Identifying the start of good data in a list
Scott David Daniels
Scott.Daniels at Acm.Org
Wed Aug 27 00:56:13 EDT 2008
tkpmep at hotmail.com wrote:
> I have a list that starts with zeros, has sporadic data, and then has
> good data. I define the point at which the data turns good to be the
> first index with a non-zero entry that is followed by at least 4
> consecutive non-zero data items (i.e. a week's worth of non-zero
> data). For example, if my list is [0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8,
> 9], I would define the point at which data turns good to be 4 (1
> followed by 2, 3, 4, 5).
>
> I have a simple algorithm to identify this changepoint, but it looks
> crude: is there a cleaner, more elegant way to do this?
>
> flag = True
> i=-1
> j=0
> while flag and i < len(retHist)-1:
> i += 1
> if retHist[i] == 0:
> j = 0
> else:
> j += 1
> if j == 5:
> flag = False
>
> del retHist[:i-4]
>
> Thanks in advance for your help
>
> Thomas Philips
Here is one that can go iterator-to-iterator:
def started(source):
src = iter(source)
lead = []
for x in src:
if x:
lead.append(x)
if len(lead) == 5:
return itertools.chain(lead, src)
else:
lead = []
print list(started([0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]))
--Scott David Daniels
Scott.Daniels at Acm.Org
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