retrieve item from nested list given index tuple
Colin J. Williams
cjw at ncf.ca
Fri Aug 14 13:57:18 EDT 2009
Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> On Fri, 14 Aug 2009 15:54:54 +0000, Alan G Isaac wrote:
>
>> `lst` is a nested list
>>
>> `tpl` is the indexes for an item in the list
>
>> What is the nice way to retrieve the item? (Speedy access is nice.)
>
> Assuming you want to do this frequently, write a helper function, then
> use it:
>
> # Untested
> def extract(nested, indexes):
> for index in indexes:
> nested = nested[index]
> return nested
This looks OK for the first level of nesting. We are not told much about tpl
but suppose that:
lst= [a, [b, [c, d]], [e, f]] and that we wish to retrieve d and f from lst.
tpl would need to be something like [[1, 1, 1], [2, 1]].
If that is the requirement, then Untested is only a step along the road,
extract could be made recursive.
Colin W.
>
>
>> I don't want to use NumPy, but I'd like somehow to avoid an explicit
>> loop. I did consider using eval. E.g., eval('lst' +
>> '[%d]'*len(tpl)%tpl). It works but seems rather ugly.
>
> And slow.
>
>
>> I kind of like
>> reduce(list.__getitem__, tpl, lst) but the reliance on reduce remains
>> controversial enough to see i removed from the Python 3 built-ins ...
>
> It's just moved into functools.
>
>
>>>> lst = ['a', 'b', ['aa', ['aaa', 'bbb', 'ccc'], 'cc']]
>>>> from functools import reduce
>>>> lst = ['a', 'b', ['aa', ['aaa', 'bbb', 'ccc'], 'cc']]
>>>> reduce(list.__getitem__, (2, 1, 0), lst)
> 'aaa'
>
>
> However, it doesn't work too well as soon as you mix sequence types:
>
>>>> reduce(list.__getitem__, (2, 1, 0, 0), lst)
> Traceback (most recent call last):
> File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
> TypeError: descriptor '__getitem__' requires a 'list' object but received
> a 'str'
>
> Try this instead:
>
>>>> from operator import getitem
>>>> reduce(getitem, (2, 1, 0), lst)
> 'aaa'
>>>> reduce(getitem, (2, 1, 0, 0), lst)
> 'a'
>
> operator.getitem is less ugly too.
>
>
Colin W.
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