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pythonlistnestedlevels

Counting depth or the deepest level a nested list goes to


A have a real problem (and a headache) with an assignment...

I'm in an introductory programming class, and I have to write a function that, given a list, will return the "maximum" depth it goes to... For example: [1,2,3] will return 1, [1,[2,3]] will return 2...

I've written this piece of code (it's the best I could get T_T)

def flat(l):
    count=0
    for item in l:
        if isinstance(item,list):
            count+= flat(item)
    return count+1

However, It obviously doens't work like it should, because if there are lists that do not count for the maximum deepness, it still raises the counter...

For example: when I use the function with [1,2,[3,4],5,[6],7] it should return 2, but it returns 3...

Any ideas or help would be greatly appreciated ^^ thanks a lot!! I've been strugling with this for weeks now...


Solution

  • Breadth-first, without recursion, and it also works with other sequence types:

    from collections import Sequence
    from itertools import chain, count
    
    def depth(seq):
        for level in count():
            if not seq:
                return level
            seq = list(chain.from_iterable(s for s in seq if isinstance(s, Sequence)))
    

    The same idea, but with much less memory consumption:

    from collections import Sequence
    from itertools import chain, count
    
    def depth(seq):
        seq = iter(seq)
        try:
            for level in count():
                seq = chain([next(seq)], seq)
                seq = chain.from_iterable(s for s in seq if isinstance(s, Sequence))
        except StopIteration:
            return level