Use indexing to get the first element of each tuple Use a for-loop to iterate through a list of tuples. Within the for-loop, use the indexing tuple[0] to access the first element of each tuple, and append it.
To create a tuple with only one item, you have add a comma after the item, unless Python will not recognize the variable as a tuple.
You can write
i = 5 + tup()[0]
Tuples can be indexed just like lists.
The main difference between tuples and lists is that tuples are immutable - you can't set the elements of a tuple to different values, or add or remove elements like you can from a list. But other than that, in most situations, they work pretty much the same.
For anyone in the future looking for an answer, I would like to give a much clearer answer to the question.
# for making a tuple
my_tuple = (89, 32)
my_tuple_with_more_values = (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6)
# to concatenate tuples
another_tuple = my_tuple + my_tuple_with_more_values
print(another_tuple)
# (89, 32, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6)
# getting a value from a tuple is similar to a list
first_val = my_tuple[0]
second_val = my_tuple[1]
# if you have a function called my_tuple_fun that returns a tuple,
# you might want to do this
my_tuple_fun()[0]
my_tuple_fun()[1]
# or this
v1, v2 = my_tuple_fun()
Hope this clears things up further for those that need it.
Single elements of a tuple a
can be accessed -in an indexed array-like fashion-
via a[0]
, a[1]
, ... depending on the number of elements in the tuple.
If your tuple is a=(3,"a")
a[0]
yields 3
,a[1]
yields "a"
def tup():
return (3, "hello")
tup()
returns a 2-tuple.
In order to "solve"
i = 5 + tup() # I want to add just the three
you select the 3 by
tup()[0| #first element
so in total
i = 5 + tup()[0]
Go with namedtuple that allows you to access tuple elements by name (and by index). Details at https://docs.python.org/3/library/collections.html#collections.namedtuple
>>> import collections
>>> MyTuple=collections.namedtuple("MyTuple", "mynumber, mystring")
>>> m = MyTuple(3, "hello")
>>> m[0]
3
>>> m.mynumber
3
>>> m[1]
'hello'
>>> m.mystring
'hello'
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