First and foremost: Python for
loops are not really the same thing as a C for
loop. They are For Each loops instead. You iterate over the elements of an iterable. range()
generates an iterable sequence of integers, letting you emulate the most common C for
loop use case.
However, most of the time you do not want to use range()
. You would loop over the list itself:
for elem in reversed(some_list):
# elem is a list value
If you have to have a index, you usually use enumerate()
to add it to the loop:
for i, elem in reversed(enumerate(some_list)):
# elem is a list value, i is it's index in the list
For really 'funky' loops, use while
or create your own generator function:
def halved_loop(n):
while n > 1:
yield n
n //= 2
for i in halved_loop(10):
print i
to print 10
, 5
, 2
. You can extend that to sequences too:
def halved_loop(sequence):
n = -1
while True:
try:
yield sequence[n]
except IndexError:
return
n *= 2
for elem in halved_loop(['foo', 'bar', 'baz', 'quu', 'spam', 'ham', 'monty', 'python']):
print elem
which prints:
python
monty
spam
foo