaultdict(list). Can be used to reverse grouping:

posts_by_tag = group_by_keys(attrgetter(tags), posts)
sentences_with_word = group_by_keys(str.split, sentences)
group_values(seq)

Groups values of (key, value) pairs. May think of it like dict() but collecting collisions:

group_values(keep(r'^--(\w+)=(.+)', sys.argv))
partition(n, [step, ]seq)
ipartition(n, [step, ]seq)

Returns a list of lists of n items each, at offsets step apart. If step is not supplied, defaults to n, i.e. the partitions do not overlap. Returns only full length-n partitions, in case there are not enough elements for last partition they are ignored.

Most common use is deflattening data:

# Make a dict from flat list of pairs
dict(ipartition(2, flat_list_of_pairs))

# Structure user credentials
{id: (name, password) for id, name, password in ipartition(3, users)}

A three argument variant of partition() can be used to process sequence items in context of their neighbors:

# Smooth data by averaging out with a sliding window
[sum(window) / n for window in ipartition(n, 1, data_points)]

Also look at pairwise() for similar use. Other use of partition() is processing sequence of data elements or jobs in chunks, but take a look at chunks() for that.

chunks(n, [step, ]seq)
ichunks(n, [step, ]seq)

Returns a list of lists like partition(), but may include partitions with fewer than n items at the end:

chunks(2, 'abcde')
# -> ['ab', 'cd', 'e'])

chunks(2, 4, 'abcde')
# -> ['ab', 'e'])

Handy for batch processing.

partition_by(f, seq)
ipartition_by(f, seq)

Partition seq into list of lists or iterator of iterators splitting at f(item) change.

Data handling

distinct(seq, key=identity)
idistinct(seq, key=identity)

Returns the given sequence with duplicates removed. Preserves order. If key is supplied then distinguishes values by comparing their keys.

Note

Elements of a sequence or their keys should be hashable.

with_prev(seq, fill=None)

Returns an iterator of a pair of each item with one preceding it. Yields fill or None as preceding element for first item.

Great for getting rid of clunky prev housekeeping in for loops. This way one can indent first line of each paragraph while printing text:

for line, prev in with_prev(text.splitlines()):
    if not prev:
        print '    ',
    print line

Use pairwise() to iterate only on full pairs.

with_next(seq, fill=None)

Returns an iterator of a pair of each item with one next to it. Yields fill or None as next element for last item. See also with_prev() and pairwise().

pairwise(seq)

Yields pairs of items in seq like (item0, item1), (item1, item2), .... A great way to process sequence items in a context of each neighbor:

# Check if seq is non-descending
all(left <= right for left, right in pairwise(seq))
count_by(f, seq)

Counts number of distinct values of f on elements of seq. Returns defaultdict(int) of counts.

Calculating a histogram is one common use:

# Get a length histogram of given words
count_by(len, words)
reductions(f, seq[, acc])
ireductions(f, seq[, acc])

Returns a sequence of the intermediate values of the reduction of seq by f. In other words it yields a sequence like:

reduce(f, seq[:1], [acc]), reduce(f, seq[:2], [acc]), ...

You can use sums() or isums() for a common use of getting list of partial sums.

sums(seq[, acc])
isums(seq[, acc])

Same as reductions() or ireductions() with reduce function fixed to addition.

Find out which straw will break camels back:

first(i for i, total in enumerate(isums(straw_weights))
        if total > camel_toughness)