You can loop through the list items by using a while loop. Use the len() function to determine the length of the list, then start at 0 and loop your way through the list items by referring to their indexes. Remember to increase the index by 1 after each iteration.
Using Python for loop to iterate over a list. In this syntax, the for loop statement assigns an individual element of the list to the item variable in each iteration. Inside the body of the loop, you can manipulate each list element individually.
x in mylist
is better and more readable than x in mylist[:]
and your len(x)
should be equal to 3
.
>>> mylist = [[1,2,3],[4,5,6,7],[8,9,10]]
>>> for x in mylist:
... if len(x)==3:
... print x
...
[1, 2, 3]
[8, 9, 10]
or if you need more pythonic use list-comprehensions
>>> [x for x in mylist if len(x)==3]
[[1, 2, 3], [8, 9, 10]]
>>>
You may as well use for x in values
rather than for x in values[:]
; the latter makes an unnecessary copy. Also, of course that code checks for a length of 2 rather than of 3...
The code only prints one item per value of x
- and x
is iterating over the elements of values
, which are the sublists. So it will only print each sublist once.
Here is the solution I was looking for. If you would like to create List2 that contains the difference of the number elements in List1.
list1 = [12, 15, 22, 54, 21, 68, 9, 73, 81, 34, 45]
list2 = []
for i in range(1, len(list1)):
change = list1[i] - list1[i-1]
list2.append(change)
Note that while len(list1)
is 11 (elements), len(list2)
will only be 10 elements because we are starting our for loop from element with index 1 in list1 not from element with index 0 in list1
Do this instead:
values = [[1,2,3],[4,5]]
for x in values:
if len(x) == 3:
print(x)
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With