How to check if all elements of 1 list are in the *same quantity* and in any order, in the list2? The Next CEO of Stack OverflowChecking if list is a sublistHow do I check if a list is empty?How to generate all permutations of a list in PythonHow do you remove duplicates from a list whilst preserving order?How do I remove an element from a list by index in Python?How do I get the number of elements in a list in Python?How do I list all files of a directory?check if all elements in a list are identicalHow to check if all items in a list are there in another list?Checking for sublists in list of lists preserving sequencePrint 'x' amount of items 'y' times?

Example of a Mathematician/Physicist whose Other Publications during their PhD eclipsed their PhD Thesis

How did people program for Consoles with multiple CPUs?

Where do students learn to solve polynomial equations these days?

Would this house-rule that treats advantage as a +1 to the roll instead (and disadvantage as -1) and allows them to stack be balanced?

Domestic-to-international connection at Orlando (MCO)

Reference request: Grassmannian and Plucker coordinates in type B, C, D

Flying from Cape Town to England and return to another province

Why is my new battery behaving weirdly?

Does increasing your ability score affect your main stat?

Why don't programming languages automatically manage the synchronous/asynchronous problem?

How to get from Geneva Airport to Metabief?

How to check if all elements of 1 list are in the *same quantity* and in any order, in the list2?

What happened in Rome, when the western empire "fell"?

Does soap repel water?

Prepend last line of stdin to entire stdin

Is French Guiana a (hard) EU border?

Running a General Election and the European Elections together

How to count occurrences of text in a file?

Powershell. How to parse gci Name?

What was the first Unix version to run on a microcomputer?

Why did CATV standarize in 75 ohms and everyone else in 50?

How do I align (1) and (2)?

Is there a way to save my career from absolute disaster?

Why do airplanes bank sharply to the right after air-to-air refueling?



How to check if all elements of 1 list are in the *same quantity* and in any order, in the list2?



The Next CEO of Stack OverflowChecking if list is a sublistHow do I check if a list is empty?How to generate all permutations of a list in PythonHow do you remove duplicates from a list whilst preserving order?How do I remove an element from a list by index in Python?How do I get the number of elements in a list in Python?How do I list all files of a directory?check if all elements in a list are identicalHow to check if all items in a list are there in another list?Checking for sublists in list of lists preserving sequencePrint 'x' amount of items 'y' times?










6















I know its a very common question at first, but I haven't found one that specific. (If you do, please tell me.) And all ways I found didnt work for me.
I need to check if all elements of list 1 appears in the same amount in the list2.



Ex :



#If list1 = [2,2,2,6] 
# and list2 =[2,6,2,5,2,4]
#then all list1 are in list2.
#If list2 = [2,6] then all list1 are not in list2.


i'm trying this way :



list1 = [6,2]

import itertools

for i in itertools.product((2,4,5,1), repeat=3) :
asd = i[0] + i[1]
asd2= i[1] + i[2]

list2 = [asd, asd2]
if all(elem in list2 for elem in list1):
print (i,list2)


It works when the elements are not repeated in the list1, like [1,2]. But when they are repeated, all repeated elements is beeing counted as only 1 : [2,2,2] its beeing understanded as [2]. Or so i think.










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    After reading both questions, it does not look like a duplicate to me. This question cares about quantity, but not order. The other one cares about order, but not quantity.

    – gilch
    4 hours ago















6















I know its a very common question at first, but I haven't found one that specific. (If you do, please tell me.) And all ways I found didnt work for me.
I need to check if all elements of list 1 appears in the same amount in the list2.



Ex :



#If list1 = [2,2,2,6] 
# and list2 =[2,6,2,5,2,4]
#then all list1 are in list2.
#If list2 = [2,6] then all list1 are not in list2.


i'm trying this way :



list1 = [6,2]

import itertools

for i in itertools.product((2,4,5,1), repeat=3) :
asd = i[0] + i[1]
asd2= i[1] + i[2]

list2 = [asd, asd2]
if all(elem in list2 for elem in list1):
print (i,list2)


It works when the elements are not repeated in the list1, like [1,2]. But when they are repeated, all repeated elements is beeing counted as only 1 : [2,2,2] its beeing understanded as [2]. Or so i think.










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    After reading both questions, it does not look like a duplicate to me. This question cares about quantity, but not order. The other one cares about order, but not quantity.

    – gilch
    4 hours ago













6












6








6








I know its a very common question at first, but I haven't found one that specific. (If you do, please tell me.) And all ways I found didnt work for me.
I need to check if all elements of list 1 appears in the same amount in the list2.



Ex :



#If list1 = [2,2,2,6] 
# and list2 =[2,6,2,5,2,4]
#then all list1 are in list2.
#If list2 = [2,6] then all list1 are not in list2.


i'm trying this way :



list1 = [6,2]

import itertools

for i in itertools.product((2,4,5,1), repeat=3) :
asd = i[0] + i[1]
asd2= i[1] + i[2]

list2 = [asd, asd2]
if all(elem in list2 for elem in list1):
print (i,list2)


It works when the elements are not repeated in the list1, like [1,2]. But when they are repeated, all repeated elements is beeing counted as only 1 : [2,2,2] its beeing understanded as [2]. Or so i think.










share|improve this question
















I know its a very common question at first, but I haven't found one that specific. (If you do, please tell me.) And all ways I found didnt work for me.
I need to check if all elements of list 1 appears in the same amount in the list2.



Ex :



#If list1 = [2,2,2,6] 
# and list2 =[2,6,2,5,2,4]
#then all list1 are in list2.
#If list2 = [2,6] then all list1 are not in list2.


i'm trying this way :



list1 = [6,2]

import itertools

for i in itertools.product((2,4,5,1), repeat=3) :
asd = i[0] + i[1]
asd2= i[1] + i[2]

list2 = [asd, asd2]
if all(elem in list2 for elem in list1):
print (i,list2)


It works when the elements are not repeated in the list1, like [1,2]. But when they are repeated, all repeated elements is beeing counted as only 1 : [2,2,2] its beeing understanded as [2]. Or so i think.







python python-3.x






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 4 hours ago









petezurich

3,76581936




3,76581936










asked 5 hours ago









Vitor OliveiraVitor Oliveira

475




475







  • 1





    After reading both questions, it does not look like a duplicate to me. This question cares about quantity, but not order. The other one cares about order, but not quantity.

    – gilch
    4 hours ago












  • 1





    After reading both questions, it does not look like a duplicate to me. This question cares about quantity, but not order. The other one cares about order, but not quantity.

    – gilch
    4 hours ago







1




1





After reading both questions, it does not look like a duplicate to me. This question cares about quantity, but not order. The other one cares about order, but not quantity.

– gilch
4 hours ago





After reading both questions, it does not look like a duplicate to me. This question cares about quantity, but not order. The other one cares about order, but not quantity.

– gilch
4 hours ago












2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















7














Use collections.Counter to convert to a dict_items view Set of (value, count) pairs. Then you can use normal set operations.



from collections import Counter

def a_all_in_b(a, b):
"""True only if all elements of `a` are in `b` in the *same quantity* (in any order)."""
return Counter(a).items() <= Counter(b).items()


Note that Counter only works on hashable elements because it's a subclass of dict.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    that's slick @gilch

    – modesitt
    4 hours ago











  • Does this work for something like a_all_in_b([1], [1, 1])?

    – Tomothy32
    4 hours ago











  • @Tomothy32 It should return False in that case, because the 1's are not "in the same quantity".

    – gilch
    4 hours ago












  • @gilch The question is a bit fuzzy regarding this, but I have to admit that you probably interpreted it correctly.

    – Tomothy32
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    Also it should be <=, not <.

    – user2357112
    4 hours ago


















1














Modify this answer to Checking if list is a sublist to check for equality of occurences:



from collections import Counter 

list1 = [2,2,2,6]
list2 =[2,6,2,5,2,4]

def same_amount(a,b):
c1 = Counter(a)
c2 = Counter(b)

for key,value in c1.items():
if c2[key] != value:
return False
return True


print(same_amount(list1,list2))
print(same_amount(list1 + [2],list2))


Output:



True
False


There is almost no transfere-knowledge needed to create this answer, thats why I suggested it as dupe. This question is simply a more specific case of what Checking if list is a sublist discussed.






share|improve this answer























  • It works too. Thanks !

    – Vitor Oliveira
    3 hours ago











Your Answer






StackExchange.ifUsing("editor", function ()
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function ()
StackExchange.using("snippets", function ()
StackExchange.snippets.init();
);
);
, "code-snippets");

StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "1"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: true,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: 10,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);













draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fstackoverflow.com%2fquestions%2f55435166%2fhow-to-check-if-all-elements-of-1-list-are-in-the-same-quantity-and-in-any-ord%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









7














Use collections.Counter to convert to a dict_items view Set of (value, count) pairs. Then you can use normal set operations.



from collections import Counter

def a_all_in_b(a, b):
"""True only if all elements of `a` are in `b` in the *same quantity* (in any order)."""
return Counter(a).items() <= Counter(b).items()


Note that Counter only works on hashable elements because it's a subclass of dict.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    that's slick @gilch

    – modesitt
    4 hours ago











  • Does this work for something like a_all_in_b([1], [1, 1])?

    – Tomothy32
    4 hours ago











  • @Tomothy32 It should return False in that case, because the 1's are not "in the same quantity".

    – gilch
    4 hours ago












  • @gilch The question is a bit fuzzy regarding this, but I have to admit that you probably interpreted it correctly.

    – Tomothy32
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    Also it should be <=, not <.

    – user2357112
    4 hours ago















7














Use collections.Counter to convert to a dict_items view Set of (value, count) pairs. Then you can use normal set operations.



from collections import Counter

def a_all_in_b(a, b):
"""True only if all elements of `a` are in `b` in the *same quantity* (in any order)."""
return Counter(a).items() <= Counter(b).items()


Note that Counter only works on hashable elements because it's a subclass of dict.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    that's slick @gilch

    – modesitt
    4 hours ago











  • Does this work for something like a_all_in_b([1], [1, 1])?

    – Tomothy32
    4 hours ago











  • @Tomothy32 It should return False in that case, because the 1's are not "in the same quantity".

    – gilch
    4 hours ago












  • @gilch The question is a bit fuzzy regarding this, but I have to admit that you probably interpreted it correctly.

    – Tomothy32
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    Also it should be <=, not <.

    – user2357112
    4 hours ago













7












7








7







Use collections.Counter to convert to a dict_items view Set of (value, count) pairs. Then you can use normal set operations.



from collections import Counter

def a_all_in_b(a, b):
"""True only if all elements of `a` are in `b` in the *same quantity* (in any order)."""
return Counter(a).items() <= Counter(b).items()


Note that Counter only works on hashable elements because it's a subclass of dict.






share|improve this answer















Use collections.Counter to convert to a dict_items view Set of (value, count) pairs. Then you can use normal set operations.



from collections import Counter

def a_all_in_b(a, b):
"""True only if all elements of `a` are in `b` in the *same quantity* (in any order)."""
return Counter(a).items() <= Counter(b).items()


Note that Counter only works on hashable elements because it's a subclass of dict.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 3 hours ago

























answered 4 hours ago









gilchgilch

4,3101716




4,3101716







  • 1





    that's slick @gilch

    – modesitt
    4 hours ago











  • Does this work for something like a_all_in_b([1], [1, 1])?

    – Tomothy32
    4 hours ago











  • @Tomothy32 It should return False in that case, because the 1's are not "in the same quantity".

    – gilch
    4 hours ago












  • @gilch The question is a bit fuzzy regarding this, but I have to admit that you probably interpreted it correctly.

    – Tomothy32
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    Also it should be <=, not <.

    – user2357112
    4 hours ago












  • 1





    that's slick @gilch

    – modesitt
    4 hours ago











  • Does this work for something like a_all_in_b([1], [1, 1])?

    – Tomothy32
    4 hours ago











  • @Tomothy32 It should return False in that case, because the 1's are not "in the same quantity".

    – gilch
    4 hours ago












  • @gilch The question is a bit fuzzy regarding this, but I have to admit that you probably interpreted it correctly.

    – Tomothy32
    4 hours ago






  • 1





    Also it should be <=, not <.

    – user2357112
    4 hours ago







1




1





that's slick @gilch

– modesitt
4 hours ago





that's slick @gilch

– modesitt
4 hours ago













Does this work for something like a_all_in_b([1], [1, 1])?

– Tomothy32
4 hours ago





Does this work for something like a_all_in_b([1], [1, 1])?

– Tomothy32
4 hours ago













@Tomothy32 It should return False in that case, because the 1's are not "in the same quantity".

– gilch
4 hours ago






@Tomothy32 It should return False in that case, because the 1's are not "in the same quantity".

– gilch
4 hours ago














@gilch The question is a bit fuzzy regarding this, but I have to admit that you probably interpreted it correctly.

– Tomothy32
4 hours ago





@gilch The question is a bit fuzzy regarding this, but I have to admit that you probably interpreted it correctly.

– Tomothy32
4 hours ago




1




1





Also it should be <=, not <.

– user2357112
4 hours ago





Also it should be <=, not <.

– user2357112
4 hours ago













1














Modify this answer to Checking if list is a sublist to check for equality of occurences:



from collections import Counter 

list1 = [2,2,2,6]
list2 =[2,6,2,5,2,4]

def same_amount(a,b):
c1 = Counter(a)
c2 = Counter(b)

for key,value in c1.items():
if c2[key] != value:
return False
return True


print(same_amount(list1,list2))
print(same_amount(list1 + [2],list2))


Output:



True
False


There is almost no transfere-knowledge needed to create this answer, thats why I suggested it as dupe. This question is simply a more specific case of what Checking if list is a sublist discussed.






share|improve this answer























  • It works too. Thanks !

    – Vitor Oliveira
    3 hours ago















1














Modify this answer to Checking if list is a sublist to check for equality of occurences:



from collections import Counter 

list1 = [2,2,2,6]
list2 =[2,6,2,5,2,4]

def same_amount(a,b):
c1 = Counter(a)
c2 = Counter(b)

for key,value in c1.items():
if c2[key] != value:
return False
return True


print(same_amount(list1,list2))
print(same_amount(list1 + [2],list2))


Output:



True
False


There is almost no transfere-knowledge needed to create this answer, thats why I suggested it as dupe. This question is simply a more specific case of what Checking if list is a sublist discussed.






share|improve this answer























  • It works too. Thanks !

    – Vitor Oliveira
    3 hours ago













1












1








1







Modify this answer to Checking if list is a sublist to check for equality of occurences:



from collections import Counter 

list1 = [2,2,2,6]
list2 =[2,6,2,5,2,4]

def same_amount(a,b):
c1 = Counter(a)
c2 = Counter(b)

for key,value in c1.items():
if c2[key] != value:
return False
return True


print(same_amount(list1,list2))
print(same_amount(list1 + [2],list2))


Output:



True
False


There is almost no transfere-knowledge needed to create this answer, thats why I suggested it as dupe. This question is simply a more specific case of what Checking if list is a sublist discussed.






share|improve this answer













Modify this answer to Checking if list is a sublist to check for equality of occurences:



from collections import Counter 

list1 = [2,2,2,6]
list2 =[2,6,2,5,2,4]

def same_amount(a,b):
c1 = Counter(a)
c2 = Counter(b)

for key,value in c1.items():
if c2[key] != value:
return False
return True


print(same_amount(list1,list2))
print(same_amount(list1 + [2],list2))


Output:



True
False


There is almost no transfere-knowledge needed to create this answer, thats why I suggested it as dupe. This question is simply a more specific case of what Checking if list is a sublist discussed.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 4 hours ago









Patrick ArtnerPatrick Artner

26k62544




26k62544












  • It works too. Thanks !

    – Vitor Oliveira
    3 hours ago

















  • It works too. Thanks !

    – Vitor Oliveira
    3 hours ago
















It works too. Thanks !

– Vitor Oliveira
3 hours ago





It works too. Thanks !

– Vitor Oliveira
3 hours ago

















draft saved

draft discarded
















































Thanks for contributing an answer to Stack Overflow!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid


  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fstackoverflow.com%2fquestions%2f55435166%2fhow-to-check-if-all-elements-of-1-list-are-in-the-same-quantity-and-in-any-ord%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

Dapidodigma demeter Subspecies | Notae | Tabula navigationisDapidodigmaAfrotropical Butterflies: Lycaenidae - Subtribe IolainaAmplifica

Constantinus Vanšenkin Nexus externi | Tabula navigationisБольшая российская энциклопедияAmplifica

Gaius Norbanus Flaccus (consul 38 a.C.n.) Index De gente | De cursu honorum | Notae | Fontes | Si vis plura legere | Tabula navigationisHic legere potes