65
votes

Assume I have a list of words, and I want to find the number of times each word appears in that list.

An obvious way to do this is:

words = "apple banana apple strawberry banana lemon"
uniques = set(words.split())
freqs = [(item, words.split().count(item)) for item in uniques]
print(freqs)

But I find this code not very good, because the program runs through the word list twice, once to build the set, and a second time to count the number of appearances.

Of course, I could write a function to run through the list and do the counting, but that wouldn't be so Pythonic. So, is there a more efficient and Pythonic way?

11
Not twice, it looks like O(N*N) complexity - Drakosha
You may be interested in: stackoverflow.com/a/20308657/2534876 for issues of performance. - JDong

11 Answers

144
votes

The Counter class in the collections module is purpose built to solve this type of problem:

from collections import Counter
words = "apple banana apple strawberry banana lemon"
Counter(words.split())
# Counter({'apple': 2, 'banana': 2, 'strawberry': 1, 'lemon': 1})
95
votes

defaultdict to the rescue!

from collections import defaultdict

words = "apple banana apple strawberry banana lemon"

d = defaultdict(int)
for word in words.split():
    d[word] += 1

This runs in O(n).

11
votes
freqs = {}
for word in words:
    freqs[word] = freqs.get(word, 0) + 1 # fetch and increment OR initialize

I think this results to the same as Triptych's solution, but without importing collections. Also a bit like Selinap's solution, but more readable imho. Almost identical to Thomas Weigel's solution, but without using Exceptions.

This could be slower than using defaultdict() from the collections library however. Since the value is fetched, incremented and then assigned again. Instead of just incremented. However using += might do just the same internally.

11
votes

Standard approach:

from collections import defaultdict

words = "apple banana apple strawberry banana lemon"
words = words.split()
result = defaultdict(int)
for word in words:
    result[word] += 1

print result

Groupby oneliner:

from itertools import groupby

words = "apple banana apple strawberry banana lemon"
words = words.split()

result = dict((key, len(list(group))) for key, group in groupby(sorted(words)))
print result
7
votes

If you don't want to use the standard dictionary method (looping through the list incrementing the proper dict. key), you can try this:

>>> from itertools import groupby
>>> myList = words.split() # ['apple', 'banana', 'apple', 'strawberry', 'banana', 'lemon']
>>> [(k, len(list(g))) for k, g in groupby(sorted(myList))]
[('apple', 2), ('banana', 2), ('lemon', 1), ('strawberry', 1)]

It runs in O(n log n) time.

3
votes

Without defaultdict:

words = "apple banana apple strawberry banana lemon"
my_count = {}
for word in words.split():
    try: my_count[word] += 1
    except KeyError: my_count[word] = 1
1
votes
words = "apple banana apple strawberry banana lemon"
w=words.split()
e=list(set(w))       
word_freqs = {}
for i in e:
    word_freqs[i]=w.count(i)
print(word_freqs)   

Hope this helps!

0
votes

Can't you just use count?

words = 'the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy gray dog'
words.count('z')
#output: 1
0
votes

I happened to work on some Spark exercise, here is my solution.

tokens = ['quick', 'brown', 'fox', 'jumps', 'lazy', 'dog']

print {n: float(tokens.count(n))/float(len(tokens)) for n in tokens}

**#output of the above **

{'brown': 0.16666666666666666, 'lazy': 0.16666666666666666, 'jumps': 0.16666666666666666, 'fox': 0.16666666666666666, 'dog': 0.16666666666666666, 'quick': 0.16666666666666666}
0
votes

Use reduce() to convert the list to a single dict.

words = "apple banana apple strawberry banana lemon"
reduce( lambda d, c: d.update([(c, d.get(c,0)+1)]) or d, words.split(), {})

returns

{'strawberry': 1, 'lemon': 1, 'apple': 2, 'banana': 2}
-1
votes

The answer below takes some extra cycles, but it is another method

def func(tup):
    return tup[-1]


def print_words(filename):
    f = open("small.txt",'r')
    whole_content = (f.read()).lower()
    print whole_content
    list_content = whole_content.split()
    dict = {}
    for one_word in list_content:
        dict[one_word] = 0
    for one_word in list_content:
        dict[one_word] += 1
    print dict.items()
    print sorted(dict.items(),key=func)