For instance, he might have two siblings and parents on the same network, behind the same router.
All of them will have the same IP. Which computer should you target if you're using that IP?
foo = {}
for x in range(1,len(network)):
subDict = set()
for k,v in network.items():
if len(network[k]) == x:
subDict.add(k)
foo[x] = subDict
return foo
@Blue I'm thinking that the most straightforward way to construct the missing keys as well, in one passing (for your oneliner), is to loop over your lengths in a comprehension
I think I have working code, he doesn't seem to be picking up my packets though. I honestly think it's a problem on his end, but it's hard to tell since I can't really read what he's done.
foo = {}
for x in range(1,len(network)):
subDict = set()
for k,v in network.items():
if len(network[k]) == x:
subDict.add(k)
foo[x] = subDict
return foo
Well we have to make sure it works on these computers in particular and apparently my partner's not able to winscp and move his files to and from these machines for whatever reason.
That's very silly. I'm not going to say there's no pedagogical use for it, but the problem with the last batch of candidates I interviewed wasn't that they couldn't one-line things, it was that they couldn't code.
lambda network: (lambda result: ([result[len(v)].add(k) for (k, v) in network.items()], [result[i] for i in range(1, len(network))] and dict(result)))(__import__('collections').defaultdict(set))