On 3 October 2012 15:26, Steen Lysgaard <boxeakast...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi, > > I am looking for a clever way to compute all combinations of two lists. > Look at this example: > > h = ['A','A','B','B'] > m = ['a','b'] > > the resulting combinations should be of the same length as h and each > element in m can be used twice. The sought after result using h and m from > above is: > > [['aA', 'aA', 'bB', 'bB'], > ['aA', 'aB', 'bA', 'bB'], > ['aB', 'aB', 'bA', 'bA']] > > (the order of the results does not matter i.e. ['aA', 'aA', 'bB', 'bB'] > and ['aA', 'bB', 'aA', 'bB'] are considered the same) > > This is achieved by the code below, this however needs to go through all > possible combinations (faculty of len(h)) and rule out duplicates as they > occur and this is too much if for example len(h) is 16. > > Can anyone guide me to a better solution? What lengths can the two lists be? Is len(h) === 2*len(m), or it it just this time? Depending on your answer this could be easy or hard ;)
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