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How does one return e.g. the first element of a tuple?

I would like to take a list of 2 element tuples and return the second element of each tuple as a new list.

4 Answers 4

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1> P = {adam,24,{july,29}}.
{adam,24,{july,29}}
2> element(1,P).
adam
3> element(3,P).
{july,29}

See also: http://www.erlang.org/doc/reference_manual/data_types.html#id2259804

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you could use lists:map (not so simple like lists comprehension though):

lists:map(fun({_,X}) -> X end, [{a,b},{c,d},{e,f}]).

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  • I think it's worth noting that this one probably behaves best when dealing with bad data, which can justify the slightly more complex looking syntax. Sep 13, 2010 at 10:07
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exactly what you've asked:
666> [element(2,X) || X <- [{1,2},{3,4}]].
[2,4]

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Well, true, element/2 + comprehension will work. But the best way is to pattern match:

[ Var2 || {_Var1, Var2} <- [{1,2},{3,4}]]

Every pattern matching is superior to function call, due to code simplicity.

So, above what you have is list comprehension (double pipes inside the list). Before pipes (right hand side) there is generator, left side is a product.

General:

List = [ ReturnedValue = some_function(X) || X <- GeneratorList, X =/= Conditions ]

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