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I have some Python code like this:

print seq(y), '\t', ', '.join(['%s-%s'%i for i in holetbl[y]])

But I would like to make the inner string generation conditional. The i in the loop is a tuple of two values which get put into the two %s values in the string. In the case that the tuple values are the same, I would instead only like one value as in:

print seq(y), '\t', ', '.join(['%s'%i for i, j in holetbl[y]])

How can I make a condition to test if i == j and if so to only print the i value, otherwise, both the i and j values as in the original above?

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  • Do you control the creation of the holetbl tuples? If so, you may have options to clean the data more easily or efficiently during generation than doing it after the fact at output.
    – Silas Ray
    Feb 26, 2013 at 16:12

2 Answers 2

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You can use the conditional expression

print seq(y), '\t', ', '.join('%s' % i if i == j else '%s-%s' % (i, j)
                              for i in holetbl[y])

Note

You don't need to formulate a list to pass to str.join. A simple generator expression would work. This will be more memory friendly and comparably faster

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  • Can you please elaborate on the 'simple generator expression' with an example?
    – WilliamKF
    Feb 26, 2013 at 16:11
  • @WilliamKF: The posted example uses generator rather than LC.
    – Abhijit
    Feb 26, 2013 at 16:12
  • I'm missing how what you posted is different (other than the addition of the conditional expression) than what I originally had so as to make it more efficient by using a simple generator expression.
    – WilliamKF
    Feb 26, 2013 at 16:14
  • @WilliamKF: Adding Brackets [] around the expression makes it a List Comprehension, ex ['%s' % i if i == j else '%s-%s' % (i, j) for i in holetbl[y]], this will force Python to generate the List before feeding to str.join.
    – Abhijit
    Feb 26, 2013 at 16:16
  • That is pretty subtle, I missed that difference in comparing the two!
    – WilliamKF
    Feb 26, 2013 at 16:17
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What about

'%s-%s'%(i,j) if i != j else '%s'%i

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