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Count Unique Characters in a Script
kyra-ptn edited this page Sep 3, 2024
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Unit 4 Session 2 Advanced (Click for link to problem statements)
Understand what the interviewer is asking for by using test cases and questions about the problem.
- Q: What is the goal of the problem?
- A: The goal is to count the number of unique characters (keys) in a dictionary representing a script where each key is a character name and the value is a list of their dialogue lines.
- Q: What are the inputs?
- A: The input is a dictionary where the keys are strings representing character names and the values are lists of strings representing the dialogue lines.
- Q: What are the outputs?
- A: The output is an integer representing the number of unique characters in the script.
- Q: How should the function handle cases where there are duplicate keys in the dictionary?
- A: In Python, dictionaries cannot have duplicate keys; the last value will overwrite any previous values for the same key.
- Q: Are there any assumptions about the input?
- A: The input dictionary is well-formed with string keys and values being lists of strings.
Plan the solution with appropriate visualizations and pseudocode.
General Idea: Use a set to track unique character names (keys). Since a set only keeps unique items, the number of unique characters will be the size of the set after iterating through the dictionary.
1) Initialize an empty set `unique_characters`.
2) Iterate over the `script` dictionary:
a) For each key (character name), add it to the `unique_characters` set.
3) After iterating through all the keys, return the size of the `unique_characters` set, which represents the number of unique characters.
**⚠️ Common Mistakes**
- Assuming that dictionaries can have duplicate keys, which is not the case in Python.
- Not correctly understanding that each key in a dictionary is unique by definition.
def count_unique_characters(script):
# Initialize a set to keep track of unique characters
unique_characters = set()
# Iterate over the dictionary and add each character to the set
for character in script:
unique_characters.add(character)
# Return the count of unique characters
return len(unique_characters)
Example Usage:
script = {
"Alice": ["Hello there!", "How are you?"],
"Bob": ["Hi Alice!", "I'm good, thanks!"],
"Charlie": ["What's up?"]
}
print(count_unique_characters(script))
# Output: 3
script_with_redundant_keys = {
"Alice": ["Hello there!"],
"Alice": ["How are you?"],
"Bob": ["Hi Alice!"]
}
print(count_unique_characters(script_with_redundant_keys))
# Output: 2