Correct, list
objects are not hashable because they are mutable. tuple
objects are hashable (provided that all their elements are hashable). Since your innermost lists are all just integers, that provides a wonderful opportunity to work around the non-hashableness of lists:
>>> lists = [[[1,2],[3,4],[6,7]],[[3,4],[5,9],[8,3],[4,2]],[[3,4],[9,9]]]
>>> sets = [set(tuple(x) for x in y) for y in lists]
>>> set.intersection(*sets)
set([(3, 4)])
Here I give you a set which contains tuples of the coordinates which are present in all the sublists. To get a list of list like you started with:
[list(x) for x in set.intersection(*sets)]
does the trick.
To address the concern by @wim, if you really want a reference to the first element in the intersection (where first
is defined by being first in lists[0]
), the easiest way is probably like this:
#... Stuff as before
intersection = set.intersection(*sets)
reference_to_first = next( (x for x in lists[0] if tuple(x) in intersection), None )
This will return None
if the intersection is empty.