Testing if a list contains another list with Python

我的梦境 提交于 2019-11-26 14:41:54

Here is my version:

def contains(small, big):
    for i in xrange(len(big)-len(small)+1):
        for j in xrange(len(small)):
            if big[i+j] != small[j]:
                break
        else:
            return i, i+len(small)
    return False

It returns a tuple of (start, end+1) since I think that is more pythonic, as Andrew Jaffe points out in his comment. It does not slice any sublists so should be reasonably efficient.

One point of interest for newbies is that it uses the else clause on the for statement - this is not something I use very often but can be invaluable in situations like this.

This is identical to finding substrings in a string, so for large lists it may be more efficient to implement something like the Boyer-Moore algorithm.

Thomas O

If all items are unique, you can use sets.

>>> items = set([-1, 0, 1, 2])
>>> set([1, 2]).issubset(items)
True
>>> set([1, 3]).issubset(items)
False
ericyan3000

There's an all() and any() function to do this. To check if list1 contains ALL elements in list2

result = all(elem in list1 for elem in list2)

To check if list1 contains ANY elements in list2

result = any(elem in list1 for elem in list2)

the variable result would be boolean (TRUE/FALSE).

May I humbly suggest the Rabin-Karp algorithm if the big list is really big. The link even contains almost-usable code in almost-Python.

eumiro

After OP's edit:

def contains(small, big):
    for i in xrange(1 + len(big) - len(small)):
        if small == big[i:i+len(small)]:
            return i, i + len(small) - 1
    return False

This works and is fairly fast since it does the linear searching using the builtin list.index() method and == operator:

def contains(sub, pri):
    M, N = len(pri), len(sub)
    i, LAST = 0, M-N+1
    while True:
        try:
            found = pri.index(sub[0], i, LAST) # find first elem in sub
        except ValueError:
            return False
        if pri[found:found+N] == sub:
            return [found, found+N-1]
        else:
            i = found+1

Here's a straightforward algorithm that uses list methods:

#!/usr/bin/env python

def list_find(what, where):
    """Find `what` list in the `where` list.

    Return index in `where` where `what` starts
    or -1 if no such index.

    >>> f = list_find
    >>> f([2, 1], [-1, 0, 1, 2])
    -1
    >>> f([-1, 1, 2], [-1, 0, 1, 2])
    -1
    >>> f([0, 1, 2], [-1, 0, 1, 2])
    1
    >>> f([1,2], [-1, 0, 1, 2])
    2
    >>> f([1,3], [-1, 0, 1, 2])
    -1
    >>> f([1, 2], [[1, 2], 3])
    -1
    >>> f([[1, 2]], [[1, 2], 3])
    0
    """
    if not what: # empty list is always found
        return 0
    try:
        index = 0
        while True:
            index = where.index(what[0], index)
            if where[index:index+len(what)] == what:
                return index # found
            index += 1 # try next position
    except ValueError:
        return -1 # not found

def contains(what, where):
    """Return [start, end+1] if found else empty list."""
    i = list_find(what, where)
    return [i, i + len(what)] if i >= 0 else [] #NOTE: bool([]) == False

if __name__=="__main__":
    import doctest; doctest.testmod()

If we refine the problem talking about testing if a list contains another list with as a sequence, the answer could be the next one-liner:

def contains(subseq, inseq):
    return any(inseq[pos:pos + len(subseq)] == subseq for pos in range(0, len(inseq) - len(subseq) + 1))

Here unit tests I used to tune up this one-liner:

https://gist.github.com/anonymous/6910a85b4978daee137f

Bart Mensfort

Smallest code:

def contains(a,b):
    str(a)[1:-1].find(str(b)[1:-1])>=0

Here is my answer. This function will help you to find out whether B is a sub-list of A. Time complexity is O(n).

`def does_A_contain_B(A, B): #remember now A is the larger list
    b_size = len(B)
    for a_index in range(0, len(A)):
        if A[a_index : a_index+b_size]==B:
            return True
    else:
        return False`

I tried to make this as efficient as possible.

It uses a generator; those unfamiliar with these beasts are advised to check out their documentation and that of yield expressions.

Basically it creates a generator of values from the subsequence that can be reset by sending it a true value. If the generator is reset, it starts yielding again from the beginning of sub.

Then it just compares successive values of sequence with the generator yields, resetting the generator if they don't match.

When the generator runs out of values, i.e. reaches the end of sub without being reset, that means that we've found our match.

Since it works for any sequence, you can even use it on strings, in which case it behaves similarly to str.find, except that it returns False instead of -1.

As a further note: I think that the second value of the returned tuple should, in keeping with Python standards, normally be one higher. i.e. "string"[0:2] == "st". But the spec says otherwise, so that's how this works.

It depends on if this is meant to be a general-purpose routine or if it's implementing some specific goal; in the latter case it might be better to implement a general-purpose routine and then wrap it in a function which twiddles the return value to suit the spec.

def reiterator(sub):
    """Yield elements of a sequence, resetting if sent ``True``."""
    it = iter(sub)
    while True:
        if (yield it.next()):
            it = iter(sub)

def find_in_sequence(sub, sequence):
    """Find a subsequence in a sequence.

    >>> find_in_sequence([2, 1], [-1, 0, 1, 2])
    False
    >>> find_in_sequence([-1, 1, 2], [-1, 0, 1, 2])
    False
    >>> find_in_sequence([0, 1, 2], [-1, 0, 1, 2])
    (1, 3)
    >>> find_in_sequence("subsequence",
    ...                  "This sequence contains a subsequence.")
    (25, 35)
    >>> find_in_sequence("subsequence", "This one doesn't.")
    False

    """
    start = None
    sub_items = reiterator(sub)
    sub_item = sub_items.next()
    for index, item in enumerate(sequence):
        if item == sub_item:
            if start is None: start = index
        else:
            start = None
        try:
            sub_item = sub_items.send(start is None)
        except StopIteration:
            # If the subsequence is depleted, we win!
            return (start, index)
    return False

I think this one is fast...

def issublist(subList, myList, start=0):
    if not subList: return 0
    lenList, lensubList = len(myList), len(subList)
    try:
        while lenList - start >= lensubList:
            start = myList.index(subList[0], start)
            for i in xrange(lensubList):
                if myList[start+i] != subList[i]:
                    break
            else:
                return start, start + lensubList - 1
            start += 1
        return False
    except:
        return False

The problem of most of the answers, that they are good for unique items in list. If items are not unique and you still want to know whether there is an intersection, you should count items:

from collections import Counter as count

def listContains(l1, l2):
  list1 = count(l1)
  list2 = count(l2)

  return list1&list2 == list1

print( listContains([1,1,2,5], [1,2,3,5,1,2,1]) ) # Returns True
print( listContains([1,1,2,8], [1,2,3,5,1,2,1]) ) # Returns False

You can also return the intersection by using ''.join(list1&list2)

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