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So, I have x=[(12,), (1,), (3,)] (list of tuples) and I want x=[12, 1, 3] (list of integers) in best way possible? Can you please help?

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5 Answers 5

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You didn't say what you mean by "best", but presumably you mean "most pythonic" or "most readable" or something like that.

The list comprehension given by F3AR3DLEGEND is probably the simplest. Anyone who knows how to read a list comprehension will immediately know what it means.

y = [i[0] for i in x]

However, often you don't really need a list, just something that can be iterated over once. If you've got a billion elements in x, building a billion-element y just to iterate over it one element at a time may be a bad idea. So, you can use a generator expression:

y = (i[0] for i in x)

If you prefer functional programming, you might prefer to use map. The downside of map is that you have to pass it a function, not just an expression, which means you either need to use a lambda function, or itemgetter:

y = map(operator.itemgetter(0), x)

In Python 3, this is equivalent to the generator expression; if you want a list, pass it to list. In Python 2, it returns a list; if you want an iterator, use itertools.imap instead of map.

If you want a more generic flattening solution, you can write one yourself, but it's always worth looking at itertools for generic solutions of this kind, and there is in fact a recipe called flatten that's used to "Flatten one level of nesting". So, copy and paste that into your code (or pip install more-itertools) and you can just do this:

y = flatten(x)

If you look at how flatten is implemented, and then at how chain.from_iterable is implemented, and then at how chain is implemented, you'll notice that you could write the same thing in terms of builtins. But why bother, when flatten is going to be more readable and obvious?

Finally, if you want to reduce the generic version to a nested list comprehension (or generator expression, of course):

y = [j for i in x for j in i]

However, nested list comprehensions are very easy to get wrong, both in writing and reading. (Note that F3AR3DLEGEND, the same person who gave the simplest answer first, also gave a nested comprehension and got it wrong. If he can't pull it off, are you sure you want to try?) For really simple cases, they're not too bad, but still, I think flatten is a lot easier to read.

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  • So what is your opinion on tuple unpacking à la pattern matching? Feb 26, 2013 at 18:50
  • @PavelAnossov: What about it? When you want to unpack a tuple into separate named variables, it's obviously exactly the right thing. When you have a tuple of one that you just want to turn into a single value, it doesn't seem quite as clear, but it's not really objectionable.
    – abarnert
    Feb 26, 2013 at 19:21
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y = [i[0] for i in x]

This only works for one element per tuple, though.

However, if you have multiple elements per tuple, you can use a slightly more complex list comprehension:

y = [i[j] for i in x for j in range(len(i))]

Reference: List Comprehensions

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  • 1
    @pedro - Yes, it will always have one element. Feb 26, 2013 at 18:03
  • For the second one: If you need to flatten any sequence of sequences, there's a recipe in the itertools docs called flatten. It's probably worth understanding both that and the list comprehension.
    – abarnert
    Feb 26, 2013 at 18:06
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    Shouldn't you inverse the order of the fors?
    – phant0m
    Feb 26, 2013 at 18:18
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    Also, why are you even iterating over range(len(i)) just to get the values by index? i[j] for j in range(len(i)) is exactly the same as j for j in i.
    – abarnert
    Feb 26, 2013 at 18:19
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Just do this:

x = [i[0] for i in x]

Explanation:

>>> x=[(12,), (1,), (3,)]

>>> x
[(12,), (1,), (3,)]

>>> [i for i in x]
[(12,), (1,), (3,)]

>>> [i[0] for i in x]
[12, 1, 3]
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This is the most efficient way:

x = [i for i, in x]

or, equivalently

x = [i for (i,) in x]

This is a bit slower:

x = [i[0] for i in x]
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  • Are you sure about the efficiency difference? In a quick test with a 1M-element list in 3.3.0, they took 4.15ms and 4.14ms respectively—and it looks like more than 4ms of that was the time spent iterating the list and building a new list, so nothing is likely to be any faster. If you change x to a genexp and replace the two listcomps with a genexp fed to deque(genexp, maxlen=0), I get 1.36us vs. 1.32us.
    – abarnert
    Feb 26, 2013 at 18:09
  • More importantly, what scenario are you imagining where anyone would care which of these two is more efficient?
    – abarnert
    Feb 26, 2013 at 18:11
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    Where's this efficiency trend for Python on SO coming from anyway? To me, it seems like a trick to gain more points.
    – phant0m
    Feb 26, 2013 at 18:21
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    @phant0m: Some people see "best way" and immediately interpret that as "the most efficient way". I have no idea why those people are coding in Python rather than C. Especially the kind of people who make assumptions instead of testing—don't those kind of people assume that C is always going to be fastest?
    – abarnert
    Feb 26, 2013 at 18:24
  • I tested it on python 2.7, this is not an assumption (34ms vs. 46ms with a 1M list). I'd say readability of these ways is pretty close, so what else is there to compare to choose the "best" (which nobody defined)? Feb 26, 2013 at 18:46
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you can use map function....

map(lambda y: y[0], x)
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    If you're going to use map, you might as well use itemgetter instead of a lambda.
    – abarnert
    Feb 26, 2013 at 18:10

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