diff --git a/content/python/concepts/deque/terms/count/count.md b/content/python/concepts/deque/terms/count/count.md new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..44963f1cde2 --- /dev/null +++ b/content/python/concepts/deque/terms/count/count.md @@ -0,0 +1,91 @@ +--- +Title: 'count()' +Description: 'Returns the number of occurrences of a specified element in a deque.' +Subjects: + - 'Computer Science' + - 'Data Structures' +Tags: + - 'Collections' + - 'Deque' + - 'Python' +CatalogContent: + - 'learn-python-3' + - 'paths/computer-science' +--- + +The **`count()`** method of a `collections.deque` object counts how many times a given value appears in the deque. It provides a direct way to determine the frequency of a specific element within the deque container. + +## Syntax + +```pseudo +deque_object.count(value) +``` + +**Parameters:** + +- `value`: The element whose occurrences are to be counted in the deque. + +**Return value:** + +Returns an integer representing the number of elements in the deque that are equal to `value`. + +## Example 1 + +In this example, the `count()` method is used to find how many times the value `3` appears in a deque: + +```py +from collections import deque + +dq = deque([1, 2, 3, 3, 4, 3, 5]) +print(dq.count(3)) +``` + +The output of this code is: + +```shell +3 +``` + +## Example 2 + +In this example, the method counts an element not present in the deque, returning zero: + +```py +from collections import deque + +dq = deque([10, 20, 30, 40]) +print(dq.count(100)) +``` + +The output of this code is: + +```shell +0 +``` + +## Codebyte Example + +In this example, the `count()` method is used to compute the frequency of a specific item in a deque of strings representing colours: + +```codebyte/python +from collections import deque + +colours = deque(['red', 'blue', 'red', 'green', 'blue', 'red']) +target_colour = 'red' +count_red = colours.count(target_colour) +print(f"The colour {target_colour!r} appears {count_red} times in the deque.") +``` + +## Frequently Asked Questions + +### 1. What does `size()` do in C++? + +The `size()` member function returns the number of elements currently stored in a container such as `std::deque`, `std::vector`, or `std::list`, typically in constant time. + +### 2. What is a deque function in C++? + +A deque (double-ended queue) in C++ is an STL container that allows efficient insertion and removal of elements at both the front and back, with functions like `push_back()`, `pop_front()`, `size()`, and others. + +### 3. How to get the size of a deque in C++? + +By calling the `size()` method on the deque object (e.g., `d.size()`), which returns an unsigned integral value (`size_type`) indicating the element count.