59

I've got some code like this:

letters = [('a', 'A'), ('b', 'B')]
i = 0
for (lowercase, uppercase) in letters:
    print "Letter #%d is %s/%s" % (i, lowercase, uppercase)
    i += 1

I've been told that there's an enumerate() function that can take care of the "i" variable for me:

for i, l in enumerate(['a', 'b', 'c']):
    print "%d: %s" % (i, l)

However, I can't figure out how to combine the two: How do I use enumerate when the list in question is made of tuples? Do i have to do this?

letters = [('a', 'A'), ('b', 'B')]
for i, tuple in enumerate(letters):
    (lowercase, uppercase) = tuple
    print "Letter #%d is %s/%s" % (i, lowercase, uppercase)

Or is there a more elegant way?

1
  • enumerate vs itertools: what should we take into account when choosing between them?
    – spazm
    Mar 20, 2013 at 19:20

4 Answers 4

142

This is a neat way to do it:

letters = [('a', 'A'), ('b', 'B')]
for i, (lowercase, uppercase) in enumerate(letters):
    print "Letter #%d is %s/%s" % (i, lowercase, uppercase)
4
  • 2
    What is this called? I want to look up more about this syntax.
    – Zak
    Jan 6, 2017 at 21:40
  • 7
    @Zak: If you mean assigning to (lowercase, uppercase), it's called "unpacking". Jan 7, 2017 at 20:01
  • 1
    Neat. I didn't know that the unpacking syntax can be nested. May 6, 2021 at 9:56
  • Awesome! I always wrote a helper generator to achieve this. I didn't know that nesting is possible. Came across this question by lucky accident. Thanks!
    – Thomas
    Sep 29, 2022 at 17:55
4

This is how I'd do it:

import itertools

letters = [('a', 'A'), ('b', 'B')]
for i, lower, upper in zip(itertools.count(),*zip(*letters)):
    print "Letter #%d is %s/%s" % (i, lower, upper)

EDIT: unpacking becomes redundant. This is a more compact way, which might work or not depending on your use case:

import itertools

letters = [('a', 'A'), ('b', 'B')]
for i in zip(itertools.count(),*zip(*letters)):
    print "Letter #%d is %s/%s" % i
1

You can do this way too:

letters = [('a', 'A'), ('b', 'B')]
for i, letter in enumerate(letters):
    print "Letter #%d is %s/%s" % (i, letter[0], letter[1])
1

You could also write a generator:

def enumerate_nested(nested_collection, start=0):

    for index, row in enumerate(nested_collection, start):
        yield index, *row

Which then allows you to iterate over the collection of tuple (or list) and to unpack the values:

names = [["Heinz", "Steiner"], ["Fred", "Glauser"], ["Nicole", "Hauser"]]

for index, first_name, last_name in enumerate_nested(names, 1):
    print(index, first_name, last_name)

However, there is a simpler built-in solution to achieve this. Have a look at Richie Hindle's answer:

names = [["Heinz", "Steiner"], ["Fred", "Glauser"], ["Nicole", "Hauser"]]

for index, (first_name, last_name) in enumerate(names, 1):
    print(index, first_name, last_name)

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.