冻结集就是冻结集。 冻结列表可以是元组。 冷冻字典会是什么?一个不可变的、可哈希的字典。

我猜它可能是collections.namedtuple之类的东西,但那更像是一个冻结的字典(一个半冻结的字典)。不是吗?

一个“frozendict”应该是一个冻结的字典,它应该有键,值,get等,并支持in, for等。

更新: 在这里:https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0603


当前回答

Python没有内置的frozendict类型。事实证明,这并不经常有用(尽管它仍然可能比frozenset更有用)。

需要这种类型的最常见原因是在记忆函数调用带有未知参数的函数时。存储dict(其中值是可哈希的)的可哈希等价对象的最常见解决方案是类似tuple(sorted(kwargs.items()))的东西。

这取决于排序是不是有点疯狂。Python不能肯定地保证排序会产生合理的结果。(但它不能承诺太多其他东西,所以不要太担心。)


你可以很容易地做一些类似字典的包装。它可能看起来像

import collections

class FrozenDict(collections.Mapping):
    """Don't forget the docstrings!!"""
    
    def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
        self._d = dict(*args, **kwargs)
        self._hash = None

    def __iter__(self):
        return iter(self._d)

    def __len__(self):
        return len(self._d)

    def __getitem__(self, key):
        return self._d[key]

    def __hash__(self):
        # It would have been simpler and maybe more obvious to 
        # use hash(tuple(sorted(self._d.iteritems()))) from this discussion
        # so far, but this solution is O(n). I don't know what kind of 
        # n we are going to run into, but sometimes it's hard to resist the 
        # urge to optimize when it will gain improved algorithmic performance.
        if self._hash is None:
            hash_ = 0
            for pair in self.items():
                hash_ ^= hash(pair)
            self._hash = hash_
        return self._hash

它应该工作得很好:

>>> x = FrozenDict(a=1, b=2)
>>> y = FrozenDict(a=1, b=2)
>>> x is y
False
>>> x == y
True
>>> x == {'a': 1, 'b': 2}
True
>>> d = {x: 'foo'}
>>> d[y]
'foo'

其他回答

你可以使用utispie包装的冷冻液:

>>> from utilspie.collectionsutils import frozendict

>>> my_dict = frozendict({1: 3, 4: 5})
>>> my_dict  # object of `frozendict` type
frozendict({1: 3, 4: 5})

# Hashable
>>> {my_dict: 4}
{frozendict({1: 3, 4: 5}): 4}

# Immutable
>>> my_dict[1] = 5
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
  File "/Users/mquadri/workspace/utilspie/utilspie/collectionsutils/collections_utils.py", line 44, in __setitem__
    self.__setitem__.__name__, type(self).__name__))
AttributeError: You can not call '__setitem__()' for 'frozendict' object

根据文件:

frozendict(dict_obj):接受dict类型的obj并返回一个可哈希且不可变的dict

Freeze实现了可哈希的、类型提示的冻结集合(dict、list和set),并将递归地冻结你给他们的数据(如果可能的话)。

pip install frz

用法:

from freeze import FDict

a_mutable_dict = {
    "list": [1, 2],
    "set": {3, 4},
}

a_frozen_dict = FDict(a_mutable_dict)

print(repr(a_frozen_dict)) 
# FDict: {'list': FList: (1, 2), 'set': FSet: {3, 4}}

我需要在某一时刻访问某个固定键用于某种全局常量类型的东西我确定了这样的东西:

class MyFrozenDict:
    def __getitem__(self, key):
        if key == 'mykey1':
            return 0
        if key == 'mykey2':
            return "another value"
        raise KeyError(key)

像这样使用它

a = MyFrozenDict()
print(a['mykey1'])

警告:对于大多数用例,我不建议这样做,因为它需要进行一些相当严重的权衡。

在没有本地语言支持的情况下,您可以自己动手,也可以使用现有的解决方案。幸运的是,Python使得扩展它们的基本实现变得非常简单。

class frozen_dict(dict):
    def __setitem__(self, key, value):
        raise Exception('Frozen dictionaries cannot be mutated')

frozen_dict = frozen_dict({'foo': 'FOO' })
print(frozen['foo']) # FOO
frozen['foo'] = 'NEWFOO' # Exception: Frozen dictionaries cannot be mutated

# OR

from types import MappingProxyType

frozen_dict = MappingProxyType({'foo': 'FOO'})
print(frozen_dict['foo']) # FOO
frozen_dict['foo'] = 'NEWFOO' # TypeError: 'mappingproxy' object does not support item assignment

这是我一直在用的代码。我子类化了frozenset。这样做的优点如下。

这是一个真正的不可变对象。不依赖未来用户和开发人员的良好行为。 在常规字典和固定字典之间来回转换很容易。frozdict (orig_dict)—>冻结字典。字典(frozen_dict)—>常规字典。

2015年1月21日更新:我在2014年发布的原始代码使用for循环来查找匹配的键。这实在是太慢了。现在我已经组合了一个实现,它利用了frozenset的散列特性。键-值对存储在特殊的容器中,其中__hash__和__eq__函数仅基于键。这段代码也经过了正式的单元测试,这与我2014年8月在这里发布的代码不同。

MIT-style许可证。

if 3 / 2 == 1:
    version = 2
elif 3 / 2 == 1.5:
    version = 3

def col(i):
    ''' For binding named attributes to spots inside subclasses of tuple.'''
    g = tuple.__getitem__
    @property
    def _col(self):
        return g(self,i)
    return _col

class Item(tuple):
    ''' Designed for storing key-value pairs inside
        a FrozenDict, which itself is a subclass of frozenset.
        The __hash__ is overloaded to return the hash of only the key.
        __eq__ is overloaded so that normally it only checks whether the Item's
        key is equal to the other object, HOWEVER, if the other object itself
        is an instance of Item, it checks BOTH the key and value for equality.

        WARNING: Do not use this class for any purpose other than to contain
        key value pairs inside FrozenDict!!!!

        The __eq__ operator is overloaded in such a way that it violates a
        fundamental property of mathematics. That property, which says that
        a == b and b == c implies a == c, does not hold for this object.
        Here's a demonstration:
            [in]  >>> x = Item(('a',4))
            [in]  >>> y = Item(('a',5))
            [in]  >>> hash('a')
            [out] >>> 194817700
            [in]  >>> hash(x)
            [out] >>> 194817700
            [in]  >>> hash(y)
            [out] >>> 194817700
            [in]  >>> 'a' == x
            [out] >>> True
            [in]  >>> 'a' == y
            [out] >>> True
            [in]  >>> x == y
            [out] >>> False
    '''

    __slots__ = ()
    key, value = col(0), col(1)
    def __hash__(self):
        return hash(self.key)
    def __eq__(self, other):
        if isinstance(other, Item):
            return tuple.__eq__(self, other)
        return self.key == other
    def __ne__(self, other):
        return not self.__eq__(other)
    def __str__(self):
        return '%r: %r' % self
    def __repr__(self):
        return 'Item((%r, %r))' % self

class FrozenDict(frozenset):
    ''' Behaves in most ways like a regular dictionary, except that it's immutable.
        It differs from other implementations because it doesn't subclass "dict".
        Instead it subclasses "frozenset" which guarantees immutability.
        FrozenDict instances are created with the same arguments used to initialize
        regular dictionaries, and has all the same methods.
            [in]  >>> f = FrozenDict(x=3,y=4,z=5)
            [in]  >>> f['x']
            [out] >>> 3
            [in]  >>> f['a'] = 0
            [out] >>> TypeError: 'FrozenDict' object does not support item assignment

        FrozenDict can accept un-hashable values, but FrozenDict is only hashable if its values are hashable.
            [in]  >>> f = FrozenDict(x=3,y=4,z=5)
            [in]  >>> hash(f)
            [out] >>> 646626455
            [in]  >>> g = FrozenDict(x=3,y=4,z=[])
            [in]  >>> hash(g)
            [out] >>> TypeError: unhashable type: 'list'

        FrozenDict interacts with dictionary objects as though it were a dict itself.
            [in]  >>> original = dict(x=3,y=4,z=5)
            [in]  >>> frozen = FrozenDict(x=3,y=4,z=5)
            [in]  >>> original == frozen
            [out] >>> True

        FrozenDict supports bi-directional conversions with regular dictionaries.
            [in]  >>> original = {'x': 3, 'y': 4, 'z': 5}
            [in]  >>> FrozenDict(original)
            [out] >>> FrozenDict({'x': 3, 'y': 4, 'z': 5})
            [in]  >>> dict(FrozenDict(original))
            [out] >>> {'x': 3, 'y': 4, 'z': 5}   '''

    __slots__ = ()
    def __new__(cls, orig={}, **kw):
        if kw:
            d = dict(orig, **kw)
            items = map(Item, d.items())
        else:
            try:
                items = map(Item, orig.items())
            except AttributeError:
                items = map(Item, orig)
        return frozenset.__new__(cls, items)

    def __repr__(self):
        cls = self.__class__.__name__
        items = frozenset.__iter__(self)
        _repr = ', '.join(map(str,items))
        return '%s({%s})' % (cls, _repr)

    def __getitem__(self, key):
        if key not in self:
            raise KeyError(key)
        diff = self.difference
        item = diff(diff({key}))
        key, value = set(item).pop()
        return value

    def get(self, key, default=None):
        if key not in self:
            return default
        return self[key]

    def __iter__(self):
        items = frozenset.__iter__(self)
        return map(lambda i: i.key, items)

    def keys(self):
        items = frozenset.__iter__(self)
        return map(lambda i: i.key, items)

    def values(self):
        items = frozenset.__iter__(self)
        return map(lambda i: i.value, items)

    def items(self):
        items = frozenset.__iter__(self)
        return map(tuple, items)

    def copy(self):
        cls = self.__class__
        items = frozenset.copy(self)
        dupl = frozenset.__new__(cls, items)
        return dupl

    @classmethod
    def fromkeys(cls, keys, value):
        d = dict.fromkeys(keys,value)
        return cls(d)

    def __hash__(self):
        kv = tuple.__hash__
        items = frozenset.__iter__(self)
        return hash(frozenset(map(kv, items)))

    def __eq__(self, other):
        if not isinstance(other, FrozenDict):
            try:
                other = FrozenDict(other)
            except Exception:
                return False
        return frozenset.__eq__(self, other)

    def __ne__(self, other):
        return not self.__eq__(other)


if version == 2:
    #Here are the Python2 modifications
    class Python2(FrozenDict):
        def __iter__(self):
            items = frozenset.__iter__(self)
            for i in items:
                yield i.key

        def iterkeys(self):
            items = frozenset.__iter__(self)
            for i in items:
                yield i.key

        def itervalues(self):
            items = frozenset.__iter__(self)
            for i in items:
                yield i.value

        def iteritems(self):
            items = frozenset.__iter__(self)
            for i in items:
                yield (i.key, i.value)

        def has_key(self, key):
            return key in self

        def viewkeys(self):
            return dict(self).viewkeys()

        def viewvalues(self):
            return dict(self).viewvalues()

        def viewitems(self):
            return dict(self).viewitems()

    #If this is Python2, rebuild the class
    #from scratch rather than use a subclass
    py3 = FrozenDict.__dict__
    py3 = {k: py3[k] for k in py3}
    py2 = {}
    py2.update(py3)
    dct = Python2.__dict__
    py2.update({k: dct[k] for k in dct})

    FrozenDict = type('FrozenDict', (frozenset,), py2)