15

I have a list in python

x = ['a','b','c']

with 3 elements. I want to check if a 4th element exists without receiving an error message.

How would I do that?

2 Answers 2

29

You check for the length:

len(x) >= 4

or you catch the IndexError exception:

try:
    value = x[3]
except IndexError:
    value = None  # no 4th index

What you use depends on how often you can expect there to be a 4th value. If it is usually there, use the exception handler (better to ask forgiveness); if you mostly do not have a 4th value, test for the length (look before you leap).

3
  • 4
    Nice, you showed a new user both the LBYL and EAFP patterns. (@A_B, google them)
    – forivall
    Mar 21, 2013 at 17:32
  • That’s fine if the number your testing is a known fixed value, but if it’s an integer variable you might not want to accept negative values as valid, though they will successfully index into the list. Jan 28, 2018 at 9:41
  • @SimonHibbs or normalise the value first (add len(x) to negative indices, so normalised = len(x) + idx if idx < 0 else idx), then check if 0 <= normalised < len(x).
    – Martijn Pieters
    Jan 28, 2018 at 10:03
4

You want to check if the list is 4 or more elements long?

len(x) >= 4

You want to check if what would be the fourth element in a series is in a list?

'd' in x

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