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159 lines
5.2 KiB
159 lines
5.2 KiB
1 week ago
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Metadata-Version: 2.1
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Name: ordered-set
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Version: 4.1.0
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Summary: An OrderedSet is a custom MutableSet that remembers its order, so that every
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Author-email: Elia Robyn Lake <gh@arborelia.net>
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Requires-Python: >=3.7
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Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
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Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
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Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
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Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.7
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.10
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: CPython
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: PyPy
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Requires-Dist: pytest ; extra == "dev"
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Requires-Dist: black ; extra == "dev"
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Requires-Dist: mypy ; extra == "dev"
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Project-URL: Home, https://github.com/rspeer/ordered-set
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Provides-Extra: dev
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[![Pypi](https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/ordered-set.svg)](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/ordered-set)
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An OrderedSet is a mutable data structure that is a hybrid of a list and a set.
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It remembers the order of its entries, and every entry has an index number that
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can be looked up.
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## Installation
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`ordered_set` is available on PyPI and packaged as a wheel. You can list it
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as a dependency of your project, in whatever form that takes.
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To install it into your current Python environment:
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pip install ordered-set
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To install the code for development, after checking out the repository:
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pip install flit
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flit install
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## Usage examples
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An OrderedSet is created and used like a set:
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>>> from ordered_set import OrderedSet
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>>> letters = OrderedSet('abracadabra')
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>>> letters
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OrderedSet(['a', 'b', 'r', 'c', 'd'])
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>>> 'r' in letters
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True
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It is efficient to find the index of an entry in an OrderedSet, or find an
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entry by its index. To help with this use case, the `.add()` method returns
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the index of the added item, whether it was already in the set or not.
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>>> letters.index('r')
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2
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>>> letters[2]
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'r'
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>>> letters.add('r')
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2
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>>> letters.add('x')
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5
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OrderedSets implement the union (`|`), intersection (`&`), and difference (`-`)
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operators like sets do.
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>>> letters |= OrderedSet('shazam')
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>>> letters
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OrderedSet(['a', 'b', 'r', 'c', 'd', 'x', 's', 'h', 'z', 'm'])
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>>> letters & set('aeiou')
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OrderedSet(['a'])
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>>> letters -= 'abcd'
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>>> letters
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OrderedSet(['r', 'x', 's', 'h', 'z', 'm'])
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The `__getitem__()` and `index()` methods have been extended to accept any
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iterable except a string, returning a list, to perform NumPy-like "fancy
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indexing".
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>>> letters = OrderedSet('abracadabra')
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>>> letters[[0, 2, 3]]
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['a', 'r', 'c']
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>>> letters.index(['a', 'r', 'c'])
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[0, 2, 3]
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OrderedSet implements `__getstate__` and `__setstate__` so it can be pickled,
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and implements the abstract base classes `collections.MutableSet` and
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`collections.Sequence`.
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OrderedSet can be used as a generic collection type, similar to the collections
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in the `typing` module like List, Dict, and Set. For example, you can annotate
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a variable as having the type `OrderedSet[str]` or `OrderedSet[Tuple[int,
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str]]`.
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## OrderedSet in data science applications
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An OrderedSet can be used as a bi-directional mapping between a sparse
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vocabulary and dense index numbers. As of version 3.1, it accepts NumPy arrays
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of index numbers as well as lists.
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This combination of features makes OrderedSet a simple implementation of many
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of the things that `pandas.Index` is used for, and many of its operations are
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faster than the equivalent pandas operations.
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For further compatibility with pandas.Index, `get_loc` (the pandas method for
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looking up a single index) and `get_indexer` (the pandas method for fancy
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indexing in reverse) are both aliases for `index` (which handles both cases
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in OrderedSet).
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## Authors
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OrderedSet was implemented by Elia Robyn Lake (maiden name: Robyn Speer).
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Jon Crall contributed changes and tests to make it fit the Python set API.
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Roman Inflianskas added the original type annotations.
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## Comparisons
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The original implementation of OrderedSet was a [recipe posted to ActiveState
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Recipes][recipe] by Raymond Hettiger, released under the MIT license.
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[recipe]: https://code.activestate.com/recipes/576694-orderedset/
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Hettiger's implementation kept its content in a doubly-linked list referenced by a
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dict. As a result, looking up an item by its index was an O(N) operation, while
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deletion was O(1).
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This version makes different trade-offs for the sake of efficient lookups. Its
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content is a standard Python list instead of a doubly-linked list. This
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provides O(1) lookups by index at the expense of O(N) deletion, as well as
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slightly faster iteration.
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In Python 3.6 and later, the built-in `dict` type is inherently ordered. If you
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ignore the dictionary values, that also gives you a simple ordered set, with
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fast O(1) insertion, deletion, iteration and membership testing. However, `dict`
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does not provide the list-like random access features of OrderedSet. You
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would have to convert it to a list in O(N) to look up the index of an entry or
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look up an entry by its index.
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