The list comprehension in the answer you linked is easily adapted to support overlapping chunks by simply shortening the "step" parameter passed to the range:
>>> list_ = ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e', 'f', 'g', 'h']
>>> n = 3 # group size
>>> m = 1 # overlap size
>>> [list_[i:i+n] for i in range(0, len(list_), n-m)]
[['a', 'b', 'c'], ['c', 'd', 'e'], ['e', 'f', 'g'], ['g', 'h']]
Other visitors to this question mightn't have the luxury of working with an input list (slicable, known length, finite). Here is a generator-based solution that can work with arbitrary iterables:
from collections import deque
def chunks(iterable, chunk_size=3, overlap=0):
# we'll use a deque to hold the values because it automatically
# discards any extraneous elements if it grows too large
if chunk_size < 1:
raise Exception("chunk size too small")
if overlap >= chunk_size:
raise Exception("overlap too large")
queue = deque(maxlen=chunk_size)
it = iter(iterable)
i = 0
try:
# start by filling the queue with the first group
for i in range(chunk_size):
queue.append(next(it))
while True:
yield tuple(queue)
# after yielding a chunk, get enough elements for the next chunk
for i in range(chunk_size - overlap):
queue.append(next(it))
except StopIteration:
# if the iterator is exhausted, yield any remaining elements
i += overlap
if i > 0:
yield tuple(queue)[-i:]
Note: I've since released this implementation in wimpy.util.chunks
. If you don't mind adding the dependency, you can pip install wimpy
and use from wimpy import chunks
rather than copy-pasting the code.
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