In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I use these names as keys in a dictionary, and store node's data.
> Now given a name like "abc", I want to find the key with the following
> rule:
> If the key exists return the value
> If the key does not exist, return the value of the leaf node whose
> name is in the given name. For, "abc", it is "ab" . For, "ad", it is
> "a".
>
> I suppose there must be a simpler solution to this problem. I
> implemented it like this:
> d = {'a':0, 'aa':12, 'ab':43, 'aaa':22, 'aab':343, 'ac':33}
> name = 'abc'
> key = max( [ x for x in d.iterkeys() if x in name] )
> value = d[key]
>
> I can change the data structure from dictinory to tuple of key,value
> pairs or any thing, and afford to keep them in a particular order. Is
> there any way I can speed up this as I have to do this for around 4000
> times with tree size being ~5000.
What about this:
def search(tree, path):
while path:
result = tree.get(path)
if result is not None:
return result
path = path[:-1]
raise KeyError('path not on tree')
Ciao,
Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch
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