What is the best way to set a start index when iterating a list in Python. For example, I have a list of the days of the week - Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, ... Saturday - but I want to iterate through the list starting at Monday. What is the best practice for doing this?
asked May 27, 2011 at 6:28
Vincent CatalanoVincent Catalano
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3
You can use slicing:
for item in some_list[2:]:
# do stuff
This will start at the third element and iterate to the end.
answered May 27, 2011 at 6:31
Björn PollexBjörn Pollex
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8
islice
has the advantage that it doesn't need to copy part of the list
from itertools import islice
for day in islice[days, 1, None]:
...
answered May 27, 2011 at 6:49
John La RooyJohn La Rooy
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You can always loop using an index counter the conventional C style looping:
for i in range[len[l]-1]:
print l[i+1]
It is always better to follow the "loop on every element" style because that's the normal thing to do, but if it gets in your way, just remember the conventional style is also supported, always.
answered May 27, 2011 at 6:35
Why are people using list slicing [slow because it copies to a new list], importing a library function, or trying to rotate an array for this?
Use a normal for-loop with range[start, stop, step]
[where start
and step
are optional arguments].
For example, looping through an array starting at index 1:
for i in range[1, len[arr]]:
print[arr[i]]
answered Jul 14, 2020 at 20:05
Charlie SuCharlie Su
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1
stdlib will hook you up son!
deque.rotate[]
:
#!/usr/local/bin/python2.7
from collections import deque
a = deque['Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday'.split[' ']]
a.rotate[3]
deque[['Friday', 'Saturday', 'Sunday', 'Monday', 'Tuesday', 'Wednesday', 'Thursday']]
Björn Pollex
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answered May 27, 2011 at 9:16
synthesizerpatelsynthesizerpatel
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If all you want is to print from Monday
onwards, you can use list
's index
method to find the position where "Monday" is in the list, and iterate from there as explained in other
posts. Using list.index
saves you hard-coding the index for "Monday", which is a potential source of error:
days = ['Sunday', 'Monday', 'Tuesday', 'Wednesday', 'Thursday', 'Friday', 'Saturday']
for d in days[days.index['Monday']:] :
print d
answered May 27, 2011 at 7:17
juanchopanzajuanchopanza
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1
Here's a rotation generator which doesn't need to make a warped copy of the input sequence ... may be useful if the input sequence is much larger than 7 items.
>>> def rotated_sequence[seq, start_index]:
... n = len[seq]
... for i in xrange[n]:
... yield seq[[i + start_index] % n]
...
>>> s = 'su m tu w th f sa'.split[]
>>> list[rotated_sequence[s, s.index['m']]]
['m', 'tu', 'w', 'th', 'f', 'sa', 'su']
>>>
answered May 27, 2011 at 8:52
John MachinJohn Machin
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If you want to "wrap around" and effectively rotate the list to start with Monday [rather than just chop off the items prior to Monday]:
dayNames = [ 'Sunday', 'Monday', 'Tuesday', 'Wednesday', 'Thursday',
'Friday', 'Saturday', ]
startDayName = 'Monday'
startIndex = dayNames.index[ startDayName ]
print [ startIndex ]
rotatedDayNames = dayNames[ startIndex: ] + dayNames [ :startIndex ]
for x in rotatedDayNames:
print [ x ]
answered May 27, 2011 at 8:19
slothropslothrop
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Loop whole list [not just part] starting from a random pos efficiently:
import random
arr = ["Mon", "Tue", "Wed", "Thu", "Fri", "Sat", "Sun"]
cln = len[arr]
start = random.randint[0, cln-1]
i = 0
while i < cln:
pos = i+start
print[arr[pos if pos= 0: index += 1..