A Python implementation of 30-seconds-of-code.
Note:- This is in no way affiliated with the original 30-seconds-of-code.
If you've come here from javascript land then you should be aware that this project uses python 3, therefore not all snippets will work as expected in every python interpreter or on system. You'll need to check your python version with the command python -v. If you need help installing the latest stable release of python 3 on your system checkout docs.python.org if you run into trouble make sure you research stackoverflow. Eventually it might be worth looking into how to set up a virtual environment for python projects with virtualenv or even a tool like anaconda.
This project contains plenty of useful snippets which can help beginners and newcomers quickly ramp-up on grasping python 3's syntax.
View contents
View contents
View contents
Author:- Shobhit Sachan
Contributors:- Shobhit Sachan
Bubble_sort uses the technique of comparing and swapping
def bubble_sort(lst):
for passnum in range(len(lst) - 1, 0, -1):
for i in range(passnum):
if lst[i] > lst[i + 1]:
temp = lst[i]
lst[i] = lst[i + 1]
lst[i + 1] = tempView Examples
lst = [54,26,93,17,77,31,44,55,20]
bubble_sort(lst)
print("sorted %s" %lst) # [17,20,26,31,44,54,55,77,91]Author:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar
Chunks an list into smaller lists of a specified size.
Uses range to create a list of desired size. Then use map on this list and fill it with splices of lst.
from math import ceil
def chunk(lst, size):
return list(
map(lambda x: lst[x * size:x * size + size],
list(range(0, ceil(len(lst) / size)))))View Examples
chunk([1,2,3,4,5],2) # [[1,2],[3,4],5]Author:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar
Removes falsey values from a list.
Use filter() to filter out falsey values (False, None, 0, and "").
def compact(lst):
return list(filter(bool, lst))View Examples
compact([0, 1, False, 2, '', 3, 'a', 's', 34]) # [ 1, 2, 3, 'a', 's', 34 ]Author:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar
ℹ️ Already implemented via collections.Counter
Groups the elements of a list based on the given function and returns the count of elements in each group.
Use map() to map the values of the list using the given function. Iterate over the map and increase the the elements count each time it occurs.
def count_by(arr, fn=lambda x: x):
key = {}
for el in map(fn, arr):
key[el] = 0 if el not in key else key[el]
key[el] += 1
return keyView Examples
from math import floor
count_by([6.1, 4.2, 6.3], floor) # {4: 1, 6: 2}
count_by(['one', 'two', 'three'], len) # {3: 2, 5: 1}Author:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar, Hui Binyuan
ℹ️ Already implemented via list.count().
Counts the occurrences of a value in an list.
Uses the list comprehension to increment a counter each time you encounter the specific value inside the list.
def count_occurrences(lst, val):
return len([x for x in lst if x == val and type(x) == type(val)])View Examples
count_occurrences([1, 1, 2, 1, 2, 3], 1) # 3Author:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar, Meet Zaveri
Deep flattens a list.
Use recursion. Use list.extend() with an empty list (result) and the spread function to flatten a list. Recursively flatten each element that is a list.
def spread(arg):
ret = []
for i in arg:
if isinstance(i, list):
ret.extend(i)
else:
ret.append(i)
return ret
def deep_flatten(lst):
result = []
result.extend(
spread(list(map(lambda x: deep_flatten(x) if type(x) == list else x, lst))))
return resultView Examples
deep_flatten([1, [2], [[3], 4], 5]) # [1,2,3,4,5]Author:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar
Returns the difference between two iterables.
Use list comprehension to only keep values not contained in b
def difference(a, b):
return [item for item in a if item not in b]View Examples
difference([1, 2, 3], [1, 2, 4]) # [3]Author:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar
Returns the difference between two list, after applying the provided function to each list element of both.
Create a set by applying fn to each element in b, then use list comprehension in combination with fn on a to only keep values not contained in the previously created set.
def difference_by(a, b, fn):
b = set(map(fn, b))
return [item for item in a if fn(item) not in b]View Examples
from math import floor
difference_by([2.1, 1.2], [2.3, 3.4],floor) # [1.2]
difference_by([{ 'x': 2 }, { 'x': 1 }], [{ 'x': 1 }], lambda v : v['x']) # [ { x: 2 } ]Author:- Rob-Rychs
Contributors:- Rob-Rychs
Checks a flat list for duplicate values. Returns True if duplicate values exist and False if values are all unique.
This function compares the length of the list with length of the set() of the list. set() removes duplicate values from the list.
def has_duplicates(lst):
return len(lst) != len(set(lst))View Examples
x = [1,2,3,4,5,5]
y = [1,2,3,4,5]
has_duplicates(x) # True
has_duplicates(y) # FalseAuthor:- Meet Zaveri
Contributors:-Meet Zaveri, Rohit Tanwar
On a very basic level, an insertion sort algorithm contains the logic of shifting around and inserting elements in order to sort an unordered list of any size. The way that it goes about inserting elements, however, is what makes insertion sort so very interesting!
def insertion_sort(lst):
for i in range(1, len(lst)):
key = lst[i]
j = i - 1
while j >= 0 and key < lst[j]:
lst[j + 1] = lst[j]
j -= 1
lst[j + 1] = keyView Examples
lst = [7,4,9,2,6,3]
insertionsort(lst)
print('Sorted %s' %lst) # sorted [2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 9]Author:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar
ℹ️ The same algorithm is already implemented via random.shuffle.
Randomizes the order of the values of an list, returning a new list.
Uses the Fisher-Yates algorithm to reorder the elements of the list.
from copy import deepcopy
from random import randint
def shuffle(lst):
temp_lst = deepcopy(lst)
m = len(temp_lst)
while (m):
m -= 1
i = randint(0, m)
temp_lst[m], temp_lst[i] = temp_lst[i], temp_lst[m]
return temp_lstView Examples
foo = [1,2,3]
shuffle(foo) # [2,3,1] , foo = [1,2,3]Author:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar
Implements javascript's [].concat(...arr). Flattens the list(non-deep) and returns an list.
def spread(arg):
ret = []
for i in arg:
if isinstance(i, list):
ret.extend(i)
else:
ret.append(i)
return retView Examples
spread([1,2,3,[4,5,6],[7],8,9]) # [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]Author:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar
ℹ️ Already implemented via itertools.zip_longest()
Creates a list of elements, grouped based on the position in the original lists.
Use max combined with list comprehension to get the length of the longest list in the arguments. Loops for max_length times grouping elements. If lengths of lists vary fill_value is used. By default fill_value is None.
def zip(*args, fillvalue=None):
max_length = max([len(lst) for lst in args])
result = []
for i in range(max_length):
result.append([
args[k][i] if i < len(args[k]) else None for k in range(len(args))
])
return resultView Examples
zip(['a', 'b'], [1, 2], [True, False]) # [['a', 1, True], ['b', 2, False]]
zip(['a'], [1, 2], [True, False]) # [['a', 1, True], [None, 2, False]]
zip(['a'], [1, 2], [True, False], fill_value = '_') # [['a', 1, True], ['_', 2, False]]Author:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar, Hui Binyuan
ℹ️ Already implemented via statistics.mean. statistics.mean takes an array as an argument whereas this function takes variadic arguments.
Returns the average of two or more numbers.
Takes the sum of all the args and divides it by len(args). The second argument 0.0 in sum is to handle floating point division in python3.
def average(*args):
return sum(args, 0.0) / len(args)View Examples
average(*[1, 2, 3]) # 2.0
average(1, 2, 3) # 2.0Author:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar
Calculates the factorial of a number.
Use recursion. If num is less than or equal to 1, return 1. Otherwise, return the product of num and the factorial of num - 1. Throws an exception if num is a negative or a floating point number.
def factorial(num):
if not ((num >= 0) & (num % 1 == 0)):
raise Exception(
f"Number( {num} ) can't be floating point or negative ")
return 1 if num == 0 else num * factorial(num - 1)View Examples
factorial(6) # 720Author:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar, cclauss
ℹ️ math.gcd works with only two numbers
Calculates the greatest common divisor between two or more numbers/lists.
The helperGcdfunction uses recursion. Base case is when y equals 0. In this case, return x. Otherwise, return the GCD of y and the remainder of the division x/y.
Uses the reduce function from the inbuilt module functools. Also defines a method spread for javascript like spreading of lists.
from functools import reduce
def spread(arg):
ret = []
for i in arg:
if isinstance(i, list):
ret.extend(i)
else:
ret.append(i)
return ret
def gcd(*args):
numbers = []
numbers.extend(spread(list(args)))
def _gcd(x, y):
return x if not y else gcd(y, x % y)
return reduce((lambda x, y: _gcd(x, y)), numbers)View Examples
gcd(8,36) # 4Author:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar
Returns the least common multiple of two or more numbers.
Use the greatest common divisor (GCD) formula and the fact that lcm(x,y) = x * y / gcd(x,y) to determine the least common multiple. The GCD formula uses recursion.
Uses reduce function from the inbuilt module functools. Also defines a method spread for javascript like spreading of lists.
from functools import reduce
def spread(arg):
ret = []
for i in arg:
if isinstance(i, list):
ret.extend(i)
else:
ret.append(i)
return ret
def lcm(*args):
numbers = []
numbers.extend(spread(list(args)))
def _gcd(x, y):
return x if not y else _gcd(y, x % y)
def _lcm(x, y):
return x * y / _gcd(x, y)
return reduce((lambda x, y: _lcm(x, y)), numbers)View Examples
lcm(12, 7) # 84
lcm([1, 3, 4], 5) # 60Author:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar
Returns the n maximum elements from the provided list. If n is greater than or equal to the provided list's length, then return the original list(sorted in descending order).
Use list.sort() combined with the deepcopy function from the inbuilt copy module to create a shallow clone of the list and sort it in ascending order and then use list.reverse() reverse it to make it descending order. Use [:n] to get the specified number of elements. Omit the second argument, n, to get a one-element list
def max_n(lst, n=1, reverse=True):
return sorted(lst, reverse=reverse)[:n]View Examples
max_n([1, 2, 3]) # [3]
max_n([1, 2, 3], 2) # [3,2]Author:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar
Returns the n minimum elements from the provided list. If n is greater than or equal to the provided list's length, then return the original list(sorted in ascending order).
Use list.sort() combined with the deepcopy function from the inbuilt copy module to create a shallow clone of the list and sort it in ascending order. Use [:n] to get the specified number of elements. Omit the second argument, n, to get a one-element list
from copy import deepcopy
def min_n(lst, n=1):
numbers = deepcopy(lst)
numbers.sort()
return numbers[:n]View Examples
min_n([1, 2, 3]) # [1]
min_n([1, 2, 3], 2) # [1,2]Author:- Rob-Rychs
Contributors:- Rob-Rychs
Checks a flat list for all unique values. Returns True if list values are all unique and False if list values aren't all unique.
This function compares the length of the list with length of the set() of the list. set() removes duplicate values from the list.
def all_unique(lst):
return len(lst) == len(set(lst))View Examples
x = [1,2,3,4,5,6]
y = [1,2,2,3,4,5]
all_unique(x) # True
all_unique(y) # FalseAuthor:- Rob-Rychs
Contributors:- Rob-Rychs
Function which accepts a dictionary of key value pairs and returns a new flat list of only the keys.
Uses the .items() function with a for loop on the dictionary to track both the key and value and returns a new list by appending the keys to it. Best used on 1 level-deep key:value pair dictionaries (a flat dictionary) and not nested data-structures which are also commonly used with dictionaries. (a flat dictionary resembles a json and a flat list an array for javascript people).
def keys_only(flat_dict):
lst = []
for k, v in flat_dict.items():
lst.append(k)
return lstView Examples
ages = {
"Peter": 10,
"Isabel": 11,
"Anna": 9,
}
keys_only(ages) # ['Peter', 'Isabel', 'Anna']Author:- Rob-Rychs
Contributors:- Rob-Rychs
Function which accepts a dictionary of key value pairs and returns a new flat list of only the values.
Uses the .items() function with a for loop on the dictionary to track both the key and value of the iteration and returns a new list by appending the values to it. Best used on 1 level-deep key:value pair dictionaries and not nested data-structures.
def values_only(dict):
lst = []
for k, v in dict.items():
lst.append(v)
return lstView Examples
ages = {
"Peter": 10,
"Isabel": 11,
"Anna": 9,
}
values_only(ages) # [10, 11, 9]Author:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar
Returns the length of a string in bytes.
utf-8 encodes a given string and find its length.
def byte_size(string):
return(len(string.encode('utf-8')))View Examples
byte_size('😀') # 4
byte_size('Hello World') # 11Author:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar
Capitalizes the first letter of a string.
Capitalizes the fist letter of the sring and then adds it with rest of the string. Omit the lower_rest parameter to keep the rest of the string intact, or set it to true to convert to lowercase.
def capitalize(string, lower_rest=False):
return string[:1].upper() + (string[1:].lower() if lower_rest else string[1:])View Examples
capitalize('fooBar') # 'FooBar'
capitalize('fooBar', True) # 'Foobar'Author:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar
Capitalizes the first letter of every word in a string.
Uses str.title to capitalize first letter of evry word in the string.
def capitalize_every_word(string):
return string.title()View Examples
capitalize_every_word('hello world!') # 'Hello World!'Author:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar
Retuns number of vowels in provided string.
Use a regular expression to count the number of vowels (A, E, I, O, U) in a string.
import re
def count_vowels(str):
return len(len(re.findall(r'[aeiou]', str, re.IGNORECASE)))View Examples
count_vowels('foobar') # 3
count_vowels('gym') # 0Author:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar
Decapitalizes the first letter of a string.
Decapitalizes the fist letter of the sring and then adds it with rest of the string. Omit the upper_rest parameter to keep the rest of the string intact, or set it to true to convert to uppercase.
def decapitalize(string, upper_rest=False):
return str[:1].lower() + (str[1:].upper() if upper_rest else str[1:])View Examples
decapitalize('FooBar') # 'fooBar'
decapitalize('FooBar', True) # 'fOOBAR'Author:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar
Checks if a string is lower case.
Convert the given string to lower case, using str.lower() method and compare it to the original.
def is_lower_case(string):
return string == string.lower()View Examples
is_lower_case('abc') # True
is_lower_case('a3@$') # True
is_lower_case('Ab4') # FalseAuthor:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar
Checks if a string is upper case.
Convert the given string to upper case, using str.upper() method and compare it to the original.
def is_upper_case(string):
return string == string.upper()View Examples
is_upper_case('ABC') # True
is_upper_case('a3@$') # True
is_upper_case('aB4') # FalseAuthor:- Rohit Tanwar
Contributors:-Rohit Tanwar
Returns True if the given string is a palindrome, False otherwise.
Convert string str.lower() and use re.sub to remove non-alphanumeric characters from it. Then compare the new string to the reversed.
def palindrome(string):
from re import sub
s = sub('[\W_]', '', string.lower())
return s == s[::-1]View Examples
palindrome('taco cat') # TrueIcons made by Smashicons from www.flaticon.com is licensed by CC 3.0 BY.
