How do I create a Python set with only one element?
For Python2.7+:
set_display ::= "{" (expression_list | comprehension) "}"
Example:
>>> myString = 'foobar'
>>> s = {myString}
>>> s
set(['foobar'])
>>> s = {'spam'}
>>> s
set(['spam'])
Note that an empty {}
is not a set
, its a dict
.
Help on set
:
class set(object)
| set() -> new empty set object
| set(iterable) -> new set object
As you can see set()
expects an iterable and strings are iterable too, so it converts the string characters to a set.
Put the string in some iterable and pass it to set()
:
>>> set(('foo',)) #tuple
set(['foo'])
>>> set(['foo']) #list
set(['foo'])
For example, this easy way:
mySet = set([myString])
set(obj)
is going to iterate trough obj
and add all unique elements to the set. Since strings are also iterable, if you pass a string to set()
then you get the unique letters in your set. You can put your obj to a list first:
set(["mystring"])
However that is not elegant IMO. You know, even for the creation of an empty dictionary we prefer {}
over dict()
. Same here. I wolud use the following syntax:
myset = {"mystring"}
Note that for tuples, you need a comma after it:
mytuple = ("mystring",)
In 2.7 as well as 3.x, you can use:
mySet = {'abc'}