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This may be trivial for some but I have trouble looking through 2d array(?) in Python.

orderList = [ ('apples', 2.0), ('pears', 3.0), ('limes', 4.0) ]

How do I loop through this list? I've tried this but obviously it's not working.

for item in orderList:
        print item;

**If you can direct me to a tutorial or website that has this information, I will be content.

3
  • 1
    What output do you expect? What you have works...
    – Tim
    Jan 13, 2013 at 1:49
  • Have you tried removing the semicolon?
    – Ernir
    Jan 13, 2013 at 1:50
  • @Ernir: The semicolon is redundant, not illegal Jan 13, 2013 at 1:51

3 Answers 3

11

You can use tuple unpacking to loop through everything:

for fruit, quantity in orderList:
    print 'I have', quantity, fruit + 'es'

You could also do this from inside of the for loop:

for fruit_info in orderList:
    fruit, quantity = fruit_info

    print 'I have', quantity, fruit + 'es'
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Your code works without any problem

orderList = [ ('apples', 2.0), ('pears', 3.0), ('limes', 4.0) ]
for item in orderList:
    print item;           #you don't need `;` but it is not a problem to leave it
>>>
('apples', 2.0)
('pears', 3.0)
('limes', 4.0)
0

There are a couple of ways to iterate over a list.

The most common is for each loop

for fruit in orderList:
    print fruit

A more efficient variation is using a generator, it's also worth noting that generators are iterable sequences.

def generator(fruits):
    for fruit in fruits:
        yield fruit

generate = generator(orderList)
firstFruit = generate.next()
// Doing complex calculations before continuing the iteration
answer = 21 + 21
secondFruit = generate.next()

A more elegant approach would be to use the higher-order function 'map'. Map can also return a value. If you wanted to increase the price or quantity of each fruit by five percent you just have to make a simple function.

def display(fruit):
    print fruit  // map takes in a function as an argument and applies it to each element of the sequence.

map( display, orderList )

// You could also use a generator
map( display, generate )

The last way I can think of is using compression. Compression is a built-in form of iteration thats now available in most standard library data structures. It's useful if you want to make new list using a sequence. I'm lazy, so I'm just reusing display to demostrate the syntax.

[ display(fruit) for fruit in orderList ]
[ display(fruit) for fruit in generate ]

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