How can I remove non-unique elements from a list entered in through the input function? - python-3.x

Currently working through the springboard data science career track admissions test and one of the questions I got asked was to removes all on non-duplicates from a list of numbers entered via a one line of standard input separated by a space, and return a list of the the duplicates only.
def non_unique_numbers(line):
for i in line:
if line.count(i) < 2:
line.remove(i)
return line
lin = input('go on then')
line = lin.split()
print(non_unique_numbers(line))
The output is inconsistent it seems to remove every other non-duplicate at times but never removes all the non-duplicates, please can you let me know where I am going wrong.

What happens when doing for i in line is that every iteration i gets the value from an iterator created on the variable line. So by changing line you are not changing the iterator.
So, when removing an element at index, say j, all items in index i > j are moved one index down. So now your next item will be again in index j, but the loop will still continue and go to index j+1.
A good way to see this is running your function on an all-non-duplicate values:
>>> l = [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
>>> print(non_unique_numbers(l))
[1, 3, 5]
You can see that only even-indexed values were removed according to the logic described above.
What you want to do is work on a new, separate list to stack your results. For that you could use simple list comrehension:
lin = input('go on then')
line = lin.split()
print([x for x in line if line.count(x) > 1])

It is not safe to modify a list while iterating through it. The actual problem, I think, is that remove() only removes the first instance of the value, which would make the < 2 check on the last element fail and not call the remove().
Better to use a hash table to find the counts and return those with < 2 then.

Related

Why does my For Loop skip over elements in my list? [duplicate]

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I'm iterating over a list of tuples in Python, and am attempting to remove them if they meet certain criteria.
for tup in somelist:
if determine(tup):
code_to_remove_tup
What should I use in place of code_to_remove_tup? I can't figure out how to remove the item in this fashion.
You can use a list comprehension to create a new list containing only the elements you don't want to remove:
somelist = [x for x in somelist if not determine(x)]
Or, by assigning to the slice somelist[:], you can mutate the existing list to contain only the items you want:
somelist[:] = [x for x in somelist if not determine(x)]
This approach could be useful if there are other references to somelist that need to reflect the changes.
Instead of a comprehension, you could also use itertools. In Python 2:
from itertools import ifilterfalse
somelist[:] = ifilterfalse(determine, somelist)
Or in Python 3:
from itertools import filterfalse
somelist[:] = filterfalse(determine, somelist)
The answers suggesting list comprehensions are almost correct—except that they build a completely new list and then give it the same name the old list as, they do not modify the old list in place. That's different from what you'd be doing by selective removal, as in Lennart's suggestion—it's faster, but if your list is accessed via multiple references the fact that you're just reseating one of the references and not altering the list object itself can lead to subtle, disastrous bugs.
Fortunately, it's extremely easy to get both the speed of list comprehensions AND the required semantics of in-place alteration—just code:
somelist[:] = [tup for tup in somelist if determine(tup)]
Note the subtle difference with other answers: this one is not assigning to a barename. It's assigning to a list slice that just happens to be the entire list, thereby replacing the list contents within the same Python list object, rather than just reseating one reference (from the previous list object to the new list object) like the other answers.
You need to take a copy of the list and iterate over it first, or the iteration will fail with what may be unexpected results.
For example (depends on what type of list):
for tup in somelist[:]:
etc....
An example:
>>> somelist = range(10)
>>> for x in somelist:
... somelist.remove(x)
>>> somelist
[1, 3, 5, 7, 9]
>>> somelist = range(10)
>>> for x in somelist[:]:
... somelist.remove(x)
>>> somelist
[]
for i in range(len(somelist) - 1, -1, -1):
if some_condition(somelist, i):
del somelist[i]
You need to go backwards otherwise it's a bit like sawing off the tree-branch that you are sitting on :-)
Python 2 users: replace range by xrange to avoid creating a hardcoded list
Overview of workarounds
Either:
use a linked list implementation/roll your own.
A linked list is the proper data structure to support efficient item removal, and does not force you to make space/time tradeoffs.
A CPython list is implemented with dynamic arrays as mentioned here, which is not a good data type to support removals.
There doesn't seem to be a linked list in the standard library however:
Is there a linked list predefined library in Python?
https://github.com/ajakubek/python-llist
start a new list() from scratch, and .append() back at the end as mentioned at: https://stackoverflow.com/a/1207460/895245
This time efficient, but less space efficient because it keeps an extra copy of the array around during iteration.
use del with an index as mentioned at: https://stackoverflow.com/a/1207485/895245
This is more space efficient since it dispenses the array copy, but it is less time efficient, because removal from dynamic arrays requires shifting all following items back by one, which is O(N).
Generally, if you are doing it quick and dirty and don't want to add a custom LinkedList class, you just want to go for the faster .append() option by default unless memory is a big concern.
Official Python 2 tutorial 4.2. "for Statements"
https://docs.python.org/2/tutorial/controlflow.html#for-statements
This part of the docs makes it clear that:
you need to make a copy of the iterated list to modify it
one way to do it is with the slice notation [:]
If you need to modify the sequence you are iterating over while inside the loop (for example to duplicate selected items), it is recommended that you first make a copy. Iterating over a sequence does not implicitly make a copy. The slice notation makes this especially convenient:
>>> words = ['cat', 'window', 'defenestrate']
>>> for w in words[:]: # Loop over a slice copy of the entire list.
... if len(w) > 6:
... words.insert(0, w)
...
>>> words
['defenestrate', 'cat', 'window', 'defenestrate']
Python 2 documentation 7.3. "The for statement"
https://docs.python.org/2/reference/compound_stmts.html#for
This part of the docs says once again that you have to make a copy, and gives an actual removal example:
Note: There is a subtlety when the sequence is being modified by the loop (this can only occur for mutable sequences, i.e. lists). An internal counter is used to keep track of which item is used next, and this is incremented on each iteration. When this counter has reached the length of the sequence the loop terminates. This means that if the suite deletes the current (or a previous) item from the sequence, the next item will be skipped (since it gets the index of the current item which has already been treated). Likewise, if the suite inserts an item in the sequence before the current item, the current item will be treated again the next time through the loop. This can lead to nasty bugs that can be avoided by making a temporary copy using a slice of the whole sequence, e.g.,
for x in a[:]:
if x < 0: a.remove(x)
However, I disagree with this implementation, since .remove() has to iterate the entire list to find the value.
Could Python do this better?
It seems like this particular Python API could be improved. Compare it, for instance, with:
Java ListIterator::remove which documents "This call can only be made once per call to next or previous"
C++ std::vector::erase which returns a valid interator to the element after the one removed
both of which make it crystal clear that you cannot modify a list being iterated except with the iterator itself, and gives you efficient ways to do so without copying the list.
Perhaps the underlying rationale is that Python lists are assumed to be dynamic array backed, and therefore any type of removal will be time inefficient anyways, while Java has a nicer interface hierarchy with both ArrayList and LinkedList implementations of ListIterator.
There doesn't seem to be an explicit linked list type in the Python stdlib either: Python Linked List
Your best approach for such an example would be a list comprehension
somelist = [tup for tup in somelist if determine(tup)]
In cases where you're doing something more complex than calling a determine function, I prefer constructing a new list and simply appending to it as I go. For example
newlist = []
for tup in somelist:
# lots of code here, possibly setting things up for calling determine
if determine(tup):
newlist.append(tup)
somelist = newlist
Copying the list using remove might make your code look a little cleaner, as described in one of the answers below. You should definitely not do this for extremely large lists, since this involves first copying the entire list, and also performing an O(n) remove operation for each element being removed, making this an O(n^2) algorithm.
for tup in somelist[:]:
# lots of code here, possibly setting things up for calling determine
if determine(tup):
newlist.append(tup)
For those who like functional programming:
somelist[:] = filter(lambda tup: not determine(tup), somelist)
or
from itertools import ifilterfalse
somelist[:] = list(ifilterfalse(determine, somelist))
I needed to do this with a huge list, and duplicating the list seemed expensive, especially since in my case the number of deletions would be few compared to the items that remain. I took this low-level approach.
array = [lots of stuff]
arraySize = len(array)
i = 0
while i < arraySize:
if someTest(array[i]):
del array[i]
arraySize -= 1
else:
i += 1
What I don't know is how efficient a couple of deletes are compared to copying a large list. Please comment if you have any insight.
Most of the answers here want you to create a copy of the list. I had a use case where the list was quite long (110K items) and it was smarter to keep reducing the list instead.
First of all you'll need to replace foreach loop with while loop,
i = 0
while i < len(somelist):
if determine(somelist[i]):
del somelist[i]
else:
i += 1
The value of i is not changed in the if block because you'll want to get value of the new item FROM THE SAME INDEX, once the old item is deleted.
It might be smart to also just create a new list if the current list item meets the desired criteria.
so:
for item in originalList:
if (item != badValue):
newList.append(item)
and to avoid having to re-code the entire project with the new lists name:
originalList[:] = newList
note, from Python documentation:
copy.copy(x)
Return a shallow copy of x.
copy.deepcopy(x)
Return a deep copy of x.
This answer was originally written in response to a question which has since been marked as duplicate:
Removing coordinates from list on python
There are two problems in your code:
1) When using remove(), you attempt to remove integers whereas you need to remove a tuple.
2) The for loop will skip items in your list.
Let's run through what happens when we execute your code:
>>> L1 = [(1,2), (5,6), (-1,-2), (1,-2)]
>>> for (a,b) in L1:
... if a < 0 or b < 0:
... L1.remove(a,b)
...
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 3, in <module>
TypeError: remove() takes exactly one argument (2 given)
The first problem is that you are passing both 'a' and 'b' to remove(), but remove() only accepts a single argument. So how can we get remove() to work properly with your list? We need to figure out what each element of your list is. In this case, each one is a tuple. To see this, let's access one element of the list (indexing starts at 0):
>>> L1[1]
(5, 6)
>>> type(L1[1])
<type 'tuple'>
Aha! Each element of L1 is actually a tuple. So that's what we need to be passing to remove(). Tuples in python are very easy, they're simply made by enclosing values in parentheses. "a, b" is not a tuple, but "(a, b)" is a tuple. So we modify your code and run it again:
# The remove line now includes an extra "()" to make a tuple out of "a,b"
L1.remove((a,b))
This code runs without any error, but let's look at the list it outputs:
L1 is now: [(1, 2), (5, 6), (1, -2)]
Why is (1,-2) still in your list? It turns out modifying the list while using a loop to iterate over it is a very bad idea without special care. The reason that (1, -2) remains in the list is that the locations of each item within the list changed between iterations of the for loop. Let's look at what happens if we feed the above code a longer list:
L1 = [(1,2),(5,6),(-1,-2),(1,-2),(3,4),(5,7),(-4,4),(2,1),(-3,-3),(5,-1),(0,6)]
### Outputs:
L1 is now: [(1, 2), (5, 6), (1, -2), (3, 4), (5, 7), (2, 1), (5, -1), (0, 6)]
As you can infer from that result, every time that the conditional statement evaluates to true and a list item is removed, the next iteration of the loop will skip evaluation of the next item in the list because its values are now located at different indices.
The most intuitive solution is to copy the list, then iterate over the original list and only modify the copy. You can try doing so like this:
L2 = L1
for (a,b) in L1:
if a < 0 or b < 0 :
L2.remove((a,b))
# Now, remove the original copy of L1 and replace with L2
print L2 is L1
del L1
L1 = L2; del L2
print ("L1 is now: ", L1)
However, the output will be identical to before:
'L1 is now: ', [(1, 2), (5, 6), (1, -2), (3, 4), (5, 7), (2, 1), (5, -1), (0, 6)]
This is because when we created L2, python did not actually create a new object. Instead, it merely referenced L2 to the same object as L1. We can verify this with 'is' which is different from merely "equals" (==).
>>> L2=L1
>>> L1 is L2
True
We can make a true copy using copy.copy(). Then everything works as expected:
import copy
L1 = [(1,2), (5,6),(-1,-2), (1,-2),(3,4),(5,7),(-4,4),(2,1),(-3,-3),(5,-1),(0,6)]
L2 = copy.copy(L1)
for (a,b) in L1:
if a < 0 or b < 0 :
L2.remove((a,b))
# Now, remove the original copy of L1 and replace with L2
del L1
L1 = L2; del L2
>>> L1 is now: [(1, 2), (5, 6), (3, 4), (5, 7), (2, 1), (0, 6)]
Finally, there is one cleaner solution than having to make an entirely new copy of L1. The reversed() function:
L1 = [(1,2), (5,6),(-1,-2), (1,-2),(3,4),(5,7),(-4,4),(2,1),(-3,-3),(5,-1),(0,6)]
for (a,b) in reversed(L1):
if a < 0 or b < 0 :
L1.remove((a,b))
print ("L1 is now: ", L1)
>>> L1 is now: [(1, 2), (5, 6), (3, 4), (5, 7), (2, 1), (0, 6)]
Unfortunately, I cannot adequately describe how reversed() works. It returns a 'listreverseiterator' object when a list is passed to it. For practical purposes, you can think of it as creating a reversed copy of its argument. This is the solution I recommend.
If you want to delete elements from a list while iterating, use a while-loop so you can alter the current index and end index after each deletion.
Example:
i = 0
length = len(list1)
while i < length:
if condition:
list1.remove(list1[i])
i -= 1
length -= 1
i += 1
The other answers are correct that it is usually a bad idea to delete from a list that you're iterating. Reverse iterating avoids some of the pitfalls, but it is much more difficult to follow code that does that, so usually you're better off using a list comprehension or filter.
There is, however, one case where it is safe to remove elements from a sequence that you are iterating: if you're only removing one item while you're iterating. This can be ensured using a return or a break. For example:
for i, item in enumerate(lst):
if item % 4 == 0:
foo(item)
del lst[i]
break
This is often easier to understand than a list comprehension when you're doing some operations with side effects on the first item in a list that meets some condition and then removing that item from the list immediately after.
If you want to do anything else during the iteration, it may be nice to get both the index (which guarantees you being able to reference it, for example if you have a list of dicts) and the actual list item contents.
inlist = [{'field1':10, 'field2':20}, {'field1':30, 'field2':15}]
for idx, i in enumerate(inlist):
do some stuff with i['field1']
if somecondition:
xlist.append(idx)
for i in reversed(xlist): del inlist[i]
enumerate gives you access to the item and the index at once. reversed is so that the indices that you're going to later delete don't change on you.
One possible solution, useful if you want not only remove some things, but also do something with all elements in a single loop:
alist = ['good', 'bad', 'good', 'bad', 'good']
i = 0
for x in alist[:]:
if x == 'bad':
alist.pop(i)
i -= 1
# do something cool with x or just print x
print(x)
i += 1
A for loop will be iterate through an index...
Consider you have a list,
[5, 7, 13, 29, 65, 91]
You have used a list variable called lis. And you use the same to remove...
Your variable
lis = [5, 7, 13, 29, 35, 65, 91]
0 1 2 3 4 5 6
during the 5th iteration,
Your number 35 was not a prime, so you removed it from a list.
lis.remove(y)
And then the next value (65) move on to the previous index.
lis = [5, 7, 13, 29, 65, 91]
0 1 2 3 4 5
so the 4th iteration done pointer moved onto the 5th...
That’s why your loop doesn’t cover 65 since it’s moved into the previous index.
So you shouldn't reference a list into another variable which still references the original instead of a copy.
ite = lis # Don’t do it will reference instead copy
So do a copy of the list using list[::].
Now you will give,
[5, 7, 13, 29]
The problem is you removed a value from a list during iteration and then your list index will collapse.
So you can try list comprehension instead.
Which supports all the iterable like, list, tuple, dict, string, etc.
You might want to use filter() available as the built-in.
For more details check here
You can try for-looping in reverse so for some_list you'll do something like:
list_len = len(some_list)
for i in range(list_len):
reverse_i = list_len - 1 - i
cur = some_list[reverse_i]
# some logic with cur element
if some_condition:
some_list.pop(reverse_i)
This way the index is aligned and doesn't suffer from the list updates (regardless whether you pop cur element or not).
I needed to do something similar and in my case the problem was memory - I needed to merge multiple dataset objects within a list, after doing some stuff with them, as a new object, and needed to get rid of each entry I was merging to avoid duplicating all of them and blowing up memory. In my case having the objects in a dictionary instead of a list worked fine:
```
k = range(5)
v = ['a','b','c','d','e']
d = {key:val for key,val in zip(k, v)}
print d
for i in range(5):
print d[i]
d.pop(i)
print d
```
The most effective method is list comprehension, many people show their case, of course, it is also a good way to get an iterator through filter.
Filter receives a function and a sequence. Filter applies the passed function to each element in turn, and then decides whether to retain or discard the element depending on whether the function return value is True or False.
There is an example (get the odds in the tuple):
list(filter(lambda x:x%2==1, (1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 9, 10, 15)))
# result: [1, 5, 9, 15]
Caution: You can also not handle iterators. Iterators are sometimes better than sequences.
TLDR:
I wrote a library that allows you to do this:
from fluidIter import FluidIterable
fSomeList = FluidIterable(someList)
for tup in fSomeList:
if determine(tup):
# remove 'tup' without "breaking" the iteration
fSomeList.remove(tup)
# tup has also been removed from 'someList'
# as well as 'fSomeList'
It's best to use another method if possible that doesn't require modifying your iterable while iterating over it, but for some algorithms it might not be that straight forward. And so if you are sure that you really do want the code pattern described in the original question, it is possible.
Should work on all mutable sequences not just lists.
Full answer:
Edit: The last code example in this answer gives a use case for why you might sometimes want to modify a list in place rather than use a list comprehension. The first part of the answers serves as tutorial of how an array can be modified in place.
The solution follows on from this answer (for a related question) from senderle. Which explains how the the array index is updated while iterating through a list that has been modified. The solution below is designed to correctly track the array index even if the list is modified.
Download fluidIter.py from here https://github.com/alanbacon/FluidIterator, it is just a single file so no need to install git. There is no installer so you will need to make sure that the file is in the python path your self. The code has been written for python 3 and is untested on python 2.
from fluidIter import FluidIterable
l = [0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8]
fluidL = FluidIterable(l)
for i in fluidL:
print('initial state of list on this iteration: ' + str(fluidL))
print('current iteration value: ' + str(i))
print('popped value: ' + str(fluidL.pop(2)))
print(' ')
print('Final List Value: ' + str(l))
This will produce the following output:
initial state of list on this iteration: [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8]
current iteration value: 0
popped value: 2
initial state of list on this iteration: [0, 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8]
current iteration value: 1
popped value: 3
initial state of list on this iteration: [0, 1, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8]
current iteration value: 4
popped value: 4
initial state of list on this iteration: [0, 1, 5, 6, 7, 8]
current iteration value: 5
popped value: 5
initial state of list on this iteration: [0, 1, 6, 7, 8]
current iteration value: 6
popped value: 6
initial state of list on this iteration: [0, 1, 7, 8]
current iteration value: 7
popped value: 7
initial state of list on this iteration: [0, 1, 8]
current iteration value: 8
popped value: 8
Final List Value: [0, 1]
Above we have used the pop method on the fluid list object. Other common iterable methods are also implemented such as del fluidL[i], .remove, .insert, .append, .extend. The list can also be modified using slices (sort and reverse methods are not implemented).
The only condition is that you must only modify the list in place, if at any point fluidL or l were reassigned to a different list object the code would not work. The original fluidL object would still be used by the for loop but would become out of scope for us to modify.
i.e.
fluidL[2] = 'a' # is OK
fluidL = [0, 1, 'a', 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8] # is not OK
If we want to access the current index value of the list we cannot use enumerate, as this only counts how many times the for loop has run. Instead we will use the iterator object directly.
fluidArr = FluidIterable([0,1,2,3])
# get iterator first so can query the current index
fluidArrIter = fluidArr.__iter__()
for i, v in enumerate(fluidArrIter):
print('enum: ', i)
print('current val: ', v)
print('current ind: ', fluidArrIter.currentIndex)
print(fluidArr)
fluidArr.insert(0,'a')
print(' ')
print('Final List Value: ' + str(fluidArr))
This will output the following:
enum: 0
current val: 0
current ind: 0
[0, 1, 2, 3]
enum: 1
current val: 1
current ind: 2
['a', 0, 1, 2, 3]
enum: 2
current val: 2
current ind: 4
['a', 'a', 0, 1, 2, 3]
enum: 3
current val: 3
current ind: 6
['a', 'a', 'a', 0, 1, 2, 3]
Final List Value: ['a', 'a', 'a', 'a', 0, 1, 2, 3]
The FluidIterable class just provides a wrapper for the original list object. The original object can be accessed as a property of the fluid object like so:
originalList = fluidArr.fixedIterable
More examples / tests can be found in the if __name__ is "__main__": section at the bottom of fluidIter.py. These are worth looking at because they explain what happens in various situations. Such as: Replacing a large sections of the list using a slice. Or using (and modifying) the same iterable in nested for loops.
As I stated to start with: this is a complicated solution that will hurt the readability of your code and make it more difficult to debug. Therefore other solutions such as the list comprehensions mentioned in David Raznick's answer should be considered first. That being said, I have found times where this class has been useful to me and has been easier to use than keeping track of the indices of elements that need deleting.
Edit: As mentioned in the comments, this answer does not really present a problem for which this approach provides a solution. I will try to address that here:
List comprehensions provide a way to generate a new list but these approaches tend to look at each element in isolation rather than the current state of the list as a whole.
i.e.
newList = [i for i in oldList if testFunc(i)]
But what if the result of the testFunc depends on the elements that have been added to newList already? Or the elements still in oldList that might be added next? There might still be a way to use a list comprehension but it will begin to lose it's elegance, and for me it feels easier to modify a list in place.
The code below is one example of an algorithm that suffers from the above problem. The algorithm will reduce a list so that no element is a multiple of any other element.
randInts = [70, 20, 61, 80, 54, 18, 7, 18, 55, 9]
fRandInts = FluidIterable(randInts)
fRandIntsIter = fRandInts.__iter__()
# for each value in the list (outer loop)
# test against every other value in the list (inner loop)
for i in fRandIntsIter:
print(' ')
print('outer val: ', i)
innerIntsIter = fRandInts.__iter__()
for j in innerIntsIter:
innerIndex = innerIntsIter.currentIndex
# skip the element that the outloop is currently on
# because we don't want to test a value against itself
if not innerIndex == fRandIntsIter.currentIndex:
# if the test element, j, is a multiple
# of the reference element, i, then remove 'j'
if j%i == 0:
print('remove val: ', j)
# remove element in place, without breaking the
# iteration of either loop
del fRandInts[innerIndex]
# end if multiple, then remove
# end if not the same value as outer loop
# end inner loop
# end outerloop
print('')
print('final list: ', randInts)
The output and the final reduced list are shown below
outer val: 70
outer val: 20
remove val: 80
outer val: 61
outer val: 54
outer val: 18
remove val: 54
remove val: 18
outer val: 7
remove val: 70
outer val: 55
outer val: 9
remove val: 18
final list: [20, 61, 7, 55, 9]
For anything that has the potential to be really big, I use the following.
import numpy as np
orig_list = np.array([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 100, 8, 13])
remove_me = [100, 1]
cleaned = np.delete(orig_list, remove_me)
print(cleaned)
That should be significantly faster than anything else.
In some situations, where you're doing more than simply filtering a list one item at time, you want your iteration to change while iterating.
Here is an example where copying the list beforehand is incorrect, reverse iteration is impossible and a list comprehension is also not an option.
""" Sieve of Eratosthenes """
def generate_primes(n):
""" Generates all primes less than n. """
primes = list(range(2,n))
idx = 0
while idx < len(primes):
p = primes[idx]
for multiple in range(p+p, n, p):
try:
primes.remove(multiple)
except ValueError:
pass #EAFP
idx += 1
yield p
I can think of three approaches to solve your problem. As an example, I will create a random list of tuples somelist = [(1,2,3), (4,5,6), (3,6,6), (7,8,9), (15,0,0), (10,11,12)]. The condition that I choose is sum of elements of a tuple = 15. In the final list we will only have those tuples whose sum is not equal to 15.
What I have chosen is a randomly chosen example. Feel free to change the list of tuples and the condition that I have chosen.
Method 1.> Use the framework that you had suggested (where one fills in a code inside a for loop). I use a small code with del to delete a tuple that meets the said condition. However, this method will miss a tuple (which satisfies the said condition) if two consecutively placed tuples meet the given condition.
for tup in somelist:
if ( sum(tup)==15 ):
del somelist[somelist.index(tup)]
print somelist
>>> [(1, 2, 3), (3, 6, 6), (7, 8, 9), (10, 11, 12)]
Method 2.> Construct a new list which contains elements (tuples) where the given condition is not met (this is the same thing as removing elements of list where the given condition is met). Following is the code for that:
newlist1 = [somelist[tup] for tup in range(len(somelist)) if(sum(somelist[tup])!=15)]
print newlist1
>>>[(1, 2, 3), (7, 8, 9), (10, 11, 12)]
Method 3.> Find indices where the given condition is met, and then use remove elements (tuples) corresponding to those indices. Following is the code for that.
indices = [i for i in range(len(somelist)) if(sum(somelist[i])==15)]
newlist2 = [tup for j, tup in enumerate(somelist) if j not in indices]
print newlist2
>>>[(1, 2, 3), (7, 8, 9), (10, 11, 12)]
Method 1 and method 2 are faster than method 3. Method2 and method3 are more efficient than method1. I prefer method2. For the aforementioned example, time(method1) : time(method2) : time(method3) = 1 : 1 : 1.7
If you will use the new list later, you can simply set the elem to None, and then judge it in the later loop, like this
for i in li:
i = None
for elem in li:
if elem is None:
continue
In this way, you dont't need copy the list and it's easier to understand.

If condition working differently for same value in python

I am trying to write a function which will return True or False if the given number is not greater than 2.
So simple, but the if condition is returning different outputs for same value '2'. The code I used is:
The code I used is:
ele_list = [1,2,3,2]
for i in ele_list:
if not i>2:
print(i,False)
ele_list.remove(i)
print(ele_list)
The ouput I am receiving is:
1 False
[2, 3, 2]
2 False
[3, 2]
I am confused to see that the first 2 in the list is passing through the if condition but the second 2 in the list is not passing through the condition. Please help me figure out this..
Removing elements from the list you're looping over is generally a bad idea.
What's happening here is that when you're removing an element, you're changing the length of the array, and therefor changing what elements are located at what indexes as well as changing the "goal" of the forloop.
Lets have a look at the following example:
ele_list = [4,3,2,1]
for elem in ele_list:
print(elem)
ele_list.remove(elem)
In the first iteration of the loop elem is the value 4 which is located at index 0. Then you're removing from the array the first value equal to elem. In other words the value 4 at index 0 is now removed. This shifts which element is stored at what index. Before the removal ele_list[0] would be equal to 4, however after the removal ele_list[0] will equal 3, since 3 is the value that prior to the removal was stored at index 1.
Now when the loop continues to the second iteration the index that the loop "looks at" is incremented by 1. So the variable elem will now be the value of ele_list[1] which in the updated list (after the removal of the value 4 in the previous iteration) is equal to 2. Then you're (same as before) removing the value at index 1 from the list, so now the length of the list just 2 elements.
When the loops is about to start the third iteration it checks to see if the new index (in this case 2) is smaller than the length of the list. Which its not, since 2 is not smaller than 2. So the loop ends.
The simplest solutions is to create a new copy of the array and loop over the copy instead. This can easily be done using the slice syntax: ele_list[:]
ele_list = [1,2,3,2]
for elem in ele_list[:]:
if not elem > 2:
print(elem, False)
ele_list.remove(elem)
print(ele_list)
the problem is that you're modifying your list as you're iterating over it, as mentioned in #Olian04's answer.
it sounds like what you really want to do, however, is only keep values that are > 2. this is really easy using a list comprehension:
filtereds_vals = [v for v in ele_list if v > 2]
if you merely want a function that gives you True for numbers greater than 2 and False for others, you can do something like this:
def gt_2(lst):
return [v > 2 for v in lst]
or, finally, if you want to find out if any of the values is > 2 just do:
def any_gt_2(lst):
return any(v > 2 for v in lst)
I think the problem here is how the remove function interacts with the for function.
See the documentation, read the "note" part:
https://docs.python.org/3.7/reference/compound_stmts.html?highlight=while#grammar-token-for-stmt
This can lead to nasty bugs that can be avoided by making a temporary copy using a slice of the whole sequence
A possible solution, as suggested into the documentation:
ele_list = [1,2,3,2]
for i in ele_list[:]:
if not i>2:
print(i,False)
ele_list.remove(i)
print(ele_list)
"""
1 False
[2, 3, 2]
2 False
[3, 2]
2 False
[3]
"""

List index out of range with one some data sets?

I am trying to code up a numerical clustering tool. Basically, I have a list (here called 'product') that should be transformed from an ascending list to a list that indicates linkage between numbers in the data set. Reading in the data set, removing carriage returns and hyphens works okay, but manipulating the list based on the data set is giving me a problem.
# opening file and returning raw data
file = input('Data file: ')
with open(file) as t:
nums = t.readlines()
t.close()
print(f'Raw data: {nums}')
# counting pairs in raw data
count = 0
for i in nums:
count += 1
print(f'Count of number pairs: {count}')
# removing carriage returns and hyphens
one = []
for i in nums:
one.append(i.rsplit())
new = []
for i in one:
for a in i:
new.append(a.split('-'))
print(f'Data sets: {new}')
# finding the range of the final list
my_list = []
for i in new:
for e in i:
my_list.append(int(e))
ran = max(my_list) + 1
print(f'Range of final list: {ran}')
# setting up the product list
rcount = count-1
product = list(range(ran))
print(f'Unchanged product: {product}')
for i in product:
for e in range(rcount):
if product[int(new[e][0])] < product[int(new[e][1])]:
product[int(new[e][1])] = product[int(new[e][0])]
else:
product[int(new[e][0])] = product[int(new[e][1])]
print(f'Resulting product: {product}')
I expect the result to be [0, 1, 1, 1, 1, 5, 5, 7, 7, 9, 1, 5, 5], but am met with a 'list index out of range' when using a different data set.
the data set used to give the above desired product is as follows: '1-2\n', '2-3\n', '3-4\n', '5-6\n', '7-8\n', '2-10\n', '11-12\n', '5-12\n', '\n'
However, the biggest issue I am facing is using other data sets. If there is not an additional carriage return, as it turns out, I will have the list index out of range error.
I can't quite figure out what you're actually trying to do here. What does "indicates linkages" mean, and how does the final output do so? Also, can you show an example of a dataset where it actually fails? And provide the actual exception that you get?
Regardless, your code is massively over-complicated, and cleaning it up a little may also fix your index issue. Using nums as from your sample above:
# Drop empty elements, split on hyphen, and convert to integers
pairs = [list(map(int, item.split('-'))) for item in nums if item.strip()]
# You don't need a for loop to count a list
count = len(pairs)
# You can get the maximum element with a nested generator expression
largest = max(item for p in pairs for item in p)
Also, in your final loop you're iterating over product while also modifying it in-place, which tends to not be a good idea. If I had more understanding of what you're trying to achieve I might be able to suggest a better approach.

python3 functional programming: Accumulating items from a different list into an initial value

I have some code that performs the following operation, however I was wondering if there was a more efficient and understandable way to do this. I am thinking that there might be something in itertools or such that might be designed to perform this type of operation.
So I have a list of integers the represents changes in the number of items from one period to the next.
x = [0, 1, 2, 1, 3, 1, 1]
Then I need a function to create a second list that accumulates the total number of items from one period to the next. This is like an accumulate function, but with elements from another list instead of from the same list.
So I can start off with an initial value y = 3.
The first value in the list y = [3]. The I would take the second
element in x and add it to the list, so that means 3+1 = 4. Note that I take the second element because we already know the first element of y. So the updated value of y is [3, 4]. Then the next iteration is 4+2 = 6. And so forth.
The code that I have looks like this:
def func():
x = [0, 1, 2, 1, 3, 1, 1]
y = [3]
for k,v in enumerate(x):
y.append(y[i] + x[i])
return y
Any ideas?
If I understand you correctly, you do what what itertools.accumulate does, but you want to add an initial value too. You can do that pretty easily in a couple ways.
The easiest might be to simply write a list comprehension around the accumulate call, adding the initial value to each output item:
y = [3 + val for val in itertools.accumulate(x)]
Another option would be to prefix the x list with the initial value, then skip it when accumulate includes it as the first value in the output:
acc = itertools.accumulate([3] + x)
next(acc) # discard the extra 3 at the start of the output.
y = list(acc)
Two things I think that need to be fixed:
1st the condition for the for loop. I'm not sure where you are getting the k,v from, maybe you got an example using zip (which allows you to iterate through 2 lists at once), but in any case, you want to iterate through lists x and y using their index, one approach is:
for i in range(len(x)):
2nd, using the first append as an example, since you are adding the 2nd element (index 1) of x to the 1st element (index 0) of y, you want to use a staggered approach with your indices. This will also lead to revising the for loop condition above (I'm trying to go through this step by step) since the first element of x (0) will not be getting used:
for i in range(1, len(x)):
That change will keep you from getting an index out of range error. Next for the staggered add:
for i in range(1, len(x)):
y.append(y[i-1] + x[i])
return y
So going back to the first append example. The for loop starts at index 1 where x = 1, and y has no value. To create a value for y[1] you append the sum of y at index 0 to x at index 1 giving you 4. The loop continues until you've exhausted the values in x, returning accumulated values in list y.

unable to delete all element satisfying condition in a python list using enumerate

i am trying to delete zero values from the list using the below code
for id,row in enumerate(list):
if row[0]=="0":
del list(id)
this works fine for input like
[0,1,3,0,9,10,0,3,0,6]
but doesn't work as expected for inputs like
[0,0,1,3,4,0,0,4,5,6,0,0].
output: [0,1,3,4,0,4,5,6,0]
I guess its because the element right after the deleted one gets the id of the deleted element and enumerate increments the id which leaves the element after the one which is deleted unchecked.
so what can be done to check all the elements ? is there a better way ?
I made a little change to your code:
mylist = [0,0,1,3,4,0,0,4,5,6,0,0]
for id,row in reversed(list(enumerate(mylist))):
if(row==0):
del mylist[id]
If you loop your list in the way you did (from start to end) and delete an element while doing it, you'll end up jumping indexes because python does not recognize that an element has been deleted from the list.
If you have an array with 10 elements inside and you delete the first (idx 0), in the next iteration you will be at index 1, but the array has been modified, so your idx 1 is the idx 2 of your array before the deletion, and the real idx 1 will be skipped.
So you just need to loop your array in reverse mode, and you won't miss indexes.
If you print the value of mylist, you'll get [1, 3, 4, 4, 5, 6].
This problem is documented on this python page under 8.3:
https://docs.python.org/3/reference/compound_stmts.html
They suggest doing it this way by using a slice. It works for me:
a = [-2,-4,3,4]
for x in a[:]:
if x < 0: a.remove(x)
print ('contents of a now: ')
print(*a)
enumerate returns an object called enumerate object and it is iterable not actually a list. second thing row is not a list it is not subscriptable.
for i,row in enumerate(l):
if row==0:
del(l[i])
you will not get result you want this way.
try this:
t=[] #a temporary list
for i in l:
if i!=0:
t.append(i)
t will contain sublist of l with non zero elements.
put the above inside a function and return the list t .

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