In Python, a Set is a collection data type that is unordered and mutable. A set cannot have duplicate elements. Here, the task is to find out the number of elements present in a set. See the below examples.
Examples:
Input: a = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6} Output: 6 Input: a = {'Geeks', 'For'} Output: 2
The idea is use len() in Python
Example 1:
Python3
# Python program to find the length # of set set1 = set () # Adding element and tuple to the Set set1.add( 8 ) set1.add( 9 ) set1.add(( 6 , 7 )) print ( "The length of set is:" , len (set1)) |
Output:
The length of set is: 3
Example 2:
Python3
n = len ({ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 }) print ( "The length of set is:" , n) |
Output:
The length of set is: 5
How does len() work?len()
works in O(1)
time as the set is an object and has a member to store its size. Below is description of len()
from Python docs.
Return the length (the number of items) of an object. The argument may be a sequence (such as a string, bytes, tuple, list, or range) or a collection (such as a dictionary, set, or frozen set).