how to separate a list into two lists?
Steven D'Aprano
steve+comp.lang.python at pearwood.info
Sat Aug 6 21:35:23 EDT 2011
Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Sun, Aug 7, 2011 at 1:58 AM, Tim Roberts <timr at probo.com> wrote:
>> I did momentarily consider the following slimy solution:
>> L1 = dict(L).keys()
>> L2 = dict(L).values()
>> but that reorders the tuples. They still correspond, but in a different
>> order.
>>
>
> Which can be overcome with collections.OrderedDict. But what's dict(L)
> going to do? It's going to loop over L, more than once in fact.
>
> I guess the real question is: Why do you wish to avoid a loop?
I think what the Original Poster actually meant was he wanted to avoid
*writing out an explicit loop*. That is, he wants a one-liner, so he
doesn't have to think about the details of iterating over the list.
When we write:
a = sum(a_sequence)
aren't we doing the same thing really?
--
Steven
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