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Day-25: Mastering Sets in Python – Unique & Unordered Collections

subinthapaOctober 6, 2025October 6, 2025 No Comments

What is a Set?

A set in Python is a collection of unordered, unindexed, and unique items.
It is represented by curly braces {} or the set() function.

Example:

fruits = {"apple", "banana", "cherry"}

Here, we have created a set named fruits. It contains 3 items.


Set Features

  • Unordered → The items have no fixed order. Printing may show a different order.
  • Unchangeable items → You cannot change elements directly, only add/remove entire items.
  • Unique items → Duplicates are not allowed.

Important Methods in Set { }

MethodDescriptionExample
add(x)Add elements.add(5)
remove(x)Remove element (error if missing)s.remove(3)
discard(x)Remove element (no error if missing)s.discard(10)
pop()Remove and return a random elements.pop()
clear()Remove all elementss.clear()
copy()Return shallow copyt = s.copy()
union(*others)Return union of setss.union(t) or `s
update(*others)Union in places.update(t) or `s
intersection(*others)Return common elementss & t
intersection_update(*others)Keep only common (in place)s &= t
difference(*others)Return items only in ss - t
difference_update(*others)Remove items in other (in place)s -= t
symmetric_difference(other)Items in either but not boths ^ t
symmetric_difference_update(other)Update with symmetric diffs ^= t
issubset(other)Check if s ⊆ others <= t
issuperset(other)Check if s ⊇ others >= t
isdisjoint(other)True if no common elementss.isdisjoint(t)

Methods That Don’t Work with Sets

append, insert, extend, sort, reverse, index, count

👉 Since sets are unordered, these list methods cannot be used directly.
If you want such operations, convert the set to a list first.

Example:

people = {"Subin Thapa", "Garima Sapkota", "Bishworaj Poudel", "Gokarna Parajuli"}
result = list(people)
print(result)

Using Sets in Everyday Life

1. Create a Set

fruits = {"apple", "banana", "cherry"}

2. Check for Item in Set

is_in_set = "banana" in fruits
print(is_in_set)  # True

3. Add Item

fruits.add("orange")

4. Remove Item

fruits.remove("banana")

5. Mixed Items

mixed_set = {1, "apple", 3.14}

Examples

Example 1: Unique Email Addresses

emails = ["alice@example.com", "bob@example.com", "alice@example.com", "bob@example.com"]
unique_emails = set(emails)
print("Unique Emails:", unique_emails)

Example 2: Finding Common Students (Intersection)

course_A_students = {"Garima", "Bob", "Ram"}
course_B_students = {"Charlie", "Garima", "Alice"}
common_students = course_A_students.intersection(course_B_students)
print("Common Students:", common_students)

Example 3: Union, Difference, Symmetric Difference

project_A_tasks = {"task1", "task2", "task3"}
project_B_tasks = {"task2", "task4", "task5"}

all_tasks = project_A_tasks.union(project_B_tasks)
print("Union:", all_tasks)

diff_tasks = project_A_tasks.difference(project_B_tasks)
print("Difference:", diff_tasks)

sym_diff_tasks = project_A_tasks.symmetric_difference(project_B_tasks)
print("Symmetric Difference:", sym_diff_tasks)

Example 4: Creating an Empty Set

empty_set = set()
print(empty_set)         # set()
print(type(empty_set))   # <class 'set'>

empty_dict = {}
print(type(empty_dict))  # <class 'dict'>

Example 5: Looping Through a Set

fruits = {"apple", "banana", "cherry"}
for fruit in fruits:
    print(fruit)

Example 6.1: Set Comprehension (Numbers)

squared_numbers = {x**2 for x in range(5)}
print("Squared Numbers:", squared_numbers)

Example 6.2: Set Comprehension (Strings)

words = ["apple", "banana", "cherry", "avocado"]
first_letters = {word[0] for word in words}
print(first_letters)   # {'a', 'b', 'c'}

Challenge 25

  • Create a set of your favorite stocks.
  • Add a few more stocks.
  • Remove one stock.
  • Perform a union with another set.
  • Find the common stocks using intersection.
my_stocks = {"AAPL", "TSLA", "AMZN"}
print("Initial:", my_stocks)

my_stocks.add("MSFT")
my_stocks.add("GOOGL")
print("After Adding:", my_stocks)

my_stocks.remove("AMZN")
print("After Removing:", my_stocks)

friend_stocks = {"TSLA", "META", "MSFT", "NFLX"}

all_stocks = my_stocks.union(friend_stocks)
print("Union:", all_stocks)

common_stocks = my_stocks.intersection(friend_stocks)
print("Common Stocks:", common_stocks)

👉 For more tutorials like this, visit my website and don’t forget to subscribe to my YouTube channel: Coding with Subin🚀

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Next: Day-26: Mastering Dictionaries in Python – Key-Value Collections

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