Disgruntled man sitting on a log surrounded by birds

William J. Turkel and Adam Crymble

Counting the frequency of specific words in a list can provide illustrative data. This lesson will teach you Python’s easy way to count such frequencies.

Peer-reviewed

edited by

  • Miriam Posner

reviewed by

  • Jim Clifford
  • Frederik Elwert

published

| 2012-07-17

modified

| 2012-07-17

difficulty

| Medium

DOI id icon https://doi.org/10.46430/phen0003

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Available in: EN (original) | ES
This lesson is part of a series of 15 lessons - You are on lesson 10 | previous lesson | next lesson

Contents

Lesson Goals

Your list is now clean enough that you can begin analyzing its contents in meaningful ways. Counting the frequency of specific words in the list can provide illustrative data. Python has an easy way to count frequencies, but it requires the use of a new type of variable: the dictionary. Before you begin working with a dictionary, consider the processes used to calculate frequencies in a list.

Files Needed For This Lesson

  • obo.py

If you do not have these files, you can download a (zip) file containing all of the code from the previous lessons in this series.

Frequencies

Now we want to count the frequency of each word in our list. You’ve already seen that it is easy to process a list by using a for loop. Try saving and executing the following example. Recall that += tells the program to append something to the end of an existing variable.

# count-list-items-1.py

wordstring = 'it was the best of times it was the worst of times '
wordstring += 'it was the age of wisdom it was the age of foolishness'

wordlist = wordstring.split()

wordfreq = []
for w in wordlist:
    wordfreq.append(wordlist.count(w))

print("String\n" + wordstring +"\n")
print("List\n" + str(wordlist) + "\n")
print("Frequencies\n" + str(wordfreq) + "\n")
print("Pairs\n" + str(list(zip(wordlist, wordfreq))))

Here, we start with a string and split it into a list, as we’ve done before. We then create an (initially empty) list called wordfreq, go through each word in the wordlist, and count the number of times that word appears in the whole list. We then add each word’s count to our wordfreq list. Using the zip operation, we are able to match the first word of the word list with the first number in the frequency list, the second word and second frequency, and so on. We end up with a list of word and frequency pairs. The str function converts any object to a string so that it can be printed.

You should get something like this:

String
it was the best of times it was the worst of times it was the age of wisdom it was the age of foolishness

List
['it', 'was', 'the', 'best', 'of', 'times', 'it', 'was',
'the', 'worst', 'of', 'times', 'it', 'was', 'the', 'age',
'of', 'wisdom', 'it', 'was', 'the', 'age', 'of',
'foolishness']

Frequencies
[4, 4, 4, 1, 4, 2, 4, 4, 4, 1, 4, 2, 4, 4, 4, 2, 4, 1, 4,
4, 4, 2, 4, 1]

Pairs
[('it', 4), ('was', 4), ('the', 4), ('best', 1), ('of', 4),
('times', 2), ('it', 4), ('was', 4), ('the', 4),
('worst', 1), ('of', 4), ('times', 2), ('it', 4),
('was', 4), ('the', 4), ('age', 2), ('of', 4),
('wisdom', 1), ('it', 4), ('was', 4), ('the', 4),
('age', 2), ('of', 4), ('foolishness', 1)]

It will pay to study the above code until you understand it before moving on.

Python also includes a very convenient tool called a list comprehension, which can be used to do the same thing as the for loop more economically.

# count-list-items-1.py

wordstring = 'it was the best of times it was the worst of times '
wordstring += 'it was the age of wisdom it was the age of foolishness'
wordlist = wordstring.split()

wordfreq = [wordlist.count(w) for w in wordlist] # a list comprehension

print("String\n" + wordstring +"\n")
print("List\n" + str(wordlist) + "\n")
print("Frequencies\n" + str(wordfreq) + "\n")
print("Pairs\n" + str(list(zip(wordlist, wordfreq))))

If you study this list comprehension carefully, you will discover that it does exactly the same thing as the for loop in the previous example, but in a condensed manner. Either method will work fine, so use the version that you are most comfortable with.

Generally it is wise to use code you understand rather than code that runs quickest.

At this point we have a list of pairs, where each pair contains a word and its frequency. This list is a bit redundant. If ‘the’ occurs 500 times, then this list contains five hundred copies of the pair (‘the’, 500). The list is also ordered by the words in the original text, rather than listing the words in order from most to least frequent. We can solve both problems by converting it into a dictionary, then printing out the dictionary in order from the most to the least commonly occurring item.

Python Dictionaries

Both strings and lists are sequentially ordered, which means that you can access their contents by using an index, a number that starts at 0. If you have a list containing strings, you can use a pair of indexes to access first a particular string in the list, and then a particular character within that string. Study the examples below.


s = 'hello world'
print(s[0])
-> h

print(s[1])
-> e

m = ['hello', 'world']
print(m[0])
-> hello

print(m[1])
-> world

print(m[0][1])
-> e

print(m[1][0])
-> w

To keep track of frequencies, we’re going to use another type of Python object, a dictionary. The dictionary is an unordered collection of objects. That means that you can’t use an index to retrieve elements from it. You can, however, look them up by using a key (hence the name “dictionary”). Study the following example.


d = {'world': 1, 'hello': 0}
print(d['hello'])
-> 0

print(d['world'])
-> 1

print(d.keys())
-> ['world', 'hello']

Dictionaries might be a bit confusing to a new programmer. Try to think of it like a language dictionary. If you don’t know (or remember) exactly how “bijection” differs from “surjection” you can look the two terms up in the Oxford English Dictionary. The same principle applies when you print(d['hello']); except, rather than print a literary definition it prints the value associated with the keyword ‘hello’, as defined by you when you created the dictionary named d. In this case, that value is “0”.

Note that you use curly braces to define a dictionary, but square brackets to access things within it. The keys operation returns a list of keys that are defined in the dictionary.

Word-Frequency Pairs

Building on what we have so far, we want a function that can convert a list of words into a dictionary of word-frequency pairs. The only new command that we will need is dict, which makes a dictionary from a list of pairs. Copy the following and add it to the obo.py module.

# Given a list of words, return a dictionary of
# word-frequency pairs.

def wordListToFreqDict(wordlist):
    wordfreq = [wordlist.count(p) for p in wordlist]
    return dict(list(zip(wordlist,wordfreq)))

We are also going to want a function that can sort a dictionary of word-frequency pairs by descending frequency. Copy this and add it to the obo.py module, too.

# Sort a dictionary of word-frequency pairs in
# order of descending frequency.

def sortFreqDict(freqdict):
    aux = [(freqdict[key], key) for key in freqdict]
    aux.sort()
    aux.reverse()
    return aux

We can now write a program which takes a URL and returns word-frequency pairs for the web page, sorted in order of descending frequency. Copy the following program into Komodo Edit, save it as html-to-freq.py and execute it. Study the program and its output carefully before continuing.

#html-to-freq.py

import urllib.request, urllib.error, urllib.parse, obo

url = 'http://www.oldbaileyonline.org/browse.jsp?id=t17800628-33&div=t17800628-33'

response = urllib.request.urlopen(url)
html = response.read().decode('UTF-8')
text = obo.stripTags(html).lower()
wordlist = obo.stripNonAlphaNum(text)
dictionary = obo.wordListToFreqDict(wordlist)
sorteddict = obo.sortFreqDict(dictionary)

for s in sorteddict: print(str(s))

Removing Stop Words

When we look at the output of our html-to-freq.py program, we see that a lot of the most frequent words in the text are function words like “the”, “of”, “to” and “and”.

(192, 'the')
(105, 'i')
(74, 'to')
(71, 'was')
(67, 'of')
(62, 'in')
(53, 'a')
(52, 'and')
(50, 'you')
(50, 'he')
(40, 'that')
(39, 'his')
(36, 'it')

These words are usually the most common in any English language text, so they don’t tell us much that is distinctive about Bowsey’s trial. In general, we are more interested in finding the words that will help us differentiate this text from texts that are about different subjects. So we’re going to filter out the common function words. Words that are ignored like this are known as stop words. We’re going to use the following list, adapted from one posted online by computer scientists at Glasgow. Copy it and put it at the beginning of the obo.py library that you are building.

stopwords = ['a', 'about', 'above', 'across', 'after', 'afterwards']
stopwords += ['again', 'against', 'all', 'almost', 'alone', 'along']
stopwords += ['already', 'also', 'although', 'always', 'am', 'among']
stopwords += ['amongst', 'amoungst', 'amount', 'an', 'and', 'another']
stopwords += ['any', 'anyhow', 'anyone', 'anything', 'anyway', 'anywhere']
stopwords += ['are', 'around', 'as', 'at', 'back', 'be', 'became']
stopwords += ['because', 'become', 'becomes', 'becoming', 'been']
stopwords += ['before', 'beforehand', 'behind', 'being', 'below']
stopwords += ['beside', 'besides', 'between', 'beyond', 'bill', 'both']
stopwords += ['bottom', 'but', 'by', 'call', 'can', 'cannot', 'cant']
stopwords += ['co', 'computer', 'con', 'could', 'couldnt', 'cry', 'de']
stopwords += ['describe', 'detail', 'did', 'do', 'done', 'down', 'due']
stopwords += ['during', 'each', 'eg', 'eight', 'either', 'eleven', 'else']
stopwords += ['elsewhere', 'empty', 'enough', 'etc', 'even', 'ever']
stopwords += ['every', 'everyone', 'everything', 'everywhere', 'except']
stopwords += ['few', 'fifteen', 'fifty', 'fill', 'find', 'fire', 'first']
stopwords += ['five', 'for', 'former', 'formerly', 'forty', 'found']
stopwords += ['four', 'from', 'front', 'full', 'further', 'get', 'give']
stopwords += ['go', 'had', 'has', 'hasnt', 'have', 'he', 'hence', 'her']
stopwords += ['here', 'hereafter', 'hereby', 'herein', 'hereupon', 'hers']
stopwords += ['herself', 'him', 'himself', 'his', 'how', 'however']
stopwords += ['hundred', 'i', 'ie', 'if', 'in', 'inc', 'indeed']
stopwords += ['interest', 'into', 'is', 'it', 'its', 'itself', 'keep']
stopwords += ['last', 'latter', 'latterly', 'least', 'less', 'ltd', 'made']
stopwords += ['many', 'may', 'me', 'meanwhile', 'might', 'mill', 'mine']
stopwords += ['more', 'moreover', 'most', 'mostly', 'move', 'much']
stopwords += ['must', 'my', 'myself', 'name', 'namely', 'neither', 'never']
stopwords += ['nevertheless', 'next', 'nine', 'no', 'nobody', 'none']
stopwords += ['noone', 'nor', 'not', 'nothing', 'now', 'nowhere', 'of']
stopwords += ['off', 'often', 'on','once', 'one', 'only', 'onto', 'or']
stopwords += ['other', 'others', 'otherwise', 'our', 'ours', 'ourselves']
stopwords += ['out', 'over', 'own', 'part', 'per', 'perhaps', 'please']
stopwords += ['put', 'rather', 're', 's', 'same', 'see', 'seem', 'seemed']
stopwords += ['seeming', 'seems', 'serious', 'several', 'she', 'should']
stopwords += ['show', 'side', 'since', 'sincere', 'six', 'sixty', 'so']
stopwords += ['some', 'somehow', 'someone', 'something', 'sometime']
stopwords += ['sometimes', 'somewhere', 'still', 'such', 'system', 'take']
stopwords += ['ten', 'than', 'that', 'the', 'their', 'them', 'themselves']
stopwords += ['then', 'thence', 'there', 'thereafter', 'thereby']
stopwords += ['therefore', 'therein', 'thereupon', 'these', 'they']
stopwords += ['thick', 'thin', 'third', 'this', 'those', 'though', 'three']
stopwords += ['three', 'through', 'throughout', 'thru', 'thus', 'to']
stopwords += ['together', 'too', 'top', 'toward', 'towards', 'twelve']
stopwords += ['twenty', 'two', 'un', 'under', 'until', 'up', 'upon']
stopwords += ['us', 'very', 'via', 'was', 'we', 'well', 'were', 'what']
stopwords += ['whatever', 'when', 'whence', 'whenever', 'where']
stopwords += ['whereafter', 'whereas', 'whereby', 'wherein', 'whereupon']
stopwords += ['wherever', 'whether', 'which', 'while', 'whither', 'who']
stopwords += ['whoever', 'whole', 'whom', 'whose', 'why', 'will', 'with']
stopwords += ['within', 'without', 'would', 'yet', 'you', 'your']
stopwords += ['yours', 'yourself', 'yourselves']

Now getting rid of the stop words in a list is as easy as using another list comprehension. Add this function to the obo.py module, too.

# Given a list of words, remove any that are
# in a list of stop words.

def removeStopwords(wordlist, stopwords):
    return [w for w in wordlist if w not in stopwords]

Putting it All Together

Now we have everything we need to determine word frequencies for web pages. Copy the following to Komodo Edit, save it as html-to-freq-2.py and execute it.

# html-to-freq-2.py

import urllib.request, urllib.error, urllib.parse
import obo

url = 'http://www.oldbaileyonline.org/browse.jsp?id=t17800628-33&div=t17800628-33'

response = urllib.request.urlopen(url)
html = response.read().decode('UTF-8')
text = obo.stripTags(html).lower()
fullwordlist = obo.stripNonAlphaNum(text)
wordlist = obo.removeStopwords(fullwordlist, obo.stopwords)
dictionary = obo.wordListToFreqDict(wordlist)
sorteddict = obo.sortFreqDict(dictionary)

for s in sorteddict: print(str(s))

If all went well, your output should look like this:

(25, 'house')
(20, 'yes')
(20, 'prisoner')
(19, 'mr')
(17, 'man')
(15, 'akerman')
(14, 'mob')
(13, 'black')
(12, 'night')
(11, 'saw')
(9, 'went')
(9, 'sworn')
(9, 'room')
(9, 'pair')
(9, 'know')
(9, 'face')
(8, 'time')
(8, 'thing')
(8, 'june')
(8, 'believe')
...

Suggested Readings

Lutz, Learning Python

  • Ch. 9: Tuples, Files, and Everything Else
  • Ch. 11: Assignment, Expressions, and print
  • Ch. 12: if Tests
  • Ch. 13: while and for Loops

Pilgrim, Diving into Python

Code Syncing

To follow along with future lessons it is important that you have the right files and programs in your “programming-historian” directory. At the end of each lesson in this series you can download the “programming-historian” zip file to make sure you have the correct code.

About the authors

William J. Turkel is Professor of History at the University of Western Ontario.

Adam Crymble, University College London.

Suggested Citation

William J. Turkel and Adam Crymble, "Counting Word Frequencies with Python," Programming Historian 1 (2012), https://doi.org/10.46430/phen0003.

Great Open Access tutorials cost money to produce. Join the growing number of people supporting Programming Historian so we can continue to share knowledge free of charge.